COMING UP
WHAT'S NEW THIS WEEK BY DAVID WIE GAND
POP MUSIC
HAIL, CESARIA
The big question on our
minds is how
Cesaria Evora's habit of
smoking cigarettes onstage
is going to go over in Berke-
ley. No matter: Most likely,
the audience will be so car-
ried away by her incompara-
bly smoky voice, no one will
mind. Evora is truly a one-of-
a-kind performer. She grew
up on Cape Verde and began
singing classic Portuguese
mornas as a teenager. After a
couple of releases, she gave
up music for several years.
Fortunately, she returned to
her career in 1985 and made a big name for herself in Lisbon and
Paris. Her 1995 album, "Cesaria," was a hit in the United States, as
was its follow-up, "Cabo Verde." Her latest, "Cafe Atlantico," finds
her voice as captivating as ever and is also graced with Cuban and
Brazilian motifs. Smoking or not, the lady is on fire. She'll appear
in Berkeley and San Francisco next week.
CESARIA EVORA, 8 p.m. Saturday, Zellerbach Hall, University of California at Berkeley, Bancroft
Way at Telegraph Ave., Berkeley, tickets $20-$32. (510) 642-9988, www.campers.berkeley.edu
7p.m. September 13, Bimbo's 365 Club, 1025 Columbus Ave, San Francisco, tickets $30,
(415) 474-0365, www.ticketweb.com
OPERA
MASK-MAKING
POP MUSIC
TROPICALISMO Beatriam mais
HEAT WAVE
those with
longer memo
ries, Gilberto Gil
is a true giant. Born in 1942 in the northeast
city of Salvador, Brazil, he was a protege of
bossa nova singer-guitarist Joao Gilberto. He
scored his first big hit in the mid-'60s and be-
came one of the leaders of the Tropicalismo
movement in Brazilian music. Over the years,
Gil has continued to push the musical enve
lope, teaming up with performers such as Yes,
Jimmy Cliff and Pink Floyd. He took a nine-year
break to serve on the Salvador
City Council
but, fortunately,
returned to music in 1992. He's
still active in politics, as well as en-
vironmental issues, but he's able to
balance all of that with music - in-
comparable music, which Bay Area
audiences can hear for themselves
when Gil performs at Masonic
Auditorium this week.
GILBERTO GIL, Bp.m. Friday. Masonic Audito-
rium 1111
California St., San Francisco,
tickets $25-$45, (415) 392-4400
century with one of Verdi's most popular operas, "Un
Ballo in Maschera," starring Carol Vaness (right) as Amelia.
The composer had a rough time getting the work off the
ground, since its focus on the assassination of Sweden's
King Gustavus III drew fire from Roman censors, who forced Verdi to change the locale of
the story and "demote" the king to a mere noble. No matter, once it premiered in 1859,
"Un Ballo" went on to become one of Verdi's greatest hits, and most subsequent produc-
tions returned to the composer's original concepts. Vaness, a graduate of the
Opera's
Merola program, was last seen here in "Norma" last year. She will be joined in the cast
by mezzo Elena Zaremba as Madame Arvidson, tenor Richard Margison as the king and
baritone Sergei Leiferkus as Anckarstrom. Music director Donald Runnicles will conduct
the Opera Orchestra. And to keep the opera party rolling, don't forget the annual Opera
in the Park concert next Sunday. It's free, it's fun and it's loaded with great singers per
forming opera's greatest hits. Among the singers scheduled to perform are Tracy Dahl,
Marcello Giordani, Jerry Hadley, Vladimir Chernov, Sam Ramey and Leiferkus.
UN BALLO IN MASCHERA by Giuseppe Verdi, 7p.m. Saturday (sold out). 8 p.m. September 14,23,25 and October 1, 2p.m, Sep-
tember 19, 7:30p.m. September 23 and October 6, staged by the San Francisco Opera, War Memorial Opera House, 401 Van
Mess Ave, San Francisco, tickets $22-$145, (415) 864-3330
OPERA IN THE PARK, 1:30-3:30p.m. next Sunday, Sharon Meadow, Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, free,(415) 777-7770
DANCE
FOLK
LEGENDS
For those who have
picked up on the
Few folk dance companies have lasted as
long as Ballet Folklorico de Mexico. More
to the point, few can point to so many years of
sold-out houses. The company now bears the
name of its founder, Amalia Hernandez, as it
returns to the United States for its 47th an-
niversary tour with two U.S. premieres and the
world premiere of a 14-member chorus. The
two premieres are "Aztecs," which interprets the Aztec myth of
creation, and "Tarascos," celebrating the culture of the people
who live on the edge of Lake Patzcuaro and maintain their pre-
Columbian traditions. From its beginnings as a company of only
eight dancers, Ballet Folklorico has grown to become one of the
most important folk dance and music performing organizations in
the world. The company performs both in San Jose and Berkeley.
BALLET FOLKLORICO DE MEXICO DE AMALIA HERNANDEZ,8 p.m. Thursday-Saturday, 3p.m. next Sun
day, San Jose Center for the Performing Arts, 255 Almaden Blvd., San Jose, tickets $20-$45, (BBB)
433-8497;8p.m. September 14, Zellerbach Hall, University of California at Berkeley, Bancroft Way
at Telegraph
Ave., Berkeley, tickets $20-$32, (510) 642-9988
M Company opens
Carin Theatre
its 1999-2000 season on
an up note. The com-
pany will stage Rodgers
and Hart's Broadway classic "Pal Joey" at its Mill
Valley theater. The show, which went on to become
a successful Frank Sinatra film, features classics such
as "My Funny Valentine," "Bewitched, Bothered
and Bewildered" and "The Lady Is a Tramp: "Pal
Joey," based on a novel by John O'Hara, tells the sto-
ry of Joey Evans, a real lounge lizard who is involved
with both wide-eyed young Linda and a wealthy,
older Vera. The Marin cast, directed by Albert
Takazauckas, features Rudy Guerrero in the title
role and screen veteran Kathryn Crosby as Vera. The
show will be choreographed by Richard Gibbs.
PALJOEY, with music by Richard Rodgers and lyrics by Lorenz Hart, in previews
8pm. Thursday-Saturday and 2 and 7p.m. next Sunday, opens 8 p.m. Septem-
ber 14 and continues through October 10, Marin Theatre Company, 397 Miler
Ave, Mill Valley
tickets $24-$40
(415) 388-5208
THEATER
WHAT A PAL
Howard
Swain and
Julie
James
in "Pal
Joey."