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New
York Newsday
October 22, 2002
By Ellen Mitchell
A
YEARNING TO SING:
Daughter
gives mom a chance to belt out a lifelong dream
When
Sally Miller strutted her stuff before a packed house the other
night, she showed a lot of rhinestones, a lot of leg and a lot of
guts. Not bad for a 76-year-old, three-time cancer survivor.
Miller, who for three-quarters
of a century confined most of her singing to the shower, belted
out a red-hot medley of Sophie Tucker torch songs. She had the audience
cheering and foot-stomping to such old-time favorites as "Some
of These Days" and "After You've Gone."
"I just let it
all hang out," said Miller of her newfound voice. "I decided
if I sing softly people will conclude, 'She can't do this,' but
if I'm loud they'll think, 'Oh, maybe she's good.'"
Sally Miller, a woman
for whom pessimism is not an option, owes her late-in-life start
in "show biz" to her daughter.
"Last year, when
things were going really badly, I wanted to do something for my
parents' 55th anniversary, explained Miller's daughter Deborah Burke.
At the time Miller was undergoing chemotherapy for her third battle
with cancer in 30 years.
What Burke did was ask
her parents, Sally, 76, and Merle, 81, of Huntington Station, what
hidden desires they may have harbored for years and never had opportunity
to achieve. Merle Miller said he wished he'd played for the Mets,
among other things. Burke arranged for him to receive an authentic
Mets uniform with his name on the back and a sweatshirt signed by
then-manager Bobby Valentine. He said he still feels he could have
been a help to the team in their just-passed sorry season. Sally
Miller confessed she'd always had a hankering to sing ... in public.
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