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Cher Concert Program 2002 Living Proof Farewell Tour 12” X 16” Book

$ 10.55

Availability: 88 in stock
  • Artist/Band: Cher

    Description

    Cher Concert Program 2002 Living Proof Farewell Tour 12” X 16” Good Condition. Comes from a pet free smoke-free home and has been kept in storage in a climate controlled moisture free environment for decades.
    This is a very cool highly illustrated large program with many pages going through not only the concert but Cher’s history. I only found very small blemishes one of them on the front cover there’s just a very mild blemish kind of crease near the binding and on the back cover in the same place there’s a couple of small creases near the binding but these are not highly noticeable and don’t affect the book in any way. I try to take a few pictures of the first several pages of the book And all the pages are as magnificent or better than the pictures I took. All together there are 40 pages within this book. Please see pictures for full details.
    Wher
    Let us not ramble through the usual Cher litany here: the chart-topping records
    the hit TV series, the acclaimed acting career, the Academy Award*, the endless
    covers of every magazine from Ms. and Cosmopolitan to Time and Newsweek and
    Vanity Fair. No. let us instead contemplate this extraordinary woman's ongoing
    status as an empress of popular culture, the incarnation of so many millions of
    people's dreams and aspirations.
    But we'll get to that. Right now, for those who may have been chained in a cave
    for the last five decades, here's the overview:
    It's the dawn of the Sixties. Shy, winsome teen Cherilyn LaPierre meets L.A.
    songwriter Sonny Bono, an associate of legendary record producer Phil Spector.
    Soon. Cher is singing backup on some of Spector's most indelible classics: the
    Crystals "Da Doo Ron Ron." the Ronettes' epochal "Be My Baby." the Righteous
    Brothers' "You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin'."
    the still-revered Yuletide album.
    "A Christmas Gift for You." (Cher's voice is so powerful, even at this youthful
    point, that she continually finds herself being shunted farther and farther back
    from the microphone.)
    Sonny and Cher become….. well, Sonny and Cher, scoring soundtrack of the
    Sixties hits like "Baby Don't Go." "The Beat Goes On." and the number-one
    smash. "I Got You Babe." (Many years later, the good-humored Cher will duet
    on this last tune with MTV's snotty cartoon duo. Beavis and Butt-head.) She
    also notches up solo hits: the unprecedented at the time divorce lament "You
    Better Sit Down. Kids." the million-selling "Bang Bang (My Baby Shot Me
    Down)." (the latter later covered by Frank Sinatra!).
    In the Seventies, she charts three number-ones on her own: "Gypsies. Tramps
    and Thieves.'
    "Half- Breed." "Dark Lady." Sonny and Cher launch a wise-cracking
    TV show. The Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour. Bob Mackie does Cher's way-over-
    the-top costumes: regulars include the young Steve Martin and Terri Carr. guests
    range from the Jackson Five to Ronald Reagan. The show is a big 1971-74 hit.
    Cher does Broadway in Come Back to the Five and Dime Jimmy Dean. Jimmy Dean.
    and then signs up for director Robert Altman's film version of the play. She
    makes her big breakthrough in Mike Nichols' 1983 nuke-scare thriller Silkwood
    (for which she's nominated for an Academy Award). Following the similarly
    acelaimed Mask (Bet Actress award. Cannes Film Festival), she finally wins
    An Oscar in 1087 for her ultra-lovable performance in the great romantic comed-
    Moonstruck, She jousts with Jack Nicholson in The Witches of Eastwick and stars
    as a footloose mom in the 1990 comedy Mennaids (which spins off another
    hit single, a cover of the old Betty Everett tune, "The Shoop Shoop Song*).
    Throughout this period, she's also racking up a series of rock hits: "I Found
    Someone." "We All Sleep Alone.'
    and the shout along anthem Il
    Could Turn back Time.'
    By 1091, Cher is - whew?- exhausted. She gears down for a side-trip
    mio
    work-out videos and infomercials, and in 1904 launches
    Sanctuary, a line of Gothic-styled home furnishings. People
    poke fun
    But Archilectural Digest is so impressed with her
    swank refurbishing of two homes in Miami and Aspen
    that
    the usually snooty magazine leatures them in
    two separate issue.
    an aPPreCIaTIOn b, KEATLODEA
    Refreshed and reinvigorated. Cher debuts as a director in 1996, with the hit HBO
    drama If These Walls Could Talk - the highest-rated original movie in HBO histo-
    Ty. In 1998, she unleashes the biggest-selling album of her career, the interna
    tional number-one smash Believe. (The title track tops the charts in 21 countries.
    including 4 weeks at number one in the US.)
    In 1999, there's an elegant "succes d'estime" with the Franco Zeffirelli film. Tea
    with Mussolini, in which Cher more than holds her own alongside such theatrical
    "grandes dames" as Joan Plowright, Judi Dench, and Maggie Smith.
    How are we to process all of this - this, shall we say. towering cornucopia of creative
    endeavor? And what are we to make of the beautiful, unstoppable high-school drop-
    out at the center of it all?
    I think it's clear by now that Cher's wildly idiosyncratic career resonates so deeply
    with her millions of admirers around the world - more deeply than many other
    icons of our time - because it so vividly illustrates the power of belief: belief in
    one's own dreams and most cherished desires. Cher's unending embrace of life's
    possibilities, even in the face of critical condescension and occasional indifference.
    has been…well, inspiring.
    People laughed at Sonny and Cher, with their weird fur vests and sometimes squeaky
    harmonies. (Sonny even released a Top-1o solo single in 1965 called "Laugh at Me.)
    But the laughter faded as their hits piled up.
    Some looked askance at The Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour - who was this dead-pan
    exotic stepping into the perky, white-bread waste-land of American TV? But Cher
    was funny in a new way, and enormously appealing to an audience starved for straight
    shooting wit and unabashed glamour - which Cher. of course, had in distinctive
    abundance. And she prevailed.
    There was much critical wincing when she launched a movie career t00 - was she
    kidding, or what? But her talent and intuitive skill (where did it come from?) were
    undeniable, and the critics soon found themselves dining on their detractions
    The hurdles seemed never to stop. Fashion arbiters sniped at her skin-baring.
    leather-laced late-Eighties hard- rock persona- but again, more hits. (And m any
    event, Cher's flamboyant sense of style has always transcended the mainstream
    fashion dictates of any particular era.) There was also much groaning when she
    suddenly side-tracked into the world of infomercials - huckster-ism! But everybedy
    takes a wrong turn occasionally. as we all well know. The important thing - and her
    audience applauded this - was that she weathered the opprobrium and stood ngh
    back up and moved on
    The most attractive aspect of Cher's long and always surprising career: I think has
    been her utter lack of naked show-biz ambition - that desperate. grasping hunger
    for continued acclaim that inevitably makes so many lesser stars seem so paelie
    Cher has always set herself out there. Sphint-like and imperturbable, doing whatcret
    she may want at any given time: the world, she seems to figure, can take it or lease
    it. Need I reiterate the world's many decisions in this regard?
    And now here she is, with another hit album in band hack on tour again. One last um
    Is this one of those David Bowie/Elton lohn "farewells
    - a sly bowing-out in antic
    pation of the money- minting comeback" that must surely follow just a sbort war
    down the road? Cher says no. And while she also says that she really is happieat!
    unstage, in front of an audience. I think anvone who's ever experienced the lone,
    blog of large-scale touring - the blur of surcessive cities, the procession of disa
    hotel rooms - can understand why she's probably serious about calling it quaile
    But is this the last we'll see of Cher? Our final glimpse of this inimitable figue
    director? Will she soon be fading from view? Can this really be goodbye
    YOU°TE KIDDING TIGHT?