Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY -ri ....A- n-7A THEMIHIANDALYrL ... -A ._. i ursucly, rApril L,4 IU I U theatre R.C. Players: Creativity oi By JOHN SHOUT generals) seemed to be I suppose that one prime a fine time cavorting virtue in a university environ- Some of the trickery, tho ment is that one can produce teresting, I presume, to vast varieties of plays on a rela- totally dedicated to mix tively limited budget and audi- dia, seemed to me a bit ences can take them or leave tous. We had, for examr them. We may not have the per- majority of the dialogue feet evening, but it doesn't cost the mouths of two narrat much and even a barely coin- a microphone ho0oup, ec petent job with an intriguing vices and whatnot, the p play is more worthwhile than a which escapes me. As Ir lot of other indulgences. I do her, Cocteau wanted a not mean to suggest that the graph at each side of th three p 1 a y s which constituted to detach "actor from sp yesterday evening's entertain- but all the electronics ment at the Residential College made it difficult to und were barely competent; at best the words. On the w we saw some incisive and highly though, one need hardly1 creative personnel at work, and critical to enjoy this sort even the flaws were never out- The main difficulty rageous. This may not be the Eiffel Tower is rather th ideal set of productions for the hard to see why the thin p er fe ct io n i st, but they are be done at all. My main worthwhile for anyone inter- throughout was that th ested in what has been happen- seemed staggeringly o ing in the theatre for the last dates from 1921). As forty years. ganda for the avant garc all very well, but we've d Jean Cocteau's The Marriage that; who defends realis In The Eiffel Tower is a sort of more expressionistic grab - bag, th e A somewhat different main purpose of which was or- crops up with ionesco iginally to serve as a vehicle for near-classic, The Bald S Cocteau's views on the necessity tersecondiofThe threeS of destroying realismthe need thismseoterpieceohe rra for play - audience continuity, ity which presents, by and other causes celebre of the innumerable laugh line 1920's. It is, in fact, preceded total destruction of lai by a preface (not performed, has b ercome so popula mercifully) somewhat 1 o n g e r everyoe waonts to pu than the play itself. I could not and, I think, without begin to summarize the plot, aware of its great difficu not that it is of any importance, in several of his later for the play is sheer trickery of onesco is interested in p the kind that Cocteau did either inecoase ofeall veywelorvr banaly ing the collapse of all very well or very banalysocial behavior by showi I suppose one m i g h t make inanities of the langua something of levels of art, real- speak. (For the record,. ity - within - art - within - came out of an intro I reality and other Pirandellian manual.) But here hec matters, but I suspect Cocteau pay much attention to pl is having fun at the expense of the actors must somehoi just such themes. This is cal- tain some forty-five mini culated hokum, good or bad de- word games without bori pending on how much you like audience; we have nothir hokum, and the TLC's comic- to interest us. The play strip production caught the a fantastic variety of pac right tone. Betsy Smith's stag- keep us going once we ing made great sport of what- (what the main bit is, and ever realistic expectations any- afraid Susan Da'vas' di one might have, and the various actors (I particularly liked Ian needs considerably mor Stulberg as the most atypical of She wisely added some I) -poetry and prose Honig's poetry of confrontation errides flaws "Cancellation Notice" In support of 8AM, the Master of Fine Arts Degree Candidates have decided to not hold their degree show until the ne- gotiations are successful and the strike is over. having about. ugh in- o those ed me- gratui- ,ple, the out of ,ors via cho de- point of remem- phono- e stage 'eaker," merely erstand h o 1 e, be very of fun. with at it is ng need feeling he play ld (it propa- ,de it is one all sm any problem 's new oprano, eplays. ational- way of es, the *nguage, ar that it on- being ilty. As plays, resent- logical ng the %ge we it all English doesn't ot, and w sus- Ltes of ng the ing else needs sing to realize d I am rection e pep. music for such scenes as that, in which Mr. and Mrs. Martin learn to their amazement that they are married to each other (or are they? Decide for yourself.), a scene that is liable to put every- one to sleep or (which some would say is the, same thing) recall Gilbert and Sullivan, but the music soon disappeared and we were left high and dry. There is enough worthwhile in this production to merit giving it a little boost. There is, by the way, an ending that might come as quite a surprise to M. lonesco, which seems to give the play a brand new social focus; I am at a loss to explain it. By the time the third pro- duction began it was past ten o'clock and some of the audi- ence hadheaded out, which was their great misfortune, since Brecht's The Exception and the Rule was far and away the high point of the evening. Peter Ferran's production made excel- lent useof a large number of the famous Brechtian alienation techniques: visible lighting in- struments, placards indicating the subject of each scene, slide projections of the sing lyrics (I wonder if anyone thought of singing along?) and the like. Even more deserving of praise, t h o ug h, is Ferran's original music which gets right to the root of what Brecht was after. Highly derivative of Kurt Weill, Brecht's occasional collaborator,, yet highly original, it explores all sorts of dissonant harmonies -in a music hall style. The actors had caught on well to the Brecht style, and I particularly liked Wendy Abehd as the un- fortunate Coolie whose murder makes up the question which the play debates. If people are basically selfish and brutal, it argues, how can we condemn a man who acts on that assump- tion, even though he misinter- prets a generous act? The stir- ring conclusion invites us to change the "rule" and promote the exceptions, and although it was somewhat difficult' to ad- just our sentiments after two frivolous pieces, the sense of it all came through with excellent effect. By MARY McNICHOLS In the introductory remarks to his reading Tuesday at the UGLI, Edwin Honig dedicated the reading to the 'Michigan bards," Donald Hall, Ernest Hemingway, Dan Hughes a n d Theodore Redke. The dedication to poets was fitting, g i v e n Honig's primary occupation with the theme of communication. Honig is a diverse poet. It's difficult to isolate a specific theme; he deals with integration, and it is this ambiguity which marks his work as good poetry. Personal psychological feelings, reactions to war, poverty and political manipulation are inte- grated together. As Honig stat- ed in his introduction to "Spring Journal," his poetry attempts to integrate "feelings, ideas in a form which would make a per- sonal sense of the world part of the social world and the times." The necessity of empathy with the world is underlined in "Spring Journal:" I lie photographing the self, myself,.all selves .,.. I hurt... because I swallowed a piece of the world and now screaming because the world is swallowing a piece of me ..,. Honig speaks of communica- tion and of committment. But not naively. His work is per- meated throughout with under- standing of the inevitable risks involved in any communication. In "A Furnace," he speaks al- most bitterly of the evolution-. ary unity of mankind, the cycle which propogates the race with the life-death process. W i t h every birth there must be a death. Infants... new presences under the sun.... Encroaching like flames to consume us ... we see ourselves tired, turn- ing t. . . Who built the furnace-... We are the flames ... Yet t h i s communion-any communication-is essential. In the same Kirkegardian leap of faith which characterizes many contemporary poets, Honig speaks of the barriers which must be broken down, despite the inevitable risk. From "Spring Journal": . . the howling drive to break down all barriers.. . Who will survive into summer ... Honig admits the ease of isolation and ignorance, but he says that such detachment must not be allowed. He speaks of "cattle peacefully drinking at home in Vietnam," in a master- ful use of irony. The analogy with Nixon's Silent Majority is too tempting to ignore. Honig's work embodies a cer- tain amount of the enigmatic. He read his poems as an ideolo- gical chronology, in which he hinted at the theme of commun- ication at first, and later pre- sented the fully developed theme. The device may be ex- plained by an investigation of -the consistent summer image, used tosymbolize mature hu- man communication. The first poem, "Happening," deals with what Honig termed a "mystic experience," in which he finds it difficult to leave an o 1 d house, perhaps representative of negated family love. Wide blue summer grew narrow.. . A Composers Forum concert will be presented by the Univer- sit of Michigan composition Department at 8 p.m. Monday, April 6 in Recital Hall, North Campus. The program of new music by University composers, will be conducted by Jack Fortner and Sydney Hodkinson. The concert will be open to the public free of charge. On the program will be works by David Maves, Stefan Ehren- kreutz, Thomas Clark, David Bates, Burton Beerman, Harold Reiter, David Foley, and Junko Sugie. DIAL 5-6290 NOMINATED FOR 10 ACADEMY AWARDS "FOUR STARS *** *HIGHEST RATING ... A GRATIFYING ACHIEVEMENT." -Wanda Hale, N.Y. Daily News "EPIC BATTLE OF THE SEXES." -Vincent Canby, N.Y. Times When I turned the house had opened its face grey as a man's . . . The last poem read deals spec- ifically with the man-woman love relationship. The title, "All Summer," represents the ideal to be attained. The poem relates risk and pain involved in the attempt to achieve that ideal. "She says nothing to him.. . When will her great green eyes accept him ... Flowers ... soon they will wilt, soon they will die ..., Edwin Honig's poetry as craft is excellent. Dealing with t h e themes of communication and integration, Honig's work em- bodies the skill to confront the reader and force him to feel the relevancy of these themes. THOMAS WEBB RICHARD TURNER KATHRYN BUNTING DALEENE MENNING AL TEOLI REYNOLD LOWE JOAQUIN RIVIER TENG BENG CHEW SUZANNE WOLFE KEIICHI HAYANO >-- N THNA7TOP CORPORATION 6NAL ENERA, COMPANY I JOK VILLAGE 375 No. MAPLE RD.-769-1300 MON.-FRI.-7:00-9:30 SAT.-SUN.-1 :45- 4:15-6:50-9:25 "DAZZLING!" -L.A. TIMES STURiS PROQilCTION Aokr0n~i Thursday, Friday-April 2, 3 "The Men Who Tread on Tigers Tails dir. AKIRA KUROSAWA (1945) Feudal Japanese Robin Hood story by the master of Samura i action. Denounced by the U.S. Occupation forces. SHORT! Song of Ceylon by JOHN GRIERSON 7 & 9 75Achitecture 66 -811 75c Adtru r PEACE CORPS 3529 S.A.B. F ;.,- March 30--April . iII R. C. PLAYERS present THE EIFFEL TOWER WEDDING PARTY THE EXCEPTION AND THE RULE THE BALD SOPRANO April 1 & 2 8:00 P.M Schorling Aud. Ed. Scho4 A. col I NOMINATED FOR 5 ACADEMY AWARDS Including BEST PICTURE "'Z' damn near knocks you out of your seat!" -The New Yorker "The Last Word in Thrillers. Terrific!" -GENE SHALIT-LOOK MAGAZINE Now at the CAMPUS THEATRE Dial 8-6416 Peace needs everyone, whatever your degree, whatever your skills. Give peace at least one chance-find out what you can do. The world does need all the help it can get- BUYING A TV SET, RADIO OR OTHER . APPLIANCE (Large or Small)? R.ICHAR BURTON GENEVIEVE BUJOLD fl TIN THE HALWALLISPRODUCTION d4;lme i guaOqF AN WRSAL PICTURE"TECHNICOLOrPANAVISION* G Shows at 1:10-3:40-6:15-9:00 A I The University Co-op can help you save money. Visit our office on the ground floor, Michigan Union (11:30 A.M. to 3:30 P.M.) or Phone 761-2808 ... .. I lq Pos1ersfrom the A uiluflonParis:Mar 1968 The French Student-Worker Revolution of May 1968, expressed itself most clearly and vividly through the remarkable series of wall posters which appeared all over Paris in defiance of police orders. Com- TAE missioned by faculty members and strik- ing workers, they were created at the Atelier Populaire, set up in the Ecole des Beaux Arts. Of the 197 posters produced,. 96 appear in large 11" x 16" reproductions in their original colors. the accompanying text includes: " A concise statement of the aims of +NA the revolution ""A statement of the activist role of the Atelier Populaire in support of the revolution through the creation of wall posters and other art forms " A chronology of events of the revo- lution accompanied by small-format reproductions of all 197 posters issued PLUS-a section on how to make and print wall posters by the silk screen process I I I I I i i l " t { i G: 1 ' I I Spend the summer in stud on the shores Lake Michigan Carthage College, Kenosha, Wisconsin ly 4 4 I Summer at Carthage Col- lege can be a time of relax- ation as well as enrichment in a vacation-like atmosphere on the shores of cool Lake Michigan. The, summer session at Carthage is conducted with all the advantages of a regular season program. Classes and seminars are treated as full- time courses. Social activities abound just as during the school year. We offer fully ac- credited courses which enable you to earn extra credit or simply to study forx enrichment. Instruc given by Carthage Col time faculty and lecturers. Kenosha is within ea ing distance from the and social centers of su ropolitan areas as Chic Milwaukee. Lovely Geneva is close by, to For pertinent inform to courses offered duri special summer sessio to Clayton Diskerud,C Special Schools. personal tion is lege full visiting asy driv- cultural uch met- cago and y Lake '0 ation as ing this n, write Office of 4 I I i