
Buddy Greco and Lezlie Anders Star in FEVER the musical legacy of Miss Peggy Lee
There is only one instance when you would want a fever to descend upon
an audience and that is the musical tribute by the same name to one hot
singer-songwriter, Miss Peggy Lee.
Whether everyone present has heard her singular style or not, all who
attend an event enlivened with the show, “Fever- A Tribute To Miss
Peggy Lee,” will leave with an appreciation of her special talents. And
that’s just what the show’s originators had in mind. Famed musician
Buddy Greco’s and stunning singer Lezlie Anders’ objective is to
celebrate the life and music of Peggy Lee with their audience.
The “Fever” show had been in the making for a few years but it is also
about connections that started many years ago. After all, both Buddy
Greco and Peggy Lee got an initial boost into their careers by
performing with Benny Goodman. This show is very close to both Greco’s
and Anders’ hearts. Buddy was a dear friend of Peggy Lee for a long
time, which was his motivation for doing the show.
Lezlie Anders, Greco’s wife of eleven years, has been likened to Miss
Lee in appearance and singing style. Likeness or not, Anders remarks,"What girl singer wouldn’t want to include Peggy Lee songs in her
repertoire?"
Peggy Lee, originally Norma Egstrom from South Dakota, passed away in
2002. She was known for her sultry, alluring vocals which she adopted
after successfully getting an audience’s attention in the days when she
was just starting her singing career exploration. She was attempting to
sing over a loud din in a club in Palm Springs. Then as soon as she
lowered her singing voice, the whole room hushed and her style was
born. Further along the way but not much, she was singing at the
Buttery in Chicago. Benny Goodman was looking for a replacement singer
when he happened into the club where Peggy was singing and she was
hired essentially on the spot. She started her Goodman Tour with no
rehearsals.
Lee didn’t think of herself as a jazz singer but jazz musicians of the
time, like Louis Armstrong, said she was because she knew how to swing.
And knowing well how to swing, Greco and Anders carry her music into
the present.
From the first drum roll and sustained piano chords of the overture at
the beginning of the show, to the melodic strands of "I’ll Be Seeing You" accompanying the bows at the end, listeners are transported, with
the musical talents of Buddy Greco and Lezlie Anders as guides, to a
time when Peggy Lee was swinging on her star.
But make no mistake, the show does not just harken to times past. Greco
and Anders bring an ever so lively presence to the stage, with
personable dialogue between the two, moving commentary about Lee, songs
backed by the Benny Goodman Tribute Band, and an unforgettable light
show, in the true Peggy Lee tradition. Lee herself admitted she "tried
to approach singing as theatre, complete with lighting, staging and acting." And that’s what you get now, with the “Fever” show. Agent Bill
Rezey describes it as, "a large show with a lot of production that
doesn’t require much outside intervention. This show comes in,
self-contained. Its sort of an all in one, all-inclusive show with a
large orchestra, dancers, headliner Buddy Greco and the music of Peggy
Lee."
Lezlie Anders brands each song with her own unique qualities, adding a
fresh effervescence to the delivery of the lyrics. Listeners can feel
the Peggy Lee easy swing driven as always with a suspended cadence, but
with an Anders lilt and timbre. Of the twenty-six numbers, most are
songs that had been written and/or sung by Peggy Lee, interspersed with
Buddy Greco singing her songs or one of his hits like “The Lady Is A
Tramp.” The flow from one song to another is a pleasant transition by
way of Greco’s dynamic arrangements and the couple’s playful quips. For
example, Greco talks about Peggy as one of the greats, but Lezlie sees
her as the greatest female singer for what she contributed to music.
Then some banter ensues to prove the point: What woman wrote the number
of songs that she did? The "firsts" that contribute to making Peggy Lee
the best were: first female singer-songwriter; first to isolate vocals
in an isolation booth of a recording studio; used the first "board fade
out" on “Manana” in 1948, diminishing the volume on the recording
equipment to end the song. A great lyricist; an actress who wrote songs for movies. In all, she
wrote about seven hundred songs. And so the audience is anecdotally
educated too on the life of a great lady.
The songs in the show actually run in chronological order, starting
with ‘Why Don’t You Do Right?” which Miss Lee first recorded with Benny
Goodman in 1941. During the show the close associations Peggy Lee
enjoyed with other artists are revisited in voice-overs by the likes of
Benny Goodman, Louis Armstrong, Frank Sinatra, Jimmy Durante and Cary
Grant. They describe the Peggy they knew, her talents, her style, in
their own words. These tributes segue into a song that explicates their
account. “Her regal presence is pure eloquence and charm," may have been the words of Frank Sinatra for Peggy Lee but Ms. Anders carries it
off as well, with her own class, suave delivery of lyrics and stately
stature as a performer.
The words of Benny Goodman are about Buddy Greco, who he introduces as‘the tough kid from Philly’ just as he did in 1951 when he hired him.
Then Goodman says in the voice-over, he fired Buddy 22 times. "I used
to drive him crazy," says Greco. An instance goes somet hing like
Goodman telling Greco to play like Teddy Wilson, Greco asks, “why don’t
you fire me and hire Wilson?” Goodman does, then hires him back and
gives him a $25 raise!
Greco’s history is legendary. He began playing the piano at age four
and was taught by Joseph Cavalierie, who voluntarily nurtured many
youths on to music careers from a settlement house in a poor
neighborhood of south Philadelphia. By age 16, Greco was out on his
own, playing and singing at a club in Philly. At age 18, he was
discovered by Benny Goodman’s manager, who offered him a recording.
Following a four year stint as pianist, singer/arranger with the Benny
Goodman Band, Buddy’s career continued to soar. He went on to sell
millions of records, received gold records for “Oh Look At Her Ain’t
She Pretty,” “The Lady Is A Tramp” and “Around The World.” He has made
65 albums, 100 singles and is listed in the Encyclopedias of Great
Musicians and of Great Jazz Singers and Musicians. He has performed
music in genres from jazz, to pop, to country, in venues on stage, in
film and on television.
At one time singer Lezlie Anders might have been attending a corporate
event with fellow bankers, investors and brokers. In fact, she could be
a poster child for women in Corporate America. She carved out a niche
starting as the first woman loan officer hired by a major savings and
loan in LA in 1978. Having gotten a real estate license, she also wrote
up second deeds of trust and when a first trustee writer was needed
there she was with the experience needed. She financed acquisitions and with a partner bought up airline and trucking businesses when they had
spread themselves too thin. Her kids grew up to conversations around
the dinner table about business. When they were grown, she quit and
moved to Oregon where her mother lived, got a degree in music and
formed her own big band, “The Roseland Orchestra.” Today the former
divestiture specialist has returned to her roots as a musician.
Distanced from her early rock and roll days, she has returned to the
stage in style, which is where she first dazzled Buddy.
In fact, it was in 1992 when Lezlie was opening shows for Bob Newhart,
Don Rickles and Greco. Buddy’s show, a two-week gig in Las Vegas,
was the start of a courtship turned marriage and partnership turned music tours and shows that branch all over the world. Together, Greco and Anders caress each song in the “Fever Tribute” with
reverence for Lee’s style. Buddy’s arrangements and Anders renditions
compliment the star’s exciting life in rousing songs like “Manana,”
“I’m A Woman” and “I’m Gonna Go Fishin'.” Then akin to Miss Lee’s
reflections in her book of poems, Softly, With Feelings, there is a
soothing reversal to “Mr. Wonderful” and “The Folks Who Live On The
Hill.” Highlighting the show is the sultry signature song, “Fever,” for
which Peggy Lee wrote special lyrics. For this number, Anders enters
the stage in a cloud of fog, wearing a bright red gown accented with
flames.
Other equally haunting melodies are intertwined throughout the show,
such as “Is That All There Is?” giving a peek into Lee’s childhood
memories, and “Golden Earrings.” Upbeat selections round out the show,“It Was Just One Of Those Things,” the resigned “Alright, OK, You Win”
which is first sung by Greco then Anders, and the delightful “He’s a
Tramp,” which Miss Lee wrote for the animated film, “Lady And The
Tramp.”
There are times in the performance when Danny Thomas’s words about Peggy Lee ring true of Ms. Anders: her stage presence is so sweet,
there’s no cockiness about her. But she’s sure. That calm assurance
comes through in Ander’s voice too.
In an interview with Anders from her and Buddy’s home outside of Las
Vegas, Anders points out another connection worth mentioning in the
current context. The show was first produced and recorded at the
University of Las Vegas, Nevada. Now when a corporation buys this
venue, they become patrons of the University of Las Vegas’ music
department because 3% of profit goes to their Performing Arts
Department, giving back just as the teacher Cavalierie gave to Greco
and several other kids in that settlement house in Philadelphia.
Anders claims the show can be adapted for a large crowd or to a small
group by adjusting the size of the band, with or without dancers, but
with the lights, always the lights, six or seven costume changes,
Greco’s seasoned piano playing, and always the wealth of songs
attributed to the talented Peggy Lee. Greco and Anders are looking to
emerge into the corporate circuit with “Fever,” but continue to tour it
and their other shows consistently. Buddy has his own jazz show backed
by a quartet and Lezlie plays venues and clubs with her Lezlie Anders
Orchestra.
The Greco/Anders team has truly brought an exquisite show together. The
songs are impeccably produced, easy on the ears, and do pay the highest
tribute to a great singer and lady. |