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LINDBERG PHOTOGRAPHY

Left With Para Matchitt’s magnificent mural as a backdrop, Howard Morrison and Tina Cross launch into another number. Tina has taken New Zealand- and further afield- by storm over the past year with records like “Make Love to Me” and “Everybody Let’s Dance”, and with her cabaret and television appearances. Not bad for a twenty-year-old! Needless to say, her greatest fans are among young people- and even the very young, as we discovered at rehearsals for the show. The primary school children went wild when she appeared on stage. Tina’s rendition of “Everybody Let’s Dance” was enlivened by the sudden whirlwind appearance on stage of Joey Moana, a Ngaruawahia boy apparently made of rubber, clockwork and spring steel. He astonished everybody with his virtuoso demonstration of what disco dancing is really all about and then disappeared as quickly as he’d arrived. Kia ora Joey!

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/KAEA19791201.2.7.4

Bibliographic details

Kaea, Issue 1, 1 December 1979, Page 6

Word Count
146

LINDBERG PHOTOGRAPHY Left With Para Matchitt’s magnificent mural as a backdrop, Howard Morrison and Tina Cross launch into another number. Tina has taken New Zealand-and further afield-by storm over the past year with records like “Make Love to Me” and “Everybody Let’s Dance”, and with her cabaret and television appearances. Not bad for a twenty-year-old! Needless to say, her greatest fans are among young people-and even the very young, as we discovered at rehearsals for the show. The primary school children went wild when she appeared on stage. Tina’s rendition of “Everybody Let’s Dance” was enlivened by the sudden whirlwind appearance on stage of Joey Moana, a Ngaruawahia boy apparently made of rubber, clockwork and spring steel. He astonished everybody with his virtuoso demonstration of what disco dancing is really all about and then disappeared as quickly as he’d arrived. Kia ora Joey! Kaea, Issue 1, 1 December 1979, Page 6

LINDBERG PHOTOGRAPHY Left With Para Matchitt’s magnificent mural as a backdrop, Howard Morrison and Tina Cross launch into another number. Tina has taken New Zealand-and further afield-by storm over the past year with records like “Make Love to Me” and “Everybody Let’s Dance”, and with her cabaret and television appearances. Not bad for a twenty-year-old! Needless to say, her greatest fans are among young people-and even the very young, as we discovered at rehearsals for the show. The primary school children went wild when she appeared on stage. Tina’s rendition of “Everybody Let’s Dance” was enlivened by the sudden whirlwind appearance on stage of Joey Moana, a Ngaruawahia boy apparently made of rubber, clockwork and spring steel. He astonished everybody with his virtuoso demonstration of what disco dancing is really all about and then disappeared as quickly as he’d arrived. Kia ora Joey! Kaea, Issue 1, 1 December 1979, Page 6

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