Daily Southtown

‘The Beat Goes On’

Amid Vegas residency as Cher, Mokena’s McClowry pops home for a quick show

- By Mary Compton Daily Southtown

As the lights grew dim inside CD&ME in Frankfort, a familiar voice flowed from the stage, “I have climbed the highest mountains … only to be with you.”

Dressed in a sparkling costume, Mokena’s Lisa McClowry had traveled from out West, coming home to perform.

Since February, McClowry has been in Las Vegas, performing as Cher in the Legendary Divas show at the Tropicana, taking the stage six days a week.

When she’s able to break away from Vegas, where she’s booked through the end of October and lives in a hotel suite, she takes her show, “The Beat Goes On,” on the road, including last month’s performanc­e in Frankfort.

It was the first return engagement in a while for McClowry, who recently celebrated her 25th anniversar­y with husband Perry Krokidas, and who will be back Saturday for a show at the Des Plaines Theater. In mid-November she’ll finally have a few days to return to the area to spend time with family.

But her parents, MaryEllen and Jim McClowry, as well as some old friends, had a chance to see her perform at the CD&ME show.

“The best way to describe performing for family and friends was opening a door to a massive party and the party was called This is Your Life,” Lisa McClowry said. “My whole history was in this night. All the love coming at you, is quite humbling.”

Old friend Jason Baumann was on hand for the performanc­e, recalling a time when he shared the stage with McClowry when he was in seventh grade for a community theater production of “The Sound of Music.”

“Lisa was Maria von Trapp and

I was Friedrich, the oldest son,” he said. “Lisa was probably in college at the time. She taught us so much especially as young aspiring theater kids.”

Even then, Baumann knew his friend was going to go far in her career.

“For many high school students, there seems to be a dream to be a profession­al athlete. For me and many others, it was the dream of doing something impactful in the music industry,” he said. “It never surprised me that Lisa has become so successful. While she

to rectify the matter and change the plates,” Freeman said.

The township spent $121,885 in public funds in March to buy the two vehicles and equip them with emergency lights, according to records obtained through a Freedom of Informatio­n Act request.

The purchases were made less than three weeks after Henyard took the oath of office as supervisor to serve out the term of Frank Zuccarelli, who died in January.

The township paid $59,690 to Chastang Enterprise­s in Houston, Texas, on March 23 for a 2021 Ford Expedition SUV, records showed.

On the same day the township paid $46,045 to Lake Country Chevrolet in Jasper, Texas, for a 2022 Chevy Tahoe C150.

On March 25 the township paid Midwest 911, a Bolingbroo­k business, to install front, side and rear warning systems on the two vehicles. The lights, sirens and speakers cost $8,170 for the Ford Expedition and $7,980 for the Chevy Tahoe.

The township board approved the vehicle purchases, Freeman said.

“Purchase of township vehicles is conducted through a vehicle consortium that ensures the township receives the lowest possible price for taxpayers,” he said in a statement in response to my inquiry.

“That consortium identified a Texas-based vendor as the source of the lowest, most responsibl­e bid, and as such, the township purchased the vehicles according to that guidance.”

For the past six months I have observed the two black SUVs outside public meetings in Dolton and Thornton Township. On Tuesday I recognized the vehicles as part of a motorcade of four black SUVs traveling south on the Dan Ryan Expressway.

I was on my way back to the south suburbs after covering an appellate court hearing at the Michael A. Bilandic Building in downtown Chicago about whether a June 28 vote to recall Henyard as mayor was legal.

I was in the left lane on the Dan Ryan, stopped in heavy traffic at about 2:30 p.m. just north of Guaranteed Rate Field, where the

White Sox play. Suddenly, the convoy of four vehicles passed inches to the left of my vehicle.

The left shoulder at that point was not quite the width of a full lane of traffic. I watched as the convoy stopped momentaril­y, then squeezed by as vehicles in the left lane of traffic moved over enough to allow the motorcade to pass.

The four vehicles in the convoy all had emergency lights flashing. I recalled seeing red, blue and yellow lights, like police vehicles. I heard sirens. Two of the vehicles had civilian plates and two had municipal police plates.

“On Tuesday, Sept. 13, as with all other times, the township’s vehicles complied with local police directives and complied with appropriat­e traffic laws and regulation­s,” Freeman said.

I observed Dolton police Chief Robert Collins and numerous other village of Dolton employees in the courtroom. It was unclear why government employees whose salaries are paid by taxpayers attended a court hearing on a political matter.

Numerous Dolton residents and elected trustees also attended the hearing. I met with them in a Dolton Park District parking lot before a chartered bus transporte­d them to Chicago.

I chatted with some residents in the courtroom before the hearing got underway.

“She has lost the support of the people,” resident Beth McBride told me.

I asked resident Karen Johnson whether citizens felt intimidate­d by the presence of security personnel. Residents called Henyard’s entourage “homeland security.”

Johnson said she did not feel intimidate­d by the men.

“This is our town and we’re the ones suffering,” she said.

A shooting Wednesday involving a bodyguard for Harvey Mayor Christophe­r Clark raised fresh concerns about security details paid by taxpayers to protect south suburban elected officials.

Residents of Harvey, Dolton and other communitie­s have previously questioned why taxpayers foot the bills for security details.

In some instances, on-duty police officers in uniform are assigned to guard a mayor or other official. Clark’s case and others involve the use of private security guards.

A security officer working for Clark on Wednesday shot at a person who was armed with a firearm and wearing a ski mask in Chicago’s Old Town neighborho­od, Harvey authoritie­s said.

The costs for security personnel, vehicles and equipment can be substantia­l.

Public officials in most communitie­s would never imagine saddling taxpayers with the costs of private security details. But in some south suburbs with high rates of violent crime the practice seems to have become establishe­d as a perk for mayors or other officials.

Henyard has said she received death threats during her 2021 campaign against former Dolton Mayor Riley Rogers. Henyard is a single mother of a young child.

 ?? MARY COMPTON/DAILY SOUTHTOWN ?? Lisa McClowry performs as Cher in her“The Beat Goes On”show last month at CD&ME in Frankfort. McClowry, of Mokena, takes her self-produced show on the road when she gets a break from performing as Cher as part of an ongoing engagement in Las Vegas.
MARY COMPTON/DAILY SOUTHTOWN Lisa McClowry performs as Cher in her“The Beat Goes On”show last month at CD&ME in Frankfort. McClowry, of Mokena, takes her self-produced show on the road when she gets a break from performing as Cher as part of an ongoing engagement in Las Vegas.
 ?? SLOWIK/DAILY SOUTHTOWN TED ?? Dolton village administra­tor Keith Freeman speak during a village board meeting May 2 at Dolton Village Hall.
SLOWIK/DAILY SOUTHTOWN TED Dolton village administra­tor Keith Freeman speak during a village board meeting May 2 at Dolton Village Hall.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States