PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1967 E~AG~ TWO THE MIChIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1967 theatre BOMBARDMENT OF SIGHTS, SOUNDS: A Gilbert and Sullivan s 'Mikado' Commits Theatrical Hari-Kari 'Light Brigade 'Attacks Canterbury By THOMAS SEGALL ! Unhappily, the news from Men-' delssohn Theatre is not good. The Gilbert and Sullivan Society's "production of "The Mikado" has seriously missed the mark. This is not just a matter of .opening night jitters, a missed cue here, or a clumsily executed scene there. Unpleasant as it is to say, this production had little to do with Gilbert and Sullivan, and little to do with good theatre. Its gravest failing is simply that it failed to tell the story, and that, after all, is rather crucial. The biggest problem was understand- ing the spoken and sung words, most of which were unintelligible. There are a number of key parts of the dialogue such as Pooh-Bah's (Zalman Usiskin) first act speech which explains how things got the way they are. This was delivered with so much ex- Lb TheLcRB a e InDou By FRITZ LYON' The Speech . Department Lab Theatre's predilection for present- ing one-act plays by George Ber- nard Shaw this semester has not been particularly rewarding, with the exception of "The Village Woo- ing" two weeks ago. Style is often the problem, and many of the student directors have neglected the restraint necessary for British comedy and inappro- priately injected American bur- lesque into Shaw. Too often, the actors resort to a frantic exaspera- tion, perhaps suited to the lines but not to the mood of the plays. In spite of a similar handicap in this week's production of "The Inca of Perusalem," directed by Susan Demirsky, Shaw's verbose dialogue and extended builds were played with enough skill and va- riety to capture the humor without boring the audience. Chiefly responsible was William Moore (the Inca) who combined a properly stiff manner with well- meaning arrogance to produce a bumbling aristocrat worthy of the best Shavian comedy. Kathleen McGill (Ermyntrude) portrayed the more difficult role requiring audacity without the traneous motion and Pooh-Bah's 1ijul puns thrown away. When irritating habit of dragging the pace that the audience lost the gist of his message. Distraction is the primary tac- tic of Director James N. Holm, Jr. Our attention is forever being drawn away from an important song by extraneous stage business, as in Pish-Tush's (Dale Helms) first act song, 'Our Great Mikado, Virtuous Man." Instead of having a mime quar- tet act out the words of the song, a rather amateurish thing, Gilbertf and Sullivan would have been, much better served if Pish-Tush .had just come down and sung the song to the. audience so that we, could understand it. Not only did unrelated "bits" substitute for an interesting story, the preoccupation with stage busi- ness was so great that legitimate bits were passed over and delight- te Spis l eheader typically American brash, coarse quality that usually accompanies that audacity among local actors. Although she was not entirely suc- cessful, her enthusiasm and stage charm made up for an occasional lack of reserve. The second play on the bill, "The Truth About the Truth," by Benn Levy, directed by Ed Van Cleef, wasn't nearly as good. Also a comedy, this play is like tele- vision-imitation Pirandello, and the dialogue is miserably uninte- resting, depending on the device of the situations to cover the ab- sense of wit. The saving grace is Marilyn Mil- ler (the maid) whose raucous Brooklynese delivery during the first ten minutes of the show was uproarious. Unfortunately, the play deterior- ates into a stock comedy soon af- ter, and reasonable performances by the actors can't lift it up again. This could easily be the fault'of the play and not the production. The two plays together provide an hour and a half of good student theatre without the usual cost of admission. At the Arena Theatre in the Frieze Building, 4:10 Thurs- day afternoon performance. N a n k i- P o o (Graham Wilks) threatens to hang himself unless alowed to marry Yum-Yum (Su- san Morris), her guardian refuses permission. If Ko-Ko (Michael Harrah) can draw the line, says Nanki-Poo, so can he. But the rope had already been pulled tip out of sight on that skyhook, the connection was not made visually, and Gilbert's double meaning was missed. None of the requisites for Gil- bert and Sullivan were fulfilled. Clumsiness took the place of grace. Diction was poor. Joy was lacking. Even on a technical basis, the simplest tenets were violated. Most of the players sang to the wings rather than turning their faces out toward the audience. This year's Mikado can only comesas ardisappointment after two quite good productions mount- ed by the Society last year. What consolation could be found was due principally to one of the old guard, Susan Morris. Miss Morris is an accomplished actress and singer, and made a most charming Yum-Yum. She has great technical control, both of her body and voice, and she 'knows when to be still on the stage. Some very nice moments were also provided by Michel Harrab in the role of Ko-Ko, the Lord High Executioner. After a rather harrowing and dissonant begin- ning, Mr. Harrah proved himself to be a delightful comedian. He comes from a theatrical rather than musical background, and it shows in his timing and diction. He was most successful in his pat- ter songs. The orchestra, under the dir- ection of John Planer, was ade- quate. "A SUPERB 'IL1M!"-Life Magazine "BRILLANT, FORCEFUL CINEMA ART." -Bosley Crowther, New York Times A RARE EXPERIENCE." -Wanda Hale, New York Daily News By KEEWATIN DEWDNEY The role of the modern artist is to collect energy in the form of electricity, water, chemicals emo- tons, instruments and ambitions toward the redefinition of sensory ratios. That is, his preoccupation is no longer with his tradition or lack of it, but rather with the processes of interaction between man and his environment. In most general terms, the modern artist creates environments. He coordinates the inputs to the various senses, look- ing for effective ratios. The Light Brigade, a light show that I am currently presenting at Canterbury House, incorporates light and sound on many different levels. The collaborations which produced the show, collaborations between specialists like scientists (Lloyd Cross), musicians (Bob Scheff, Karen Naditch, Ralph Kaplan, and Jerry), dancers (Hope Palmer, Martha Wehrer), idea men (Nick Bertoni, Ron Schae- fer), film-makers, etc., were es- sential to the show. It would have been impossible without this com- munity effort. One of the most interesting com- ponents is Cross'' Light Fantastic." a laser which is projected in time- varying patterns on a screen. A special plastic diaphragm, placed directly in front of instrument- linked loudspeakers, vibrates in nodes characteristic to the pitch and amplitude of the music driv- ing it. The diaphragm is reflective and reproduces the laser beam in a kind of wild TV scan which is nothing more than a profoundly sensuous synchronized picture of the music. This projection occurs in the centre of the "Magic Man- dala". In concentric rings toward the outside of this eight-foot circle are a blue light also bounced from a diaphragm, eight movies, and florescing Eastern designs. At one point dancers patterned with florescent paint flank the mandala. Soldiers and Nurses. 1858. The Light Brigade. Electrons streaming from a TV screen form a light brigade according to Mc- Luhan. I think I wanted to express something about the TV genera- tion. This is the only intellectual content I can think of as belong- ing to the show. Beyond that, it is a sensory proposition. Intellec- tual conteniL is perhaps enhanced with ieadings by Judy Succop and myself. The readings are suggested mental paths. The Maltese Cross Movement, "wh'ch p oduced the show is simply , cod: lction of local energies whose contiibutions will vary. The Mal- tese C oss Movement hopes to pro- cuce an amazing underground film night sometime in January, featur- ing the work of Larry Jordan and Walt Disney. Other projects of the Maltese Cross Movement include computer- made films (no cameras, projec- tors, film etc), hypersynchronized films, stories and poetry, electric happenings, and so on. The bias to this community of work (if there is any bias) is sim- ply to be aware. The Light Brigade is a form of awareness. '4 A -Daily-Richard S. Lee PULSATING TO THE BEAT of electronic music and bathed in a sea of color, a dancer participates in the sound and light show held at Canterbury house yesterday. The girl, a member of the "Light Brigade" show, unwinds her tensions along with her skirt. a 4 HELD OVER! -CAMPUS Dial 8-6416 "ROGER CORMAN'S BEST PICTURE. A quite remark- able film, striking and imaginative." -Saturday Review I ALVELY S ETH Samuel Z. Arkoff & James H, Nicholson - Roger Corman's Production of -PSYCHEDELIC COLOR x. PETER FONDA-SUSANSTRASBERG A V Across, Campus NATIONAL GENERAL CORPORATION FOX EASTERN THEATRES w Mon. thru Thurs. 8:00 P.M. FOX VILLaGE Fri. 6:00-9:00 375 No.MAPLE RD.-769-1300 Sat.-Sun. 2:00-5:15-8:45 Theglamour acid ,greatness... Tespeed spectacle! MGE&AMAPRESENERG IN SUPER PANAVISION' AND METROCOLORMG I1 BY A STRIKING AND ORIGINAL TRAGI-COMEDY STUDS TERKEL with I 1 Organist Robert Clark of the University Music School will give an all-Bach concert, at 4 p.m. Sunday (Nov. 19) at the Mariner's Church in Detroit's Civic Center. The program will include "Pre- lude and Fugue in E minor," "Trio Sonata No. 6 in C," Advent and Christmas chorales fr'om the "Orgelbuchlein," and "Fugue in E minor." Clark will give another concert at the Mariner's Church on March 10. Other University fac- ulty recitals at the church will be by Marilyn Mason on Dec. 10 and Robert Glasgow on Feb. 11. QNERATION, the inter-arts magazine, will 'present Walter Clark, professor of English, in a reading of his own poetry on Nov. 17 at 7:30 p.m. in the Mich- igan Room of the League WUOM will rebroadcast two speeches from the recently com- pleted UAC Controversy '67 series this weekend. The speech given by Mark Lane, and the discus- sion that followed it, will be re- broadcast at 8:05 p.m. Nov. 17. At 1 p.m. Nov. 18, the station will present the lecture by Barry Goldwater. The University Sesquicentennial Major Ceremony continues today with Session II of "Fertility and Family Planning: A World View." Edgar M. Ioover, Ph.D. will speak on "Some Causes and Conse- quences of Fertility Trends" in Rackham Lecture Hall at 9 a.m. Session III; a lecture by A. S. Parkes, Ph.D. on "The Biological Aspects of Fertility Control" at 2 p.m. in Rackham Lecture Hall. MART HULSWIT VICTOR KILIAN VERNA BLOOM PAUL ANDOR Directed by MARCELLA CISNEY Designed by ELDON ELDER, 4 s Admitance will be denied to alI under 18 years of ape 'AnArbor, Michigan 21O S. Fifth Avenue 761-9700 Gt DIAL 5-6290 STARTING FRIDAY Shows at 1:00-3:35-6:18-8:57 4 PaUL NEWMAN lust bugs the Establishment as 4 A COLUMBIA PICTURES PRESENTS ELIZABETH RICHARD TAYLOR BURTON IN THE BURTON-ZEFFIRELU PRODUCTION OF THETAMING OFTHE HREW P 3 f I