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Night of guise and dolls

Hair, fashion and frenzy shared equal billing with music for the tweens at last night's Hannah Montana show

January 09, 2008|By Abigail Tucker , Sun Reporter

This was no ordinary Tuesday afternoon. Indoor soccer games were skipped and piano lessons forsaken. Megan Foard of Forest Hill apologized in advance to her pony, A.J., for bowing out of their regular after-school ride.

"He was cool with it, though," the 13-year-old said.

And why wouldn't he be? Megan and her friends had to-die-for concert tickets - for Hannah Montana, who played at the 1st Mariner Arena last night before a sold-out crowd of screaming tweens. Thousands of lucky girls, and not a few boys, scampered home from school to prepare for the arrival of the 15-year-old singer-cum-actress, whose real name is Miley Cyrus, and who holds the youthful audience in the palm of her pretty hand.

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But for Foard and her pals, the weeks of anticipation, antsiness and outfit-planning leading up to the concert were perhaps the sweetest part of all. Getting ready in the hours just before the 7 p.m. show, the girls were a little like Miley herself, who - on her top-rated Disney Channel sitcom - plays an ordinary kid with a secret career as a rock star. The Harford County middle-schoolers, too, were students by day and glamour girls by night - or by afternoon, as was technically the case.

And at 2:45 p.m., it was time to decide, for real, what to wear.

Megan, 13-year-old Alexi Spector, and 13-year-old Leah Litwak stared at four jean miniskirts laid out on Alexi's bed. The skirts were virtually identical, differing just slightly in denim wash and fray pattern.

"This is hard," said Alexi, whose mother, Lori, was hosting a preconcert party at her Forest Hill home.

"Really hard," Leah said.

Weeks of planning

The three had strategized about this moment for weeks, and especially over the weekend when they designed Hannah Montana posters to wave at the concert. They'd pondered it in class, even as they tried to hide from their classmates their excitement about getting the coveted Montana tickets, which vanished almost as soon as they went on sale in the fall. Alexi and her sister, 12-year-old Courtney, received several for bat mitzvah gifts and shared them with Leah and Megan. Megan's mother and Lori Spector would chaperone them at the show.

After about 20 minutes of earnest debate, the girls all resolved to wear jean skirts, dark tights, brown Ugg boots and white camisoles. Alexi and Leah picked green shirts; daringly, Megan chose blue.

Straightened locks

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