Friday, December 22, 2006

Dreamgirls & The Supremes & Diana Ross .....



Supreme effort channels Motown's diva
'Dreamgirls' dazzles with its display of jaw-dropping costumes reminiscent of Diana Ross' glamour
By Tanika White
Sun reporter
Originally published December 21, 2006
Is Deena Jones Diana Ross? Are the Dreamettes really the Supremes?

Dreamgirls, the much-buzzed-about movie version of the 1981 hit Broadway musical, doesn't say so flat out.




But the costumes in the film (in theaters nationally Christmas Day) -- from the many extravagant gowns to those used for the transformation of the once-meek lead character into a fabulous, fashionable diva -- say it all too well.

"This is pure, unadulterated glamour," says Jacqui Stafford, executive style director for Shape magazine, about the outfits worn in the film by Deena Jones (Beyonce Knowles), Lorrell Robinson (Anika Noni Rose) and Effie White (Jennifer Hudson). "And in that era, the Supremes, they were the first girls to be really incredibly glamorous, to have a very stylish wardrobe."

Deena, Lorrell and Effie's girl group, the fictional Dreamettes, dazzle in the film, wearing jaw-dropping numbers in rich jewel tones and sparkling metallics -- glittering, body-hugging gowns and cocktail dresses in shades of ruby, turquoise, mother of pearl and aquamarine.

In a memorable scene at the end of the movie, the group performs onstage in elaborate gowns with heavy boning and chain mail formed from platinum sequins. The dresses are so tricked out that each weighed 15 pounds.

Such intricacy and sophistication is not just reminiscent of the Supremes; it was the Supremes.

"Even today, the Supremes gowns are legendary," says Tom Ingrassia, a pop music/culture historian who specializes in Motown's impact on society in the 1960s. "The gowns became part of the image and part of the whole package."

Wardrobe credits for the film, which spans 13 years in the lives of the characters, go to Sharen Davis, whose work designing costumes for the movie Ray earned her an Oscar nomination.

For Dreamgirls, Davis combed through archives of photographs, old issues of magazines such as Ebony and Life, and spent hours viewing shows such as American Bandstand for footage from the Motown era.

In a Paramount-distributed production booklet about the film, the studio says Davis' challenge was "to produce clothes that would evoke a sense of period, but not exist merely as reproductions of the clothing of the '60s and '70s eras."

But some ardent students of that time period say the Supremes' famous glamour clearly influenced Davis -- in a big way.

"It seems to me that the producers of the Broadway show really went out of their way to say that this really was not the story of the Supremes, that it was really a generic story about the era, about girl groups and black performers in general. The film version seems to be going in just the opposite direction," says Ingrassia. "There are so many direct connections that make it very obvious. And one of them is some of the costumes are direct knockoffs of actual costumes that the Supremes wore in the '60s. When I look at the clips I've seen of the movie, and the stills, they are dead on with the look and the feel of the era from a fashion point of view."

Ingrassia says female groups that predated the Supremes -- such as the Marvelettes, the Chantelles and the Shirelles -- were elegantly turned out but fairly plain.

"They weren't wearing cocktail dresses or sequin gowns. Patti LaBelle and the Bluebells usually performed on stage wearing bell-bottom pants. The Shirelles wore just very basic black dresses," Ingrassia says.

But it was clear after the Supremes' early years -- of homemade frocks and off-the-rack dresses -- that Ross and her group were aiming higher.

"As the popularity of the group skyrocketed, they started wearing designed gowns, gowns designed by Michael Travis and Bob Mackie," says Ingrassia. "They were in head-to-toe sequins, very glamorous. That was what set the Supremes apart from the other girl groups of the era. They went on stage dressed to the nines, and that's what fans came to expect."

As Dreamgirls moves into the 1970s, it becomes especially clear -- through fashion as well as other cues -- that Ross is the inspiration for Knowles' Deena.

A brief fashion montage of Deena -- of beautifully backlit photos on a wall -- is reminiscent of a similar one in Mahogany, the 1975 movie starring Ross and Billy Dee Williams. Mahogany was produced by Ross' Svengali at the time, Motown founder Berry Gordy, who was clearly the inspiration for Curtis Taylor Jr., Jamie Foxx's character in Dreamgirls.

Ross, who designed many of her own costumes in Mahogany, was the epitome of black glamour in the 1970s. And it's apparent that the costume designers for Dreamgirls used the Motown diva as the style template for Knowles' character.

In Deena's fashion sequence, her makeup (the heavy lashes, the bold eye shadows) and hair (the mushroom Afro, the pretzel braids) mirror Ross' classic look in Mahogany.

"Diana was very chic," says Jackie Rogers, a New York-based couture designer who made many dresses for Ross in the 1970s. "She's very knowledgeable about clothes. She's got more style than any of those girls walking around who had stylists. She didn't need a stylist. She knew what to wear."

The ever-confident Ross was incredibly tiny, but her expertly made clothes fit her in a way that was sexy and sophisticated. But women need not be Ross' size, or Knowles' even, to wear Supremes-style dresses, fashion experts say.

"The great thing about the movie is that it shows you don't have to be skinny or starve yourself to wear a glamorous, form-fitting dress," says Stafford, of Shape. "Jennifer Hudson will never be a size 0, but she is easily as gorgeous as the other girls in the show because she loves her curves and that works for her.

"I think this movie will hopefully herald the return to glamour," Stafford continues. "It's beautiful to be feminine, it's beautiful to show your curves, it's beautiful to show them off in a sexy form-fitting dress. It's not about being safe. It's about loving your body. So wear that dress. Own it. Love it."

tanika.white@baltsun.com
Sun Pop Music Critic Rashod D. Ollison contributed to this article.

Tuesday, December 19, 2006

Diana Ross shopping Ralphs


Last night while Henry was doing his grocery shopping, he noticed one of the great Divas of all time. Diana Ross! He captured this amazing photograph of her at the check out counter at Ralph’s. Yes, she looks a bit deshelved, but she is still a class act. Just got off the phone with our London office and they are sure that several of the daily papers will pick up on the photo. The recent release of Dream Girls and her new upcomming album also make this iconic image newsworthly.

More pictures!!

Monday, December 18, 2006

Waking the Dreamgirls: The Complete Motown Press Releases, 1964-1966.

Waking the Dreamgirls: The Complete Motown Press Releases, 1964-1966.

Waking the Dreamgirls: The Complete Motown Press Releases, 1964-1966. Compiled by Al Abrams, the Motown publicist who originally crafted the releases, the book features a foreword by Mary Wilson, one of the original Supremes.

The book chronicles the cultural transition of the Detroit-based Motown Sound from its roots in urban soul music through its breakthrough as The Sound of Young America. It is a story that closely parallels the rise and emergence of the civil rights movement in the United States. The music of Tamla-Motown founder Berry Gordy, Jr. broke generations of racial barriers, and every victory was eagerly reported to the media by his press man Abrams.

Any Motown fan who has wondered when the Supremes taped a Shindig TV show, or had a Number One record in Singapore or played the Copa in New York will find all the answers here – and more. It is a treasure trove of trivia – and facts, covering not only the Supremes but the entire Motown family of artists.

Smokey Robinson and the Miracles, Martha and the Vandellas, the Four Tops, Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye, the Temptations are just some of the Motown legends whose career moves you’ll find reported here in the era before the Internet and cable network shoes such as E! provided celebrity news to eager fans.

The book reproduces all of the original press releases as they were issued. They are copied from the only set in existence – that in the author’s Motown archives held at the University of Michigan’s Bentley Historical Library in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

Typed and crudely mimeographed, they are presented un-retouched, with typos, sometimes strange syntax and even bad puns. If the news was truly breaking, the press releases went out as “Deliver, do not phone” Western Union telegrams.

Barbara Holliday, a veteran Detroit Free Press reporter, once wrote of Abrams’ press releases, “This is the rhetoric of Al Abrams … the baroque but amazingly effective approach (through which) Abrams has the knack for making the unlikely possible.”

Certainly there has never been another PR campaign like this one – and because the world has changed, there will never be one like it again.

The book also contains many hitherto unpublished Motown artist biographies, compiled by Abrams for the use of the media, as well as rare newspaper stories generated by the press releases.

Motown in those days was said to be a factory turning out hit records. Abrams had his own assembly line, sometimes issuing three different news releases on the same day.

The book is a useful addition to the library of anyone who practices the art of publicity.

Abrams, who became the first employee of Motown in May, 1959, is completing his Motown memoirs, to be published under the title of Hype. His planned Broadway musical, Hitsville USA, has been temporarily sidelined because the widely announced funding for the project never materialized.

Bank House Books is the world’s foremost publisher of Motown-themed books.

The book sells for $30 in the US and £15 in the UK. You can also view the dust jacket at

Wednesday, December 13, 2006

DreamGirls singing dance versions


A new concept CD featuring real-life DreamGirls singing dance versions of key tracks from the show/movie.

The website is in development, not ready for primetime, but you all are welcome to check it out. The cover art is in draft form,(the cover will definitely have to be artwork). There can and will be pix inside ....

Clips [visual and soundwise will be added]. The videographer is putting together highlights of studio sessions to date .... and also snaps from same.

http://www.dreamgirlsdanceproject.com

It started a couple of months ago with Charlotte Crossley ...


Charlotte Crossley singing "And I'm Telling You"

More news ....


In 1984, when Dreamgirls hit Los Angeles, I had a major 12" dance single hit with "One Night Only" on my label, Altair Records [distributed by Megatone Records]. Scherrie Payne, final lead singer of the Supremes [74-77], was the vocalist, and the Stars on Background were Cindy Birdsong [Supremes], Pat Hodges [Hodges, James & Smith], and Edna Wright [HoneyCone]. I have remixed the original master for today's dance market as well as remastered the original version, which will be released New Years Eve of this year promotionally and will be the centerpiece of the CD album DREAMGIRLS DANCE PROJECT. "One Night Only" sounded so good remastered that I was inspired to find more real DreamGirls and record my favorite songs from the show, all in dance format. The results so far are beyond my expectations and I think will be a fun listening [and dancing] experience for many DREAMGIRLS fans!

www.scherriepayne.com

Original 'Dreamgirl' Diana Ross Plots Return





NEW YORK (December 13, 2006) – The original ‘Dreamgirl,' Diana Ross is gearing up to release a new studio album I Love You, January 16.

Her first artist album since 1999, Ross recruited a host of former producers to work on the new album including Marylata E. Jacob, Peter Asher (of Peter & Gordon) and Steve Tyrell. The fourteen-track effort was recorded in studios in New York, Los Angeles and London using a host of instrumentalists and vocalists.

"When I was in the studio, sharing these songs, I was filled with strong emotion," the singer said in a statement. "These songs, these singers, these musicians and all my fans are a gift of love to me."

Ross sang a number of covers for the record including the Burt Bacharach and Hal David standard "The Look of Love," Paul McCartney's "I Will," The Drifters "This Magic Moment" and "To Be Loved," penned by Berry Gordy Jr. "What About Love," which was written for Oprah Winfrey's stage production of "The Color Purple," is also on the upcoming album.



Photo: C. Randee St. Nicholas/EMI



"We wanted to create the quintessential album to be played at celebrations of love and life: weddings, family gatherings, intimate moments," Jacob said. "I Love You is Diana's personal offering to honor these celebrations of love, from the glance of your first true love, through the joy of children, and love everlasting."

Famed photographer Herb Ritts, Douglas Kirland and director Randee St. Nicholas took a number of images of the legend, which make up the CD booklet. The deluxe edition of the effort features a DVD with a photo gallery and a behind the scenes look at the making of I Love You.

The 'Dreamgirls' Get A Supreme Surprise


It was a dream come true for the cast of “Dreamgirls” Monday night, as Beyoncé, Jennifer Hudson, Jamie Foxx and Eddie Murphy encountered a Supreme surprise on the red carpet: one of the original Supremes, Mary Wilson.

As the all-star ensemble hit the L.A. red carpet alongside fellow A-listers including Teri Hatcher, Dr. McSteamy, Shirley MacLaine, Snoop Dogg, Vivica A. Fox, Paula Abdul and Randy Jackson, they had no idea “Extra” was about to unleash our very own secret weapon.

Wilson, who is enjoying a resurgence in fame thanks to the DVD, “Reflections: The Definitive Performances,” was part of the legendary group whose story loosely shaped the “Dreamgirls” script.

When our “Extra” special correspondent stepped out on our behalf, she herself created a photo frenzy and left the “Dreamgirls” cast in utter disbelief.

“This is all very surreal to me,” Beyoncé admitted. “If it wasn't for you and The Supremes, Destiny's Child, well, everyone, we wouldn't have had the success that we've had.”

Even Snoop Dogg was in musical awe over the legend. “It’s a beautiful thing to be in your presence, baby,” the rapper admitted.

Speaking of presence, Hollywood was well represented on Monday night’s “Dreamgirls” red carpet.

From Teri Hatcher’s sing-along to “American Idol” judges Paula and Randy, who came out to praise Jennifer Hudson, it was a night to remember.

“I'm really proud,” Randy said of Hudson, who was eliminated from “Idol.” I'm really proud that she kept her nose down, kept pushing.”

“I just believe in myself and I held onto my dream,” Hudson revealed.

Meanwhile, the dream may continue for the cast of “Dreamgirls,” as buzz mounts that they could be picking up a few golden trophies this awards season.

“I’m so nervous this week,” Jennifer continued. “The pressure is on.”

So where can we find Jamie Foxx Thursday morning for the Golden Globe nominations?

“I’m going to be at your crib,” he joked with Mary. “Holler at me!”

Judge “Dreamgirls” for yourself when the film opens everywhere Christmas Day.

Singer says she has no gripes with Diana Ross....


Singer says she has no gripes with Diana Ross, Jennifer Hudson; trek to start end of April.

Beyoncé fans who have believed chatter that she's feuding with Diana Ross over "Dreamgirls" are about to get a wake-up call: Knowles says there is no truth to the rumors.

"I actually spoke to her at a Clive Davis party," Knowles said to a roomful of reporters earlier this month while promoting the upcoming film. "She was so nice. And it made me very happy because I respect her and I want her to be happy."

In "Dreamgirls," Knowles plays Deena, lead singer of a fictional '60s trio called the Dreams (see "Jamie Foxx Raves About Beyonce, Ribs Eddie Murphy At 'Dreamgirls' Event" and "Beyonce Slimming Down And 'Completely Becoming Deena' "). The story spans several years, and audiences get to see each woman's plight as the group rises to fame. The movie is based on the play of the same name that opened in 1981, and to this day, there are still rumors that the characters were inspired by Diana Ross & the Supremes.

"Deena is not Diana Ross," Knowles clarified. "It was very clear that a lot of the story lines never happened to Diana. I kind of borrowed some of her posture and makeup, but it stops there. She's definitely stronger and has a different story."

In recent weeks, reports have swirled that Ross has taken offense to the movie and is even protesting its release. But the veteran singer has not come out publicly and addressed the star-studded project, which hits L.A. and New York in limited release Friday and opens nationwide Christmas Day. Ross' camp was unable for comment as of press time.

"I would hope she wasn't," Knowles answered when asked about rumors that Ross was upset over the film. "I love her. I think she's amazingly talented. I hope she enjoys the movie."

While pumping up the flick, Knowles also shot down talk that she didn't get along with co-star Jennifer Hudson because of jealousy over the newcomer having the meatier role in the film. Hudson has been receiving a myriad of accolades for her portrayal of Effie White (see "Jennifer Hudson's 'Dream' Is Reality: R&B Album, Starring With Beyonce, Jamie Foxx").

"I didn't have the part with the most drama, I was fine with that," Knowles clarified. "I'm not doing this to become a star or prove that I can sing. I've already won nine Grammys and everyone knows that I can sing. I did this mainly to know I can act, to know myself and show everyone else that I could. I'm extremely happy with the movie. I'm extremely proud of Jennifer. I think she's incredible. It's so unfortunate that once again the media is starting things with women. ... You hear I'm mad. Why would I be mad? I'm a part of an Oscar-buzz-[worthy] movie.

"Why would I be mad at Jennifer?" she continued. "I can only imagine the pressure she had being a woman that's never had an album, never done a movie. When I told people I'm doing 'Dreamgirls,' they were like, 'That's good. Who's doing Effie? Is she singing "And I Am Telling You [I'm Not Going]" right?' ... That [song] is what the [production] is famous for, [and] she pulled it off. She's sweet, she incredible and I hope she maintains that same sweetness. ... She's gifted, and I hope she maintains that."

In fact, B says she would have been happy with any role she could get her hands on — she wanted to be part of the movie that badly. Knowles became familiar with the play 10 years ago as a teen and instantly fell in love with the story. She says the onetime Broadway musical was inspiration for some of the choreography and staging that Destiny's Child used over the years.

To show you how things come full circle, Knowles revealed that she first met with director Bill Condon while on the road with her group.

"He said, 'I'm not sure if you can play this part. I'm not sure if people will believe you as Deena when she's more plain and younger,' " she recalled. "I did a screen test. I found the ugliest wig I could find and put the thickest eyebrows on my eyes I could. I got the part. I was the first one cast. I knew this would be important, I knew this would be history. I knew Deena was not written as the strong powerhouse singer. She's actually not even the star of the movie — it's an ensemble cast — but I didn't care. I just wanted to be a part of something so wonderful, and I did it."

In the movie, Hudson has her crescendo scene when she sings "And I Am Telling You I'm Not Going," the epitome of a power ballad, made famous 25 years ago by Jennifer Holliday. Knowles gets her chance to sing out via the tune "Listen" — the scene comes toward the end of the movie, when Deena goes through a life change.

"Bill Condon suggested 'Listen,' " she said of the song, the only original one in the movie. "Actually, it was in the script I read. He felt the second half needed another song. ... It was exciting for me. ... It was important for Deena's character, because she was so controlled [throughout] the whole movie — so manipulated — and finally, when she stands up for herself, it's so effective. I love the record. I think it's something that's still relevant now. Everyone has a moment when they decide they're taking control of their life."

Offscreen, Knowles has another one of those empowering women anthems, "Irreplaceable," to her own name. The song is #1 on the Billboard Hot 100.

"I love 'Irreplaceable,' " she said. "I think it's important to have those songs. I've had so many people come up to me in tears saying, 'I experienced my first breakup. If it wasn't for the song, I wouldn't be strong enough to not call. I wouldn't know how much I'm worth.' I'm happy to be a part of that. I wrote 'Independent Women' and 'Bootylicious' and 'Survivor,' and it helped women with their self-esteem. I'm happy to continue to do that."

B and the girls are hitting the road next year, and she's taking her all-female band on tour this spring (see "Beyonce Asks Women To Battle Over Her For Backing-Band Roles"). They'll need a few suitcases, as the multitasking star plans to be out for a while.

"I go on tour the end of April until September," she divulged. "I love to tour. I love to perform every night. It's kinda like I get to be my own director and do my own production. It's exciting. I always try to find new dancers. I was given an opportunity and I like to give new people opportunity ... so I have auditions all across America. It'll be the same type of show: broken down with me singing, big production, and dancers and a band, the whole nine."

Knowles says there are currently no new movies on her horizon. She's waiting for producers to get a load of her chops in "Dreamgirls" first.

"After the movie comes out, I know [the] scripts [I'm offered] will change," she determined.

Friday, December 01, 2006

Tracee Ellis Ross daughter of Diana Ross



Actress Tracee Ellis Ross daughter of Diana Ross grocery shopping

'Dreamgirls' taps into the '60s girl-group zeitgeist


'Dreamgirls' taps into the '60s girl-group zeitgeist
Pic's music is conjured through a filter of Broadway-styled show tunes

By KEN KUBERNIK

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Supremes, the biggest girl group ever, provided the inspiration for 'Dreamgirls.'

In her memoir, "Dreamgirl -- My Life as a Supreme," Mary Wilson recalled the transformative experience of seeing a "new Broadway musical called 'Dreamgirls.'
"By the second act I was crying because while many of the incidents depicted in the play could have happened to any number of female singing groups, I knew in my heart that this story rang far truer than the producers could have imagined. There were bits and pieces of my life -- and the lives of my two best friends -- up there."

If Wilson saw her life and career unfold before her eyes, the "Dreamgirls" story follows a dramatic arc that has proved surprisingly universal in reflecting the girl-group craze of the '60s and the common linkage throughout: the controlling Svengali, the ego clashes, the breakout diva, the struggles with personal demons and the changing nature of a music business that left many out in the cold.

The Effie White and Deena Jones characters in "Dreamgirls" were inspired by the Supremes' Florence Ballard and Diana Ross, respectively, and the saga's impresario, Curtis Taylor Jr., might be viewed as an amalgam of Motown chief Berry Gordy Jr., record producer Phil Spector and other key '60s music kingpins. But the Broadway musical-turned-Paramount/DreamWorks release also, in a larger sense, reflects the enduring appeal of a moment in pop when comets, crickets and duck walks gave way to chiffon, crystal and the promise of Shangri-la.

Pop music has always had an address as well as an attitude. In the Jazz Age it was Tin Pan Alley. By 1960, it was 1619 Broadway in Manhattan -- the Brill Building -- and 2648 Grand Ave., Detroit, the home of Motown. They were song factories rolling out top-40 staples like Chevy Novas.

The birth of the teen girl market sent the post-Elvis-in-the-Army boy crooners into exile. With their first chart topper, "Will You Love Me Tomorrow," the Shirelles set the template in motion. "It had a profound, spiritual effect on me; it transcended sex, it had ... a sound," exclaims Steven Van Zandt, longtime guitarist for Bruce Springsteen, whose Sirius Satellite Network radio show "Little Steven's Underground Garage" spins a wealth of classic girl group A and B sides. "It was the arrangement, the production, the fact that great musicians were backing these graceful vocals. And it was one hit right after another; 'Soldier Boy,' c'mon, where do I sign up?"

This explosion of sentimentality and sass not only liberated its Revlon-eyed listeners, it was a get-out-of-hell card for young black women. In her liner notes to the Rhino box set "Girl Group Sounds, Lost and Found," writer Gerri Hirshey has Mary Wells of "My Guy" fame reveal the stark reality: "Until Motown in Detroit, there were three big careers for a black girl: babies, factories or day work. Period."

Soon, every church social, every bedroom, every high school bathroom resonated with girls harmonizing, searching for that felicitous marriage of pitch, blend and range. Even the Supremes, the most successful girl group ever, struggled mightily to find that winning combination. "Everyone at Motown was calling us the no-hit Supremes," Wilson says in the "Girl Group" liner notes. "We were the first girl group to sign with the label, but the last to get a hit record."

Heavenly singers & glittery gowns

Bill Condon, writer-director of the bigscreen "Dreamgirls," was one of those adolescents struck by the Supremes' alchemy of longing and heartbreak. "I was 8 years old, glued to my transistor radio, and I heard 'Where Did Our Love Go,'" he enthuses. "It changed me forever. I begged my father to take me to the Paramount Theater in Brooklyn to see the Supremes, around '63 or early '64. Anybody, black or white, could dance to it. And it sounded great on an AM radio."

If Motown coveted a suave, polished sound that appealed to crossover audiences -- a recurring motif in "Dreamgirls" -- with its roster of heavenly singers resplendent in glittering gowns, New York City countered with a one-two punch of edginess and insolence. "The Tycoon of Teen," Phil Spector, headed an all-star lineup of producer-writers who concocted "mini-operas for the kiddies." They embraced the innocence and anguish of the wonder years and served them up in three-minute passion plays, replete with character, conflict and setting.

Under the stewardship of George "Shadow" Morton, the Shangri-las, four looking-for-trouble teens from Queens, ran the table in 1965 with "Leader of the Pack," "Remember (Walking in the Sand)" and "Out in the Streets."

Miriam Linna, co-owner of Norton Records, a Brooklyn-based label long associated with artists of the '50s and '60s, recalls the period with a girlish glee. "The early rock 'n' rollers all wore their hearts on their sleeves; and that made them great boyfriend material," she says. "But they didn't sing about me, my loneliness, my sense that no one understood me. And then came the girls, and they're singing about what I'm feelin' right now! And it was fashion, it was style. A group like the Shangri-las was way ahead of their time. They were finally in control."

If just a few years earlier the Shirelles lovingly cooed "Dedicated to the One I Love," Lesley Gore was now announcing that "You Don't Own Me." With the likes of Quincy Jones behind the board, arranger extraordinaire Jack Nitzsche and a minyan of precocious tunesmiths lurking in the rabbit warrens of the Brill on Broadway, it was "a renaissance period that will never be repeated again," according to Van Zandt. "The best music being made was also the most popular. It was a convergence of opposing disciplines -- hustlers who knew how to make great records."

Motown in spirit

In "Dreamgirls," the music is conjured through a filter of Broadway-styled show tunes -- originally penned by composer Henry Krieger and lyricist Tom Eyen, with additional songs written for the movie -- that not only attempt to capture the zeitgeist of girl-group glory but, in a sense, the whole spectrum of black music in the '60s as it hurtles headlong into the disco era. Beyond the Supremes, "Dreamgirls" the movie offers, at least in spirit, flashes of James Brown, Aretha Franklin, Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell, and the Jackson 5.

Krieger will be the first to admit that the music for "Dreamgirls" is more Motown in spirit than style. "I defy anyone to find anything that sounds like Motown in my show," says the composer. "They're theatrical, character-driven songs. (The music) makes you think of a Motown song -- the technicality of the music. It evokes the period."

Looking back, it is surprising how uninterested Hollywood has been in exploring the cherishable girl-group legacy as fodder for films. Just one title, a mid-'70s release, "Sparkle," starring Irene Cara and featuring the music of Curtis Mayfield, authentically captured the milieu. Something of a cult favorite today, "Sparkle" also provided the storyboard for an En Vogue video.

With the arrival of "Dreamgirls," however, the prospect of renewed interest in this fabled past looms tantalizingly near. But, like the songs themselves, it may well be a bittersweet symphony. The artists rarely heard the cha-ching of royalties or enjoyed the respect of their peers. According to Hirshey, "Martha Reeves told me that the Marvelettes name was lost one night in a poker game between Motown founder Berry Gordy and his staffers. 'That's how easily your life can get tossed from one place to another,' she said."

Andrew Loog Oldham, legendary record producer, author, and host of his own program on satellite radio, was there at the beginning and offers this rueful benediction:

"The memories of our time period remain great and the audio recalls of what our life was about: Dusty Springfield, Lesley Gore, the Shangri-las, the Ronettes, the Crystals, Darlene Love. It's a shame that their collective royalties might just cover a Paris Hilton shopping spree. But if the aforementioned ladies had fun getting the job done, they got the only blessing that's secure."