No kidding. I didn't know that. I loved her, but she was a hard taskmaster. I remember the club used to go dark, and you'd only hear my voice saying, "Ladies and gentlemen, Annie's Room is proud to present Dakota Staton." She called me back into her dressing room and gave me hell. She said, "I am not Dakota Staton. I am recording artist" blah blah blah blah blah, the great, the magnificent, the wonderful Dakota Staton. I said okay. She said, "Do it for me." I said, "What?" I said, "No, I know how to do it. I'll do it."Another one who did that was Anita O'Day. She said, "Now" - she sat me down at a table at rehearsal, and she said, "Now, how do you introduce me?" I said, "Well, the lights go dark, and you just hear 'Ladies and gentlemen.' They know who they've come to see. So I just say, 'Anita O'Day'." "No. First of all, the band plays eight bars of Jordu. " [Ross sings the first phrase of the melody.] She said, "Then you come in, and you do it on the floor. You say, 'Ladies and Gentlemen, Annie's Room is proud and pleased to present" so-and-so recording star - whatever label it was - the great, the magnificent, Anita O'Day. So I said all right. She said, "Do it for me." I said, "What?" She said, "Show me. Tell me how you're going to introduce me." I said, "The lights go down, and I come out. The band plays eight bars of Jordu, and I say" blah blah blah blah blah blah dah. Okay. So it is packed, the club. The lights go down. I go on the floor. I do the whole thing. I say, "Anita O'Day." Nobody's there. I waited a while. I said, "Ladies and gentlemen, Miss Anita O'Day." Nothing. About five minutes later, she comes on, backing up, saying, "I'll see you tomorrow about four o'clock." Then she does her show. She was weird. Blossom was somewhere else. She - I was doing a t.v. show at the time, the David Frost t.v. show. So I was working hard. I get a phone call from a friend of Blossom's, an American lady, who said - because Blossom had taken time off. She had a cold or something like that - she said, "I think you better get Blossom back." I said, "Why?" She said, "She's having parties" and blah blah blah. So Sean called her, and he said, "Look.This is an emergency. You got to come. Annie is tired. She's been in the t.v. studios all day." So Blossom appears. She gets on the mic, and she says, "I came down here, because I heard this is an emergency. Some emergency." I thought, uh-oh. So I said, "I'd like to see Miss Dearie after the performance." I said to her, "Blossom, you're working for me. We're great friends. But you can't do that. You don't disrespect me in my own club." After that, we were okay. But I'll tell you, sometimes your friends can turn the other way when you're associated with them on a business level. But we had great fun. It was hell, because I had to be there every night, made up, dressed, to introduce the act. But that was fine. I didn't mind that. But every time that I thought, I'm going to cool it, somebody else would walk in the club and whoop, we'd be off again.