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	<title>Observer &#187; With New York a Celebrity Ghost Town, It&#8217;s the Season of the B-list</title>
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		<title>With New York a Celebrity Ghost Town, It&#8217;s the Season of the B-list</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2001/11/with-new-york-a-celebrity-ghost-town-its-the-season-of-the-blist/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 12 Nov 2001 00:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2001/11/with-new-york-a-celebrity-ghost-town-its-the-season-of-the-blist/</link>
			<dc:creator>NYO Staff</dc:creator>
				
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>Life During Wartime</p>
<p>The Amazing Kreskin was running loose. On Nov. 5, the 66-year-old</p>
<p>mentalist had broken free from his Howard Rubenstein publicist and was zooming</p>
<p>around Suite 16, a nightclub on Eighth Avenue and 16th Street, greeting people</p>
<p>by either delivering a bone-bruising whack to their backs or shaking their</p>
<p>hands like he was working a rusty well pump.</p>
<p> "I think I need to read these ladies' minds!" Mr. Kreskin yelled</p>
<p>as he lurched toward a small group of attractive young women who were seated at</p>
<p>the back of the club. He was dressed to impress in a dark sport jacket over a</p>
<p>matching incandescent yellow silk shirt and tie. His graying hair was parted on</p>
<p>the side, and he wore big chunky glasses.</p>
<p> But then he looked over at The Transom, who was sitting at an</p>
<p>adjacent table, waiting to interview him.</p>
<p> "A little later," the mentalist said to the women as he made a</p>
<p>beeline for the tape recorder.</p>
<p> These are heady times for</p>
<p>entertainers like the Amazing Kreskin. For whatever reason-terrorism, anthrax</p>
<p>or general spinelessness-America's A-list celebrities just don't seem</p>
<p>interested in attending New York premieres, store openings and benefits.</p>
<p> But where Jennifer Lopez and Drew Barrymore see risk, hard-bitten</p>
<p>entertainers like Mr. Kreskin, Barry Manilow, Susan Lucci and others-who long</p>
<p>ago dropped off the A-list, or never made it in the first place-see</p>
<p>opportunity.</p>
<p> These show-business lifers</p>
<p>have found themselves in a city where, suddenly, free drinks with a man who</p>
<p>bills himself as "The Original Mastermind" qualified as an eminently coverable</p>
<p>media event in what was once the peak social month of November. And they</p>
<p>were more than willing to pick up the slack.</p>
<p> Their ideas about sleekness may be more at home in Vegas than</p>
<p>Hollywood, but the 24/7 brand of show business they practice requires an iron</p>
<p>constitution that comes in handy when the better-styled are heading for their</p>
<p>safe rooms. And in moments of crisis, their penchant for big, emotive numbers</p>
<p>and old-fashioned parlor tricks works like the entertainment equivalent of</p>
<p>comfort food.</p>
<p> On Nov. 5, Manhattan was like a big bowl of Kraft Macaroni &amp;</p>
<p>Cheese, with Mr. Kreskin plugging his new book, The Amazing Kreskin's Future with the Stars , at Suite 16 and Mr.</p>
<p>Manilow performing at both the Hammerstein Ballroom and Carnegie Hall with a</p>
<p>cast of characters that included Chevy Chase, Ms. Lucci and former porn star</p>
<p>Jack Wrangler.</p>
<p> Off the Wall</p>
<p> Over at Mr. Kreskin's party, the mentalist's publicists had taped</p>
<p>up a sheet of predictions that he had allegedly made on CNN at the beginning of</p>
<p>the year. Among them: "There will be at least two major airline tragedies by</p>
<p>September or early October," and that the Yankees would not win the World</p>
<p>Series.</p>
<p> For his book, Mr. Kreskin had</p>
<p>gotten some help on the prognostication front. The Amazing Kreskin's Future with the Stars attempts to ask a</p>
<p>number of celebrities and professionals, including actor Tom Hanks, former</p>
<p>special prosecutor Kenneth Starr, conductor Skitch Henderson and Son of Sam</p>
<p>killer David Berkowitz, to make predictions about the futures of their various</p>
<p>professions.</p>
<p> As a result, it seems destined to become a cult classic, along</p>
<p>the lines of Robert Evans' audio-book reading of his own memoir, The Kid Stays in the Picture.</p>
<p> In Mr. Kreskin's book, the comedian Roseanne is asked, "In the</p>
<p>next millennium, what will be the main TV-delivery mechanism?" Her reply: "Are</p>
<p>you on drugs?" Mr. Berkowitz predicts that tens of thousands of prison inmates</p>
<p>will "suddenly disappear" when God whisks them to heaven.</p>
<p> And Howard Stern forecasts that Mr. Kreskin "will shake hands so</p>
<p>hard with a biker that he will beat the crap out of you." That one seems</p>
<p>destined to come true.</p>
<p> The cover of the book proclaims Mr. Kreskin "the Nostradamus of</p>
<p>the 21st Century!" But when The Transom asked the mentalist if that was true,</p>
<p>he replied, "Yeah, but he was flaky."</p>
<p> Mr. Kreskin fidgeted in his seat.</p>
<p> So what were his predictions about the future of celebrity? we</p>
<p>asked.</p>
<p> "Can I be honest about that?" he replied. "I just toured Canada</p>
<p>last week for two weeks. Nobody pretty much cares about-what was his name?-Gary</p>
<p>Condit. Nobody cares about whether a scoutmaster is gay or not gay.</p>
<p> "Who in God's name!" the mentalist yelled, startling a group of</p>
<p>people at the bar. "People are going to start having priorities, maybe breaking</p>
<p>down fences around their houses, using porches, which were used in the days of</p>
<p>no air conditioning when people spent time outside and visited."</p>
<p> What?  </p>
<p> The mentalist seemed to sense that he had gone astray. "The</p>
<p>important thing of the celebrity will be going back to the Second World War and</p>
<p>how important the comedians, the performers that dealt with fantasy, took</p>
<p>people's minds."</p>
<p> Mr. Kreskin didn't seem to think that sentence needed correcting.</p>
<p> "I think the climate has changed," Mr. Kreskin said rapidly, as</p>
<p>someone put what looked like a caffeinated drink on the table in front of him.</p>
<p>"Celebrity is great, but in the whole scope of things, it has a different</p>
<p>position.</p>
<p> "My uncle was a fireman 18</p>
<p>years. And I have been to more fires on fire trucks as a kid. I know every</p>
<p>part. I could take you on a fire truck and say, 'Let's sit here,' and we'd</p>
<p>have, not a great time, but an exciting time."</p>
<p> Mr. Kreskin stopped himself. "I'm sorry if I get off the wall,</p>
<p>but that's my nature!" he said as he started whacking The Transom repeatedly on</p>
<p>the back.</p>
<p> So we asked Mr. Kreskin if he saw this moment, when a lot of</p>
<p>other celebrities were running scared, as a time to shine?</p>
<p> "It's ironic you bring up</p>
<p>what you said to me, because this has been discussed with me," Mr. Kreskin</p>
<p>said. He alluded to an "inspiring" but mysterious meeting with Secretary of</p>
<p>State Colin Powell.  I've got to do it in</p>
<p>my own way. I just can't cheapen-I don't want to take advantage of what's</p>
<p>happened. I want to make this a positive opportunity for all of us to be</p>
<p>greater than ever."</p>
<p> Manilow's Mitzvah</p>
<p> Further uptown, at the Hammerstein Ballroom, comedian Chevy Chase</p>
<p>was trying his best to make "WorldTrAID911"-a benefit for the children who lost</p>
<p>parents in the terrorist attack of Sept. 11-a positive experience for himself.</p>
<p> "That was the worst applause</p>
<p>I've ever gotten," Mr. Chase told the crowd, which was remarkably sparse given</p>
<p>the cause. (The top two levels of the Hammerstein Ballroom were almost</p>
<p>completely empty.) But the show went on, with Mr. Chase introducing the evening's</p>
<p>"surprise guest," Barry Manilow.</p>
<p> "I just thought I'd stop by to say hello," Mr. Manilow said as he</p>
<p>stood at his piano, his spiky, highlighted hair looking darker than usual. He</p>
<p>was late for another benefit at Carnegie Hall that night, but hell-when</p>
<p>newspapers are declaring that the age of irony is over, guys like Mr. Manilow</p>
<p>know they've got to make hay while the sun of sincerity shines.</p>
<p> "I'm going to do a song that speaks to me and moves me," Mr.</p>
<p>Manilow said. "I wrote this song for my very first album that I recorded, back</p>
<p>in 1821." The crowd tittered, then Mr. Manilow tinkled the ivories and sang "I</p>
<p>Am Your Child," followed by a rousing, a cappella version of "One Voice."</p>
<p> The crowd cheered. "I'm getting a mitzvah!" Mr. Manilow said.</p>
<p> Mr. Chase could have used some of Mr. Manilow's showbiz polish.</p>
<p>He did the same joke twice-"Where is the money going? It's going to me"-and</p>
<p>more than once mentioned the "stupid" questions that reporters had asked him</p>
<p>before the show.  ("Is it safe to laugh?"</p>
<p>was his favorite.) And on a number of occasions, after leaving his stack of</p>
<p>note cards backstage, he seemed lost.</p>
<p> The stately, plump Colin Quinn fared a little better. Referring</p>
<p>to the Northern Alliance rebels, Mr. Quinn said: "There's nothing like going</p>
<p>into battle with guys on horseback. We may lose the battle, but we hit the</p>
<p>Triple." But Mr. Quinn seemed to bog down with a joke that attempted to compare</p>
<p>New York fire chief Thomas von Essen to fashion designer Tommy Hilfiger.  "Whoops," he said mid-joke to the</p>
<p>firefighters in the audience. "You guys hate him. I'm not going to do that</p>
<p>one."</p>
<p> Mostly, things were pretty sincere. A children's choir did "New</p>
<p>York, New York."  Comedian Denis Leary,</p>
<p>who used to tell a great joke involving Mr. Manilow, a fan and bondage, thanked</p>
<p>the rescue workers in the audience.</p>
<p> But Jamie-Lynn Sigler, co-star of The Sopranos and a budding pop star, reenergized the evening with</p>
<p>her surreal, chest-heaving performance of her single, "Cry Baby." With one</p>
<p>shoulder and her midriff bare, Ms. Sigler gave a Minnelli-class performance of</p>
<p>the tune, singing: "You can cry cry, baby, all you want / You can try try, but</p>
<p>I'm gonna tell you to stop." </p>
<p> The Joy of the Prostate</p>
<p> Long before Mr. Manilow took the stage at Carnegie Hall, New York</p>
<p>Pops conductor and The Amazing Kreskin's</p>
<p>Future with the Stars contributor Skitch Henderson led the orchestra</p>
<p>through "That Old Black Magic," with All</p>
<p>My Children diva Susan Lucci on vocals.</p>
<p> Clad in a red reflective sheath that looked like it could survive</p>
<p>reentry into the earth's atmosphere, Ms. Lucci was giving her all at the Lauri</p>
<p>Strauss Leukemia Foundation Benefit Concert. Organized long before the events</p>
<p>of Sept. 11, the event, titled "Accentuate the Positive," was billed as a</p>
<p>tribute to the music of Johnny Mercer.</p>
<p> But for her next song, Ms. Lucci attempted something a little</p>
<p>more personal. "I know what you're wondering," she told the crowd. "You want to</p>
<p>know, 'How did it feel to be nominated for an Emmy all those times and never</p>
<p>win?'"</p>
<p> The white-haired crowd, many</p>
<p>of whom didn't seem well versed in the saga of Ms. Lucci's 19-year Emmy losing</p>
<p>streak, stared blankly-but, undeterred, the actress slipped into "Winning Isn't</p>
<p>Everything," a song written for her by Marvin Hamlisch, about her suffering at</p>
<p>the hands of the Academy of Television Arts &amp; Sciences.</p>
<p> "Me, I'm doing fine," she sang. "Seated on the aisle / I'll lose</p>
<p>and then I'll smile." And then, like some audio defibrillator, the Carnegie</p>
<p>Hall sound system cut to the actual voice clip of soap actor Shemar Moore</p>
<p>shrieking: "The streak is broken! The Emmy goes to Susan Lucci!"</p>
<p> The stunned crowd applauded politely as Ms. Lucci trundled</p>
<p>offstage-where, according to a witness, the actor John Davidson was running</p>
<p>around like a madman.</p>
<p> Next came Friars Club dean</p>
<p>Freddie Roman, who addressed "the young men in this room who do not yet know</p>
<p>the joy of the prostate." Most of the crowd seemed well acquainted with the</p>
<p>prostate and loved the joke.</p>
<p> "I pee like a stutterer</p>
<p>talks!" the Vulcanesque Mr. Roman blurted out to whooping laughter.</p>
<p> After Monica Mancini</p>
<p>performed "Moon River," the song that her father, Henry Mancini, co-wrote with</p>
<p>Mercer, Jack Wrangler, the former gay porn star and monologist, introduced his</p>
<p>77-year-old wife, Margaret Whiting, who sang "Hooray for Hollywood"-a song that</p>
<p>her father, Richard Whiting, co-wrote with Mercer. Ms. Whiting added a verse of</p>
<p>her own: "Hooray for royalties / It seems that money grows on trees."</p>
<p> When Mr. Manilow finally did take the stage around 10 p.m., the</p>
<p>Carnegie Hall crowd went nuts.</p>
<p> "We love you!" shouted one woman from the balcony as Mr. Manilow</p>
<p>concluded his first number, "Daybreak," which included the lyric "It's daybreak</p>
<p>/ Ain't no time to grieve!" The audience clapped and swayed, and Mr. Manilow</p>
<p>shouted, "Hello, New York!"</p>
<p> Mr. Manilow introduced his</p>
<p>next number as "I Am Your Child." He'd written it for his very first album, he</p>
<p>said, which he'd recorded "in 1821."</p>
<p> Again, the crowd cheered. Mr. Manilow beamed at the Carnegie Hall</p>
<p>crowd. "I'm getting a mitzvah!" he said .</p>
<p> -Frank DiGiacomo, Ian Blecher</p>
<p>&amp; Rebecca Traister </p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Life During Wartime</p>
<p>The Amazing Kreskin was running loose. On Nov. 5, the 66-year-old</p>
<p>mentalist had broken free from his Howard Rubenstein publicist and was zooming</p>
<p>around Suite 16, a nightclub on Eighth Avenue and 16th Street, greeting people</p>
<p>by either delivering a bone-bruising whack to their backs or shaking their</p>
<p>hands like he was working a rusty well pump.</p>
<p> "I think I need to read these ladies' minds!" Mr. Kreskin yelled</p>
<p>as he lurched toward a small group of attractive young women who were seated at</p>
<p>the back of the club. He was dressed to impress in a dark sport jacket over a</p>
<p>matching incandescent yellow silk shirt and tie. His graying hair was parted on</p>
<p>the side, and he wore big chunky glasses.</p>
<p> But then he looked over at The Transom, who was sitting at an</p>
<p>adjacent table, waiting to interview him.</p>
<p> "A little later," the mentalist said to the women as he made a</p>
<p>beeline for the tape recorder.</p>
<p> These are heady times for</p>
<p>entertainers like the Amazing Kreskin. For whatever reason-terrorism, anthrax</p>
<p>or general spinelessness-America's A-list celebrities just don't seem</p>
<p>interested in attending New York premieres, store openings and benefits.</p>
<p> But where Jennifer Lopez and Drew Barrymore see risk, hard-bitten</p>
<p>entertainers like Mr. Kreskin, Barry Manilow, Susan Lucci and others-who long</p>
<p>ago dropped off the A-list, or never made it in the first place-see</p>
<p>opportunity.</p>
<p> These show-business lifers</p>
<p>have found themselves in a city where, suddenly, free drinks with a man who</p>
<p>bills himself as "The Original Mastermind" qualified as an eminently coverable</p>
<p>media event in what was once the peak social month of November. And they</p>
<p>were more than willing to pick up the slack.</p>
<p> Their ideas about sleekness may be more at home in Vegas than</p>
<p>Hollywood, but the 24/7 brand of show business they practice requires an iron</p>
<p>constitution that comes in handy when the better-styled are heading for their</p>
<p>safe rooms. And in moments of crisis, their penchant for big, emotive numbers</p>
<p>and old-fashioned parlor tricks works like the entertainment equivalent of</p>
<p>comfort food.</p>
<p> On Nov. 5, Manhattan was like a big bowl of Kraft Macaroni &amp;</p>
<p>Cheese, with Mr. Kreskin plugging his new book, The Amazing Kreskin's Future with the Stars , at Suite 16 and Mr.</p>
<p>Manilow performing at both the Hammerstein Ballroom and Carnegie Hall with a</p>
<p>cast of characters that included Chevy Chase, Ms. Lucci and former porn star</p>
<p>Jack Wrangler.</p>
<p> Off the Wall</p>
<p> Over at Mr. Kreskin's party, the mentalist's publicists had taped</p>
<p>up a sheet of predictions that he had allegedly made on CNN at the beginning of</p>
<p>the year. Among them: "There will be at least two major airline tragedies by</p>
<p>September or early October," and that the Yankees would not win the World</p>
<p>Series.</p>
<p> For his book, Mr. Kreskin had</p>
<p>gotten some help on the prognostication front. The Amazing Kreskin's Future with the Stars attempts to ask a</p>
<p>number of celebrities and professionals, including actor Tom Hanks, former</p>
<p>special prosecutor Kenneth Starr, conductor Skitch Henderson and Son of Sam</p>
<p>killer David Berkowitz, to make predictions about the futures of their various</p>
<p>professions.</p>
<p> As a result, it seems destined to become a cult classic, along</p>
<p>the lines of Robert Evans' audio-book reading of his own memoir, The Kid Stays in the Picture.</p>
<p> In Mr. Kreskin's book, the comedian Roseanne is asked, "In the</p>
<p>next millennium, what will be the main TV-delivery mechanism?" Her reply: "Are</p>
<p>you on drugs?" Mr. Berkowitz predicts that tens of thousands of prison inmates</p>
<p>will "suddenly disappear" when God whisks them to heaven.</p>
<p> And Howard Stern forecasts that Mr. Kreskin "will shake hands so</p>
<p>hard with a biker that he will beat the crap out of you." That one seems</p>
<p>destined to come true.</p>
<p> The cover of the book proclaims Mr. Kreskin "the Nostradamus of</p>
<p>the 21st Century!" But when The Transom asked the mentalist if that was true,</p>
<p>he replied, "Yeah, but he was flaky."</p>
<p> Mr. Kreskin fidgeted in his seat.</p>
<p> So what were his predictions about the future of celebrity? we</p>
<p>asked.</p>
<p> "Can I be honest about that?" he replied. "I just toured Canada</p>
<p>last week for two weeks. Nobody pretty much cares about-what was his name?-Gary</p>
<p>Condit. Nobody cares about whether a scoutmaster is gay or not gay.</p>
<p> "Who in God's name!" the mentalist yelled, startling a group of</p>
<p>people at the bar. "People are going to start having priorities, maybe breaking</p>
<p>down fences around their houses, using porches, which were used in the days of</p>
<p>no air conditioning when people spent time outside and visited."</p>
<p> What?  </p>
<p> The mentalist seemed to sense that he had gone astray. "The</p>
<p>important thing of the celebrity will be going back to the Second World War and</p>
<p>how important the comedians, the performers that dealt with fantasy, took</p>
<p>people's minds."</p>
<p> Mr. Kreskin didn't seem to think that sentence needed correcting.</p>
<p> "I think the climate has changed," Mr. Kreskin said rapidly, as</p>
<p>someone put what looked like a caffeinated drink on the table in front of him.</p>
<p>"Celebrity is great, but in the whole scope of things, it has a different</p>
<p>position.</p>
<p> "My uncle was a fireman 18</p>
<p>years. And I have been to more fires on fire trucks as a kid. I know every</p>
<p>part. I could take you on a fire truck and say, 'Let's sit here,' and we'd</p>
<p>have, not a great time, but an exciting time."</p>
<p> Mr. Kreskin stopped himself. "I'm sorry if I get off the wall,</p>
<p>but that's my nature!" he said as he started whacking The Transom repeatedly on</p>
<p>the back.</p>
<p> So we asked Mr. Kreskin if he saw this moment, when a lot of</p>
<p>other celebrities were running scared, as a time to shine?</p>
<p> "It's ironic you bring up</p>
<p>what you said to me, because this has been discussed with me," Mr. Kreskin</p>
<p>said. He alluded to an "inspiring" but mysterious meeting with Secretary of</p>
<p>State Colin Powell.  I've got to do it in</p>
<p>my own way. I just can't cheapen-I don't want to take advantage of what's</p>
<p>happened. I want to make this a positive opportunity for all of us to be</p>
<p>greater than ever."</p>
<p> Manilow's Mitzvah</p>
<p> Further uptown, at the Hammerstein Ballroom, comedian Chevy Chase</p>
<p>was trying his best to make "WorldTrAID911"-a benefit for the children who lost</p>
<p>parents in the terrorist attack of Sept. 11-a positive experience for himself.</p>
<p> "That was the worst applause</p>
<p>I've ever gotten," Mr. Chase told the crowd, which was remarkably sparse given</p>
<p>the cause. (The top two levels of the Hammerstein Ballroom were almost</p>
<p>completely empty.) But the show went on, with Mr. Chase introducing the evening's</p>
<p>"surprise guest," Barry Manilow.</p>
<p> "I just thought I'd stop by to say hello," Mr. Manilow said as he</p>
<p>stood at his piano, his spiky, highlighted hair looking darker than usual. He</p>
<p>was late for another benefit at Carnegie Hall that night, but hell-when</p>
<p>newspapers are declaring that the age of irony is over, guys like Mr. Manilow</p>
<p>know they've got to make hay while the sun of sincerity shines.</p>
<p> "I'm going to do a song that speaks to me and moves me," Mr.</p>
<p>Manilow said. "I wrote this song for my very first album that I recorded, back</p>
<p>in 1821." The crowd tittered, then Mr. Manilow tinkled the ivories and sang "I</p>
<p>Am Your Child," followed by a rousing, a cappella version of "One Voice."</p>
<p> The crowd cheered. "I'm getting a mitzvah!" Mr. Manilow said.</p>
<p> Mr. Chase could have used some of Mr. Manilow's showbiz polish.</p>
<p>He did the same joke twice-"Where is the money going? It's going to me"-and</p>
<p>more than once mentioned the "stupid" questions that reporters had asked him</p>
<p>before the show.  ("Is it safe to laugh?"</p>
<p>was his favorite.) And on a number of occasions, after leaving his stack of</p>
<p>note cards backstage, he seemed lost.</p>
<p> The stately, plump Colin Quinn fared a little better. Referring</p>
<p>to the Northern Alliance rebels, Mr. Quinn said: "There's nothing like going</p>
<p>into battle with guys on horseback. We may lose the battle, but we hit the</p>
<p>Triple." But Mr. Quinn seemed to bog down with a joke that attempted to compare</p>
<p>New York fire chief Thomas von Essen to fashion designer Tommy Hilfiger.  "Whoops," he said mid-joke to the</p>
<p>firefighters in the audience. "You guys hate him. I'm not going to do that</p>
<p>one."</p>
<p> Mostly, things were pretty sincere. A children's choir did "New</p>
<p>York, New York."  Comedian Denis Leary,</p>
<p>who used to tell a great joke involving Mr. Manilow, a fan and bondage, thanked</p>
<p>the rescue workers in the audience.</p>
<p> But Jamie-Lynn Sigler, co-star of The Sopranos and a budding pop star, reenergized the evening with</p>
<p>her surreal, chest-heaving performance of her single, "Cry Baby." With one</p>
<p>shoulder and her midriff bare, Ms. Sigler gave a Minnelli-class performance of</p>
<p>the tune, singing: "You can cry cry, baby, all you want / You can try try, but</p>
<p>I'm gonna tell you to stop." </p>
<p> The Joy of the Prostate</p>
<p> Long before Mr. Manilow took the stage at Carnegie Hall, New York</p>
<p>Pops conductor and The Amazing Kreskin's</p>
<p>Future with the Stars contributor Skitch Henderson led the orchestra</p>
<p>through "That Old Black Magic," with All</p>
<p>My Children diva Susan Lucci on vocals.</p>
<p> Clad in a red reflective sheath that looked like it could survive</p>
<p>reentry into the earth's atmosphere, Ms. Lucci was giving her all at the Lauri</p>
<p>Strauss Leukemia Foundation Benefit Concert. Organized long before the events</p>
<p>of Sept. 11, the event, titled "Accentuate the Positive," was billed as a</p>
<p>tribute to the music of Johnny Mercer.</p>
<p> But for her next song, Ms. Lucci attempted something a little</p>
<p>more personal. "I know what you're wondering," she told the crowd. "You want to</p>
<p>know, 'How did it feel to be nominated for an Emmy all those times and never</p>
<p>win?'"</p>
<p> The white-haired crowd, many</p>
<p>of whom didn't seem well versed in the saga of Ms. Lucci's 19-year Emmy losing</p>
<p>streak, stared blankly-but, undeterred, the actress slipped into "Winning Isn't</p>
<p>Everything," a song written for her by Marvin Hamlisch, about her suffering at</p>
<p>the hands of the Academy of Television Arts &amp; Sciences.</p>
<p> "Me, I'm doing fine," she sang. "Seated on the aisle / I'll lose</p>
<p>and then I'll smile." And then, like some audio defibrillator, the Carnegie</p>
<p>Hall sound system cut to the actual voice clip of soap actor Shemar Moore</p>
<p>shrieking: "The streak is broken! The Emmy goes to Susan Lucci!"</p>
<p> The stunned crowd applauded politely as Ms. Lucci trundled</p>
<p>offstage-where, according to a witness, the actor John Davidson was running</p>
<p>around like a madman.</p>
<p> Next came Friars Club dean</p>
<p>Freddie Roman, who addressed "the young men in this room who do not yet know</p>
<p>the joy of the prostate." Most of the crowd seemed well acquainted with the</p>
<p>prostate and loved the joke.</p>
<p> "I pee like a stutterer</p>
<p>talks!" the Vulcanesque Mr. Roman blurted out to whooping laughter.</p>
<p> After Monica Mancini</p>
<p>performed "Moon River," the song that her father, Henry Mancini, co-wrote with</p>
<p>Mercer, Jack Wrangler, the former gay porn star and monologist, introduced his</p>
<p>77-year-old wife, Margaret Whiting, who sang "Hooray for Hollywood"-a song that</p>
<p>her father, Richard Whiting, co-wrote with Mercer. Ms. Whiting added a verse of</p>
<p>her own: "Hooray for royalties / It seems that money grows on trees."</p>
<p> When Mr. Manilow finally did take the stage around 10 p.m., the</p>
<p>Carnegie Hall crowd went nuts.</p>
<p> "We love you!" shouted one woman from the balcony as Mr. Manilow</p>
<p>concluded his first number, "Daybreak," which included the lyric "It's daybreak</p>
<p>/ Ain't no time to grieve!" The audience clapped and swayed, and Mr. Manilow</p>
<p>shouted, "Hello, New York!"</p>
<p> Mr. Manilow introduced his</p>
<p>next number as "I Am Your Child." He'd written it for his very first album, he</p>
<p>said, which he'd recorded "in 1821."</p>
<p> Again, the crowd cheered. Mr. Manilow beamed at the Carnegie Hall</p>
<p>crowd. "I'm getting a mitzvah!" he said .</p>
<p> -Frank DiGiacomo, Ian Blecher</p>
<p>&amp; Rebecca Traister </p>
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