James Gregory once lived in a farm and had befriended a native youth, Bafana, and had even had a photograph taken with him. Years later, now married to Gloria and father of three children (Chris, Brett, and Natasha), James has nothing but shame and regret, as many South African Caucasians in the oppressive Apartheid-era ridiculed him, leading him to hate Africans. He seeks to redeem himself by spying on imprisoned African National Congress Leader, Nelson Mandela.
An American secret agent and an evil female supercriminal vie to recover a pair of top secret X-ray vision glasses that have accidentally fallen into the hands of a ditzy stripper.
Sally's early albums (especially "Water Bearer", "Easy", and "Playing in the Flame") are prime examples of an innovative and creative folk-pop style, with some jazz mixed in here and there. Her later labums, like "Instincts", "Femme", and "Natasha" are a blander adult contemporary pop which, while pleasant to listen to, is nothing to get excited about. This album, "Strange Day in Berlin" is a a transitional album…