Home | Headlines | City | Sports | Showbiz | Editorial | Columns | Article | Horoscope | Archive | Contact Us

 

 Print This Page  Add To Favourite    

 

Miley Cyrus keeps kids, parents happy
Darryl Morden

LOS ANGELES—“Miley makes me smiley.” A handmade sign held high by a fan during Wednesday’s appearance by Hannah Montana, a.k.a. Miley Cyrus, at Staples Centre in downtown Los Angeles summed up all the screams and squeals during the night for the teen TV and pop star.
The sold-out audience of young teen, tween and toddler girls, along with some boys, was all smiles, dancing and singing along. Parents smiled too, watching their happy kids. And even some ushers were smiling. When’s the last time you saw that?
Cyrus’ hit Disney Channel show “Hannah Montana,” which co-stars her father, one-time country pinup Billy Ray Cyrus, is about a teen pop star coming to terms with her onstage and offstage personas, and this show did the same.
For the first half of the 80-minute concert, she was Hannah, wearing her blond wig and various outfits that included spangled tops over leggings. Just 14, she’s already a playful pro, singing mostly uptempo tunes including “Life’s What You Make It,” the spunky “Old Blue Jeans” and the rah-rah “Pumpin’ Up the Party.”
Anchored by chunky guitar or keyboard waves, the candy-coated pop-rock was hook-filled and probably reminded some moms and dads of the early ‘80s new wave sound and groups like the Go-Go’s.
The lighting, video screen images and costumes for the dancers matched the music — colourful with lots of green, red and pink, lots of pink — while the choreography was unpretentious and loose, never getting in the way of the songs.
Midway, for “We Got the Party,” Cyrus was joined by her opening act, Disney’s Jonas Brothers, who drew their own starry-eyed high-pitched screams. The trio played a couple of its generic Radio Disney hits while she transformed backstage into her “real” self, Miley.
Wearing a fashion-mall-punky outfit, her wavy brunette hair a touch wild, she beamed for bubblegum garage-rock of “Start All Over” and was silly sneer for “See You Again.” She mugged, stuck out her tongue and grinned throughout more costume changes and cutesy production numbers such as the salsa-dipped “Let’s Dance” and school spirit of “East Northumberland High.”

Copyright © 2007 The Daily Mail.  All rights reserved