Published June 12, 2008 02:54 pm - Ann-Margret said she has many fond memories of her last on-stage engagement in Branson, but most of all she remembers the people. After a four-year absence, Ann-Margret has returned to the stage at the Andy Williams’ Moon River Theatre for a seven-week run with her friend of 46 years.
She's back in Branson: After four-year absence, entertainment icon Ann-Margret returns to the stage w/ Ann-Margret interview audio, video and official Web site
By Dave Woods
dwoods@joplinglobe.com
BRANSON, Mo. — Ann-Margret said she has many fond memories of her last on-stage engagement in Branson, but most of all she remembers the people.
“The people are extraordinary people,” she said. “They are the kind that are really hard-working, they never ask anyone for anything, they are patriotic and good people. That’s the way I was brought up. That’s the kind of people I happen to love.”
Now, after a four-year absence, Ann-Margret has returned to the stage at the Andy Williams’ Moon River Theatre for a seven-week run with her friend of 46 years.
“I was just talking to Andy, and I told him the things I was going to do,” the sexy sexagenarian said in an interview a few days before her new show opened last Friday. “There are only two things in the show now that I did four years ago. Everything else is new.”
In fact, she said, the opening number she sings — the 1967 Jackie Wilson hit “Higher and Higher” — is one she has never performed before. “I certainly hope I don’t mess it up,” she added with a sultry laugh.
New songs, old favorites
The show, she said, will offer a little something for everyone.
Williams gets the musical ball rolling, then introduces Ann-Margret. They welcome the audience with several upbeat numbers including the perennial Samba favorite, “Girl from Ipanema,” during which she undulates around the stage. Williams’ show includes several of his well-known standards including “Days of Wine and Roses,” “Call Me Irresponsible” and, of course, his signature song, “Moon River.”
Ann-Margret takes a short break while Williams entertains the crowd and then, after the intermission, she returns to the stage for her half of the show.
“My own show is usually an hour and 20 minutes, but since (Andy and I) are both doing shows, mine is going to be around 35 or 40 minutes,” she said.
During her half of the evening, Ann-Margret sings, dances, tells jokes and teases the front row with a purple feather boa while belting out the 1965 hit song “Rescue Me.”
Valsjobyn to Chicago
Ann-Margret was born Ann-Margret Olsson in April 1941 in the small village of Valsjobyn (population 150) in Sweden. At one point in the show, she recounts how her father had to leave his wife and 8-month-old daughter in Sweden to find work in the United States during World War II.