DOLLY PARTON Birthday Appearance 9 to 5 The  Musical' in Chicago tonight 
DOLLY  PARTON, the 65-year-old American country  singer, is set to make a  birthday appearance at a showing of '9 to 5 The  Musical' in Chicago  tonight (19th January 2011) according to the  Chicago Sun Times. The  musical, which Parton wrote her first Broadway  score for, is currently  midway through a national tour.  
 
In  1980,  Dolly Parton starred on the big-screen movie 9 to 5.  The movie   celebrated its 30th anniversary in December.  In the movie, Dolly  Parton  plays one of three female employees of an egotistical, lying,  sexist,  hypocritical bigot boss.  The trio find a way to turn the  tables on him.  The movie has been made into a musical and is coming to  the Fabulous Fox Theatre in St. Louis, Missouri on February 8-20, 2011.
When  “9 to 5: The Musical,” the screen-to-stage Broadway musical  closely  based on the 1980 comedy starring Lily Tomlin, Jane Fonda and,  of  course, Parton herself appeared on Broadway in 2009, the producers  were  faced with the Dixie Stampede problem. The movie — with its beloved   title song about tumbling out of bed to face the quotidian drudgery of   office work — is inextricably linked with Parton, who wrote all the   music and lyrics in the score and whose personality imbues the entire   show.
Yet  Parton could not, for obvious reasons, be there in person. And  whereas  Parton's fans in Pigeon Forge might have been happy with a  video, that  was deemed a tad too tacky for Broadway.
Not  any more. The show did not do so well on Broadway. And the  national  touring production of “9 to 5” features Parton herself. A  lesson has  been learned from the Dixie Stampede.
“We  felt people really wanted to see Dolly,” said Mike Isaacson of  Fox  Theatricals, the producer of the show. And thus at the road version  of  “9 to 5: The Musical,” which opens in Chicago Wednesday night, Dolly   they will see.
“I  am the face of the clock.” said Parton, in a recent phone  interview.  “I talk about the 1970s over the vamp of ‘9 to 5.' I just  like being  able to welcome people to the show.”
A  beloved figure in industry circles — where her hard work, humility,   business smarts and multifarious creative talents are all widely   respected — Parton is known for her hands-on involvement. Isaacson said   Parton showed up for auditions for the tour, first terrifying the   actresses who were called back and then putting them at ease.
“She'd  just shout out ‘Hi, I'm Dolly,' said Isaacson, recreating the  moment  when Parton's hand rose and famous East Tennessee twang rang out   through the rehearsal space.
“I've  been working this ‘9 to 5' job for 30 years,” Patron said,  explaining  her presence. “I feel like I know these characters by heart.”
Parton,  of course, is one of those artists whom people think they  know but is,  in fact, difficult to categorize. “I really don't consider  this a  country musical, “she said of “9 to 5.” “The only country song in  it is  ‘Backwoods Barbie.' Sure, there's a little Dolly flavor to all my   music. But people had a preconceived notion that if I wrote it, it had   to be country.”
Those  were people, presumably, who were unaware that Whitney  Houston's  massive hit “I Will Always Love You” was penned and first  recorded by  Parton. Not only is country a malleable notion, but there is  plenty of  the big city in Parton.
The  touring production, Parton says, has a “cozier feeling” that the   Broadway prototype, which felt overblown and missing its roots. And the   show, which is directed by Jeff Calhoun and now stars Dee Hoty, no   longer has to worry about Broadway pundits. It is travelling to the   heartland where it is more likely to reach its natural audience.
But  if you talk to folks at the Dixie Stampede, and at Dollywood,  they'll  tell you that Dolly does show up quite regularly at those  locales. She  might not be able to be everywhere at once, but she knows  how to choose  her moments to appear in three dimensions.
Chicago  is a high-profile city — a second opening, really for “9 to  5.” The  Chicago Bears are currently sucking up a lot of oxygen in town  and  sometimes, video is not enough. Dolly Parton didn't get to be Dolly   Parton without an innate sense of those moments.
And  thus Wednesday night at the Bank of America, a red carpet will be   rolled out in front of the theater. An American icon is expected to   make her entrance and head backstage. And when the curtain rises, the   welcome will be personal.


