From raunchy stage performer known for her ''Trash With Flash'' to dramatic actress to author, Bette Midler's versatility has yielded many triumphs and some magnificent failures, too. Here's a guide to help separate the thorns from The Rose.
ON RECORD
The Divine Miss M (1972)
Produced with help from Barry Manilow,
the album not only won her a Grammy as best new artist but
crystallized the Divine Miss M persona a lonely, misfit funny girl on
''Friends'' and the aching ''Delta Dawn,'' gleefully possessed by her
own gargantuan talent on the rambunctious ''Boogie Woogie Bugle
Boy.'' She may not always hit the notes, but she always hits on some
truth. A
Bette Midler (1973)
Her second album, which also went gold,
established her as the 1970s' premiere pop diva. She gives a nice,
boozy flow to ''Drinking Again'' and lets loose with a big-eyed
rendition of ''In the Mood.'' A
Songs of the New Depression (1976)
Sounds like Bette stayed out
too late at Studio 54. A disco version of ''Strangers in the Night''?
Yes, it was the '70s, but that's no excuse. D
Broken Blossom (1977)
She plumbs the depths of Eddy Arnold's
''You Don't Know Me,'' lifts ''La Vie en Rose'' from Edith Piaf, has
almost too much fun on Billy Joel's ''Say Goodbye to Hollywood,'' and
earns squatter's rights on every one. A
Thighs and Whispers(1979)
''Married Men'' with Luther Vandross on
background vocals became a Top 40 hit, but her rendition of James
Taylor's ''Millworker'' may be Midler's finest moment. A widowed mom
sits at her factory sewing machine ''waiting for a daydream to take me
through the morning.'' Her subtle inflections convey the quiet courage
that only comes from defeat. A
No Frills (1983)
She needed a hit after the movie Jinxed!, and
this spawned two: the harmony-rich ''Favorite Waste of Time'' and
''Beast of Burden,'' a good-natured ode to masochism by Mick Jagger
and Keith Richards. B
Mud Will Be Flung Tonight(1985)
Watching Midler in concert, you
always want still more Sophie Tucker jokes, more patter, more spicy
observations on celebrity life. This recording of her stand-up act
delivers. On Prince: ''When there's a sex symbol, I like to know the
sex of the symbol.'' A
Some People's Lives (1990)
Relaxed and in control, Midler shakes
her head at war and famine in the enigmatic hit ''From a Distance'' and
tears you apart with ''Since You Stayed Here'' and ''He Was Too Good to
Me.'' She doesn't wrap herself up in the emotion of a song the way she
used to, melody be hanged. The sound of a bad girl moving gracefully
into middle age, Lives received four Grammy nominations. B+
For the Boys (1991)
We've come to expect Bette to reinvent the
'40s big-band standards; on this soundtrack album she just seems
respectful. But there are some thrilling vocal gymnastics on ''Stuff
Like That There'' and a beautifully understated version of the
Beatles' ''In My Life.'' B
IN MOVIES
The Rose (1979)
As a ferocious rock star burning out fast,
Midler lets sad glimmers of light peek through a fog of drugs, booze,
anger, and frustration. The performance, which earned her an Oscar
nomination, is one of the most audacious screen debuts in history. ASoundtrack album: A-
Jinxed! (1982)
The name says it all. A lounge singer (Midler)
and her lover (Ken Wahl) want to bump off her husband (Rip Torn), but
the performers' efforts were ruined by feuds between them and
director Don Siegel. C-
Down and Out of Beverly Hills(1986)
As a pampered bourgeoise in
Paul Mazursky's film, Midler goes a little crazy she swoons over a
bum (Nick Nolte) whom her nervous husband (Richard Dreyfuss) saves
from suicide but her rowdiness is more restrained and riper than
usual. A
Ruthless People (1986)
Midler brings the housewife-from-hell to
its zenith as a brutal Bel Air heiress who is kidnapped her nasty
little husband, Danny DeVito, doesn't care and threatens her sweet,
well-meaning kidnappers (Judge Reinhold and Helen Slater) with
''chain-saw enemas.'' Great fun Dynasty set in Pee-wee's Playhouse. B+
Outrageous Fortune (1987)
Most Midler movies are one-woman
shows. But in this buddy movie, she and Shelley Long as zany
actresses trying to track down the missing lover they unwittingly
shared have a bouncy comic chemistry. B
Big Business (1988)
Standard mistaken-identity stuff but Midler
has never been better. She and Lily Tomlin play two sets of twins,
mismatched at birth, who all end up at the Plaza Hotel. ''Chaplin did
this sort of thing,'' wrote Pauline Kael, impressively, ''and he didn't
do it better.'' B
Beaches (1988)
Love Story in drag. Midler is a bigger-than-life
Jewish star. Barbara Hershey is an uptight WASP who gets heart
disease and teaches lifelong friend Midler to be a better person. C Soundtrack album: C-
Stella (1990)
What ever was she thinking? Midler tries way too
hard to outdo Barbara Stanwyck's 1937 extravagant, weepy Stella
Dallas, about a poor woman who gives up her little girl. Let's not
talk about it. F
Scenes From a Mall (1991)
For fans of Midler and Woody Allen,
who play a wealthy L.A. couple whose marriage comes undone during a
day at the mall, this supposed comedy is a disappointment. Director
Paul Mazursky is on his home turf, but his mind is somewhere else. C-
ON VIDEO
The Bette Midler Show (1976)
She'd just come off a smash
Broadway show, Clams on the Half Shell, when this concert was filmed
(and recorded for the Live at Last double album). Backed by her trio,
the Harlettes, doughy-faced Midler sings about getting the clap in
Rio, jiggles around in outrageous bloomers, and tells a sincere,
poignant story about a woman walking down the street with a fried egg
on her head. When she says, ''This is really a show about shoes,'' it
actually makes sense. A Live At Last: A
Divine Madness! (1980)
And now for the moment you've all been
waiting for Midler in that mermaid costume, propelling around in a
wheelchair, sprouting legs (''Wait'll Jerry Lewis hears about this!''),
and zipping offstage whilst belting out the last note of ''My Way.''
The rest of the time, her tiny high-heeled feet flit like
hummingbird's wings as she tells jokes and sings rock ballads. It's
uneven. But it's a good ''Auld Lang Syne'' to the '70s. B+ Soundtrack
album: B
Art or Bust (1984)
She starts by singing the definitive
version of ''Don't Look Down'' in a big, boxy, red minidress, then
out comes the mermaid costume again. Ignore the Devoesque
choreography and savor her singing ''Chattanooga Choo Choo'' in a New
York bathhouse, circa 1971, and flirting with the audience during a
United Jewish Appeal Telethon: ''Thank you, thank you, and kiss my
tuchis.'' B
IN PRINT
View From a Broad (1980)
With this memoir of her 1979 world tour
through England, France, Germany, and Australia (her ''monumental
schlepp''), Midler proves herself as innovative a writer as she is a
performer. Her most inspired words are the imaginary headlines she
prints when she recounts her many brushes with death, each with the
subhead, ''Began Career at Continental Baths.'' A
The Saga of Baby Divine (1983)
Under the cover of this lavishly
illustrated best-selling children's book, Midler tells in verse what
is presumably her own story Baby Divine enters the world with
henna-red hair and high heels, crying ''More,'' dances out of her
cradle, wrestles with the monster Anxiety, and learns to love life.
A


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