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Wall Street Journal

Diversions

'Live, From Your Living Room ...'
Big Names Now Do Parties

By LISA GUBERNICK
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Strobe lights flash across the stage as the evening's main attraction, singer Tom Jones, emerges in his signature French-cuffed shirt and skintight pants. Flanked by his band, Mr. Jones pulls a woman from the crowd and does the bump with her. The audience goes wild.

Is this Caesar's Palace? Madison Square Garden? The Hollywood Bowl? No, it's the 50th birthday party of Dee Dee Anderson of Corona del Mar, Calif. "It was incredible," says Brandy Valdez, one of Mrs. Anderson's daughters, who helped throw the party. "Mom totally savored the moment."

Here's the latest evidence the economy is rockin':  Party givers across the country, people whose closest link to the music business is listening to the radio, are hiring celebrity performers to entertain their guests. Costs range from as low as $7,500 for graying headliners such as '60s rockers Gary Lewis and the Playboys, to around $50,000 for rhythm-and-blues diva Gladys Knight, to upward of $500,000 for Whitney Houston and Elton John. An Affordable Extravagance.

Though an extravagance by any definition, some performers actually can be booked for less than the price of a family trip to Europe. Like Mr. Lewis, Mark Lindsay, a big name from the '60s who hit the top of the charts with Paul Revere and the Raiders, charges less than $10,000 for some events. Susan Pearlstine Foster and her husband, who own a beer distributorship in Charleston, S.C., hired the Four Tops for their 15th wedding anniversary last year for $25,000 plus travel fees. "When we heard the price, we thought maybe we should rethink and get a local zydeco band," says Ms. Pearlstine Foster. "Then we figured it wasn't so bad. They were, after all, the thing that was going to make everyone show up."

While megawatt stars such as Elton John rarely do more than half a dozen private dates a year, some acts -- particularly those whose salad days predate disco -- fill as much as 30% of their tour schedules with corporate events and other parties.  Anything that generates income is a good thing," says Mr. Lewis of Gary Lewis and the Playboys, who had their first big hit, "This Diamond Ring," back in 1964. The group still performs 125 dates a year, and as many as 25 are parties. "Doing private gigs keeps us alive," Mr. Lewis says.

Keep in mind that the performer's fee isn't the only cost. You will be expected to cover travel, lodging and production fees such as lighting and sound costs -- all of which can total as much as half of the original tab. Contract riders can cover everything from the number of hotel rooms required, to the kind of food the artists must be served, to the precise length of the performance.

When You Wish Upon a Star

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