PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, NQVENTBER 3, 1967 PAGE TWO TUE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3,1967 theatre 'U' Players Present 'Musgrave' cinema Leroi Jones' "The Dutchman:' Black Power Rides the IT 'World Communists Gather For Bolshevik Anniversary A *1 By ANDREW LUGG John Arden is one of the most important contemporary English playwrights. His plays are com- plex. The have guts. They deal with both a formal and an ide- ological radicalism, and it's Ardens subtle blending of these compo- nents that makes his plays so dif- ficult to characterize by some cheap universal. England, of course, is a place where "class" has some meaning. I mean there is a working class, a middle class and an aristocracy. In America, by comparison, there is the poor, the middle class and the rich.' The difference between these two sets of categories is that in England they are cultural whereas in Americal they are material. Ar- den comes from a middle class background and writes about the working class. However, it is not the working class, per se, that Arden studies. He uses their culture to set and develop their ideas. The theme of the play is de- veloped within an historical con- text-that of Victorian colonialism -and the action is set in a north country mining town. An initial dialectic is between the political reality-the macroscopic--and the individual lives of the miners and that there are no clear choices but that one has to act publically, one the soldiers who come to "recruit" for the queen-the microscopic. First, let us not ignore Arden's politics. He consistently deals with the problems of the left. He sees has to take a stand. Black Jack Musgrave (Douglas Sprigg) is a man obsessed with an idea: "Colonialism is a bad thing." More specifically, he sees, nothing unjust about killing twenty-five men in a reprisal against the kill- ing by "the rebels" of five of his own men. He thinks that like cures like- that by killing a few, the millen- nium will arrive-that by having a parade, "the end of the world" will result. On a deeper level, "Musgrave" concerns the way or process of being against colonial- ism. In the introduction to the Grove Press edition of "Musgrave," Ar- den says that the play is not ni- hilistic, not symbolist, nor does it advocate bloody revolution. The simplistic overview of the present production is that because of these bounds set by Arden, the play must be against bloody revolution. Not at all-the play is a clear view of the conflict in political man (or rather, the political left) between its natural pacifist ten- dencies and its appreciation of political reality in the ends-and- means sense. This, then, is the problem with the University Players production: the play has been castrated. As an example, at the end of scene II, act I, the preacher takes a sip of ale when no one is looking, after profusely refusing earlier. Always good for a laugh, but it gave the play an element that Arden was at pains to eliminate. It was the wrong sort of vaude- ville. And "Rule Britannia" in the music is really to much. What's good in this production? The stage falling away toward the audience (no footlight) gives the actors a real intimacy with the audience. In the play there is much eye-to-eye actor-audience confrontation and director, James Coakley brings his actors front stage whenever possible. Peter Ferren as John Bludgeon uses this direction to obtain mag- nificent results. His movement and acent is sharp and pointed-he es- tablishes a ferocious intimacy with the audience. Eric Brown (Sparkey), although his accent slips at times, and Rob- ert Elliott (The Slow Collier) both bring the action to life whenever they are on stage. Sprigg has a much more difficult time. To retain the accent through many different situations is dif- ficult and Musgrave is an extreme- ly complex character. Toward the end, when the action speeds up, Spriggs almost totally drops his accent and his performance be- comes much richer. Often, especially in the slower passages, the north country accent seems an encumbrance and the rate at which the play progresses is far too slow. It was even dif- ficult for me, an Englishman, to understand some of the speeches. But the standard of acting is consistent-there are no apparent "fill-ins." The company works as a group. Yes, the whole cast de- serves mention. By RICHARD AYERS In writing on a film which is adapted from a play, a reviewer is faced with the problem of what focus to adopt. Either he can deal with the theatrical and thematic aspects of the piece which nor- mally concern a drama critic, or he can discuss whether it suc- ceeds as cinema. In the case of "The Dutchman," I have the advantage of a critical precedent, "The Brig." This was an off-Broadway play which was filmed in one night, after the police had closed down the the- atre in which it was being per-' formed. The resulting film has since received such wide acclaim in the realm of independent cinema that a whole critical ap- paratus has grown up around its unique approach to cinema. "The Brig" succeeds in captur- ing the claustrophobia intended in the one-set play, and adds the dimension of a subjective camera as an involved witness to the hor- rors of a Marine prison. "The Dutchman," similarly, is adapted from a play with a sin- gle set, a subway car. Clearly the film has the advantage of put- ting the characters in an actual subway car and including the mo- tion and noise of the New York subway. The director, Anthony Harvey, has brilliantly adapted the emotional affect which Leroi Jones intended in the play. has more violence and hatred in Jones, the tortured and violent him than she can understand: "I black playwright who was re- wear this middle-class suit just cently arrested in the Newark riots, has carefully structured his piece to make his audience, both black and white, come to reali- zations about its racial attitudes which it is quite hesitant to ad- mit. The leftist white chick and the middle-class black man find, in the end, that the only relation- ship which can develop between them is one of violence. In the beginning the man, Al Freeman, tries to maintain a fa- cade of the conventional no- touch-no-threat idiom of conver- sation. The w o m a n, Shirley Knight, wants to seduce him on the one hand (to which he, still in the middle-class bag, is happy to acquiesce) and challenge him out of his position of an "escaped nigger" on the other. It becomes clear, however, that even he, in spite of his facade, Phorie 434-0190 Entwm" On CARPENTER ROAD OPEN 6:30 P.M. FREE HEATERS MGM presents G lenn Wh A g e Do s in Panavison' and Metrocolor to keep from strangling you." The conversation, which began in a teasing flirtation, ends in an honest but exasperating murder. If your conservative, liberal, or radical bag is embarrassedbythe honest violence of the dialogue, Harvey adds to this a face, fifteen feet tall on the screen, which spits the words into your face. The last five minutes, with the murder which becomes almost a ritual of orgasm, with the fan- tastic music, with the shots of the barren subway, is one of the best sequences in film. SIDNEY POITIER "TO SIR,WITH LOVE" TECHNICOLOR- "SUPERB! WARM, MOVING SIDNEY POITIER "TO SIR, WITH LOVE" TECHNICOLOR' AND HUMOROUS --N.Y. News SIDNEY POITIER "TO S1 9 I LOVE" TECHNICOLOR* NOW AT THE MICH IGAN ST HEA TRE MOSCOW (AP) - Six days of celebrations began in redfestoon- ed Moscow yesteday with top Communists from around the world gathered to honor the Bol- shevik Revolution and discuss current problems, including Red China. China boycotted the festiv- ities. The key man in the celebra- tions, Communist party General Secretary Leonid J. Brezhev, opened the program by unveil- ing a 12-foot Kremlin statue of Lenin. Today Brezhnev will deliver the main speech of the six-day celebration. The ceremonies will end with the traditional Red Square parade Tuesday. Four new types of military rockets are expected to be shown in the parade - following the horse cavalry that recall the old Red army which consolidated Lenin's revolution. Premier Alexei N. Kosygin may speak Sunday when attention shifts briefly to Leningrad, the city where the revolution occur- red in 1917. GREAT HITS ENCORE! "'GEORGY GIRL' IS SUPERIORI WONDERFUL PELL-MELL ENJOYMENT, IMMENSELY ORIGINAL!" . BosieCrowthe. N.Y. Tim I s eorgy. 1 nis is ~uorgy sU Uis is 1 ueorgy9 roommate. roommates roommete. COLUMBIA PICTURES nws JAMES MASON- ALAN BATES - LYNN REDGRAVE * AND * 4 U Ia cros ampus +I h's mn snaaa .Ize. tza, ts -_ _ f r NOxATIO ENEFEATURE TIMES NOW FXESELYTETEMEN 12- Monday-Friday LflU E 6:00, 7:45, 9:20 SHOWING i E.VILL Sat-Sun.: 1:30- 375 No. MAPLE RD.-769.1300 3:10-4:55-6:40- 8:20-10:00 MGMpresents- A Judd Beard- Irwin Winkler Production I A reception for Congressmen Robert Taft and Marvin Esch will be held at Assembly Hall in the Michigan Union from 9:30 to 11:00 this morning. The reception is be- ing sponsored by the College Re- publican Club and is .open to the public free of charge. Coffee and donuts will be served., * * * A "new" phenomenon is about to be visited upon the campus, at Canterbury House, this weekend. Appearing there will be Skip J a m e s, reknowned Mississippi Delta blues singer. Now 65 years old; James first recorded for Paramount Records in 1930. Thirty-four years later, in June, 1964, he was "re-discov- ered" and appeared at the New- port Folk Festival, where he cap- tured the audience with his high, plaintive singing style and fine guitar work. James has been per- forming constantly since then and has just returned from tour- ing Europe with the "American Folk Blues Tour, 1967." * * * James F. Brinkerhoff, who has been director of plant extension at ,the University since 1962, has been named director of business operations. He will remain re- sponsible for plant extension and now also will be in charge of plant operation and maintenance, Willow Run Airport, purchasing and stores, and personnel policies and operations. He will also be chairman of the University com- mittee for union relations. PLUS .. '' F E LEE MARVIN BLAN K" cOstarring GIE DICKINSON Au,1 in Panavision*and MetrocoCor QMGM WITH DAVID NIVEN r m rwo ' . .r . ". . . . .. . r , ... . . . . . . .. . . . : .:.S w*A:":..S4 } i } : "'.::*.*.... . }.. . .. : ",. " - .... '" : . .r..f*. . . .. .G. .. x k..}. :" v:."nv::v. :: : ,h: ~v:.. f ::.:.::.,..,,,.::.". _:." #i,.k ,.w.. ..i. :r."...x..,..a . .....n.. .... . , h ..\ .. T3:5... ..v:"rJ$ ....:{,;. e} .:. . ..} ... *... . .. yy . .. . ..{ :"".::. . HELD OVER: 2nd WEEK NOW SHOWING Everything you know about people will be shattered! "A striking experience and one with an impact that is all but un- forgettable!" --Hollis Alpert SATURDAY REVIEW "Like a volt jolt from the third rail" -TIME MAGAZINE 411 1%4f~ ....~......... *,..:..... ~ 149. . When a girl like Lula gets with a man like Clay-, she can love him... or kill him--or maybe both! "Told with brutal eloquence! Shirley Knight is close to perfect- startling! Al Freeman, Jr. is excellent." -Brendan Gill THE NEW YORKER "There had never been anything like this on the American screen." -William Wolf CUE MAGAZINE 4 AYVERY WELL BETH cANT M ©VER t H OA W BEER PuT ONTHE STAGA OE PUT O IL E q1jHS pARD WINNING"DUTCHMA SHOW TIMES: She Walter Reade organlization Present~s E Pr FAe EIER SS " .Assoc producer NY SILVERMAN 4pruerOGNE R~gO Director ANTONy tARVEY .,Ectby30NBARY b.PRSNTl'"PNt 8Y ,OV{IE A ROBERT WISE PRODUMIONA STEVE MCQUEEN k nunnnn aT~ruunnnniiniinuniinn nnrama. i ninr nrnnru Monday-Thursday 7 & 9 P.M. I r I I i J N