age Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, April 16, 1970 'Pirates By JOHN ALLEN be There aie two ways to do ne > Gilbert and Sullivan's Pirates ter of Penzance: director R o g e r tr Wertenber ger did it the othei Oa bway. in Which is to say one can play bot ' up the music and the pacing exf and try to hide the corn, or one w can have a warm July and ei±t watch the corn grow uninhibited, gos To quote from the show: "yet people say I know not why th; that we shall have a warm July." eq In spite of the busyness of _ some of the business, the strain- ing for laughs that don't quite come naturally, this semester's - s:offering by the G & S Society the is mostly successful, and doubt- ty ~¢less a good way to celebrate his the ending of a school year Ca which seems to have lasted Po: _through a middle-length eter- bei nity of winter. The show's pri- bol k mary strength lies in the mu- out sical and comic talents of its Br :.cast. cel William Hall as the Pirate ter -J. Mark Rottshafer King and Linda Oakley as Ma- So in cinemain sin pi thi -theatre Busy, yet enjoyable BARBER. L, the romantic lead, are both w to the Society this semes- r and both are worthy of the ust placed in them. M i s s akley's singing is clear and telligible, as is Mr. Hall's, and oh of them carried off the :aggerated melodrama t h a t as required of their acting tal- ts by the stylistic conception verning the production. James Bryan as Frederic, s male romantic lead, was rual to Miss Oakley vocally, For more ARTS, see page 9 ough he may have been gui- now and then of overdoing htronics of the role. H. Don meron as the Sergeant of lice was appropriately dumb, Muddled, bemused and discom- buated.. everything a Fuzz ght to be, in short. Both Mr. ryan and Mr. Cameron air e ,ebrating their second semes- in the Gilbert and Sullivan ciety with their appearance Pirates. Three old-timers are featured ithe cast. Jane Hassinger ngs the role of Ruth, the 'atical maid-of-all-work. Per- ps the role is a bit low for r: not as much voice comes rough as one might desire, at her comic talents find their eIge in the part: John Alexander continues his freer as chief pratfaller of the aciety. One keeps waiting for voice to roll out with the vinous warning,, "this per- frmer will self-destruct in ten ,onds. ." In any produc- on that was less of a slapstick "e-for-all his characterization 'Samuel,- right-hand-man to ie Pirate King, would perhaps too broad. As it is, he pro- ies some of the major laughs, ace one adjusts to the tone of e evening. Chief pleasure of the show. however, is Charles Sutherland as Major General Stanley. His off-rhymes in the patter-song - "I Am the Very Model of a Modern Major General" - are about as far off as rhymes have yet been known to go, but even the strictest purist of a Sa- voyard should find his liber- tiesin this number to be a de- light, acknowledging as they do the great familiarity of t h e whole number. Mr. Sutherland's performance is a delight throughout and his singing is equal to his ever- finer sense of comic timing. Colby Schneider, Helene Freedman and Anne Umana round out the cast of principals and take good advantage of the humorous business given them as leading ladies of the women's chorus. The chorus, by the way, seems particularly animated in this production and sings fairly well when not overwhelmed with business. The staging is, at times, murky. Too much use of a com- bination bridge and archway simply because it is there, in the middle of a not-very-in- spired set, is rendered the more disturbing by lighting that seems designed to illuminate hemlines and boots but to do very little for faces. The s e co nd act throughout seems to be too dark. But the orchestra is generally sharp, the spirit of the produc- tion is generally high, and any- one who likes to hum along with one of the most popular of the G & S operettas should be alerted early to the fact that such productions here at the University tend to sell out early. And exams are days and days away. Enjoy. Enjoy. BILLIARDS BOWLINHG MICHIGAN UNION WILL BE OPEN AT REGULAR HOURS NEXT WEEK SSTAND .:..;. .....J.:J::::::. .;rrJJ: ;J¢1r ."rrR ""if r.J"Y "frrr }Y'r fJ 4; :: r{{{ nV ".1 ..,.. J ... 1 ..:::......:.":"..... t.:"° :%: rJ "':titi':ti .4 . :f' . :" .':. . {J.... ti :ti:l::} :;:;:;:}i:":%:"' r:ti:;:: ..11 .; f . J.%%. ..' ": J J"JS J J . .. r.ai '.'':f : ?a:;; " + JJ."r:". "i::JJJAVJJJ."f:'N.VJJt.. l:"AVJ. :.l...l. M: f...... J:V...{ . .... .. ::..":: :VJ: JJ:< ...A..1. 1 J.. J. JJ ..................1: J....:: J: '."J:'JJJJ::.4Vh::: "1ti1:VJJJ::": .: ...... N.J.Js By WILLIAM DINNER If one plans on an entertain- ing evening ogling over the Roll- ing Stones, ala the Beatles pro- ductions, one might as well stay home, as ,nearly one-third of the audience who did plan on that type of show and walked out of Jean-luc Godard's Sym- pathy for the Devil at Wayne State's Helen De Roy Theatre. However, the majority who, stayed were exposed to a de- manding, intense, and frustrat- ing film as Godard portrays the sickness of American society while intricately weaving the cultural and political transfor- mation necessary for a true rev- olution. Godard is fully aware of the frustrations of the revolutnion- arytmovement, yet, he also feels that revolution is inevitable as portrayed in the closing scene with the body of a blood splash- ed girl sprawled on a camera bom between a red and black flag. This same theme was utilized by political artist R. Crump a while back in a drawing of a black militant sitting with a rifle on his lap protecting a garbage heap behind. The caption reads: "So what." -Ironically this is Godard's first film in English. Ironic since Godard continually frustrates the viewer with a pornographic "political novel" interspersed throughout the dialogue. With passages such as, "Brut- ally; she kissed the so-called apostle of non-violence on the mouth," Godard told of the rev- olutionai-ies who have heard the political rhetoric time and time again - still have no fruits to bear. The form of the film is es- sential flat, comprised of ten seperate episodes. Five of these, totalling nearly half the iun- ning time, are of the Rolling Stones' practice sessions. We watch the Stones' "Sympathy for the Devil" grow from rough rehearsals through a series of tentative arrangements to actual takes of the finished product. However, the viewer is never permitted to hear a complete version during these sessions. These episodes of the Stones develop the dominant influence of the film; the slow tedious creativeness that is essential for constructing the revolution. Alternating with the Stones are several segments of black militants spurting readings from LeRoi Jones and Eldridge Cleav- er. From their base in an auto- mobile junkyard, symbol of American heritage, they casual- ly execute three white girls clothed in virginal white gowns alluding to the violence that must be endured during the rev- olution. Later the blacks methodically and carefully place their stock- pile of automatic rifles neatly on the dead bodies. Then just as methodically, put them back in their truck. There is also a scene in a magazine store specializing in soft-core pornography. Godard focuses the camera nearly ex- clusively on the covers of the magazines while the fascist manager reads passages from Mein Kampf. Ingeniously there is little reading from the frus- trating novel. Rather, Godard relies on the American social- ization process to district him from listening to Mein Kampf, since the viewer's eyes and mind are glued to the cover of the rags. Then there is a fascinating ten minute dialogue with Eve Democracy (Anne Wiazemsky), strolling mournfully through the meadows and constantly queried about her feelings of political and cultural ideas. She answers either 'yes' or 'no' somewhat in the typical mentality molded by the movement. Aside from the different epi- sodes, the Rolling Stones' seg- ments are sporadically inter- rupted for brief moments to watch a young girl, (Eve Dem- ocracy?), paint rhetorical Mao, Leninist, Marxist slogans on cars or billboards. Godard presents a pretexts in the film; there is no plot to un- fold, merely a plethora of ideas woven around the central theme. Sympathy for the Devil, how- ever, is not without problems. The second half is somewhat boring and requires complete concentration, but even 'is slow- er parts depict Godard's true genius. The viewer's frustration from not hearing the complete version of "Sympathy for the Devil" ist finally relieved with the full song at the close. But Godard never intended - and I think rightly so - for the song to be aired in its entirety. He insisted that since the rev- olution is not complete the song must remain fragmentary In the original production of the movie in London under the title One Plus One the final scene was silent. But as typical with Americans the version here was changed and the scene seems totally out of place. FFE RAHEAD bu ra ca So a om fo sec tic fre of th be on thf plus JOHN SEBASTIAN also BLUES IMAGE Friday, May 8 - 8:30 p.m. COBO ARENA TICKETS: $3.50, $4.00, $5.00, $6.00 Available at Cobo Box Office, Grinnell's in Ann Arbor ticket outlet. MAIL ORDERS: Cobo Hall Box Office, 1 Washington Blvd., Detroit, Mich. 48226, enclose check or money order with self-addressed, stamped envelope. :"ti":' irgr {:}X":'}rN p}:rrr:";yi}:""":i:;t;:};'}}:rr,";{:"ifiR:Y;%{i ::N#%:ri{i: : .'rr,.}:,:;ti: }}:": I '* F U-M Tutorial Project!I BUCKET DRIVE FRIDAY, APRIL 17~ 31 N. Washington YPSILANTI DIAL 483-3534 SHOWS AT 6:30-8 P.M.-9:30 "Go see 'Putney Swope'. Tells it like it's never been told before."-Judith Crist Rated. NO WAITING 8 BARBERS OPEN 6 DAYS -., i I I I I Arborkor d--Combus Maole Virboe The Dascola Barbers GUILD HOUSE, 802 Monroe Women's Army Corps Counselor US Army Main Station 16820 James Couzens Highway Please send me more information on executive opportunities as a Women's Army Corps officer. iI Name_ Address city _. County state Zip College . -Age Date Graduated Will Graduate On Phone 1' Noon Luncheon 25c, Thursday, April 16 SAE SUMMER STUDY IN ITALY "PUTNEY, WPThe Truth and Soul Movie A RADICAL FILM SERIES presents a benefit for Legal Self Defense Fund Pumpkin (Eater (1964) THUR.. 16: screen play by Pinter, starring Anne Bancroft 7,9, 11 75 cents a night Canterbury House-330 Maynard -Earn up to 8 transferable credit hours -Learn Italian while study- ing Italian a r t, history, philosophy, literature -No previous knowledge of Italian required -%z sessions or full summer session - See M. B. LONG 3097 FRIEZE BUILDING Call between6-8 P.M. 663-4995 CUBA and GUATEMALA TODAY (their struggle for social justice) *1 Discussion based on recent visits by BETTY RICHARDSON NUTE (staff member, American Friends Service Committee) - COME TO THE DIAG 4) I NGC THEATRE CORPORATION H ELD A NATIONAL GENERAL COMPANY TIMES O R-FOHRVILLaE 375 fo. MAPLE RD.7691300 720-::3 "'M ASI'IS THE BEST AMERICAN WAR COMEDV SINCE SOUND CAME IN New Yorker TODAY-12 noon ISSUES: University Discipline Procedures and REPRISALS from the BAM STRIKE -1