THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, March 12, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thu rsdoy, March 12, 1970 theatre Life is a Dream' -- Yuk, yuk By MARCIA ABRAMSON Life is a Dream is an intense- ly serious play which has rais- ed profoundly religious and ul- timately existential questions since it was first performed in seventeenth century Spain. Be- cause it is a masterpiece of the Spanish drama - and of all drama - the play's vision en- composses the humor as well as the tragedy of life: like life, it is meant to be deadly serious even if full of comedy. Unfortunately, the University Players have chosen 'to treat Life is a Dream as a comedy spliced with serious scenes. Their production is bright and lively, but it does not confront the dramatic challenge offered by Calderon, who wrote t h e play to deal with overwhelming human dilemmas like the dicho- tomy of free will and fate and the paradox of dramas and death. Imagine instead such a play staring Dustin Hoffman as The Graduate as the prince and Barbara Streisand as F u n n y Girl as the noblewoman he loves. Have the supporting cast play Laugh-In whenever they can- even when the fun and games detract from the seriousness of what Calderon has to say. Life is a Dream is about the old King of Poland, Basil, who learns from astrology that his son will be a bloody tyrant. He attempts to prevent this by exil- ing the boy to a deserted moun- tain, but relents as he grows old and gives the son, Segis- mund, now grown, a chance. Segismund is like an animal, knowing nothing of men and their world; he rages, incens- ed at the treatment he has re- ceived, and the King sends him back. The people refuse to ac- cept any other heir, rebel and restore Segismund. So much for the physical plot- line. What is really important is Segismund's struggle f o r knowledge, for a meaningful way to live. Jolted back to his bitter exile, he begins to learn the fleeting value of human glory and the need for modera- tion and measure," for mercy and generosity. There is, of course, a real and intended place for humor in the Spanish comedy. The bumb- ling servant Clarion (Evan Jef- fries) went out for all t h e laughs he could get, and justly won them. But the prince's attempted rape of the lady is an important moment of the play, and when Calderon wrote for her the lines equivalent to "I am lost".