Page Two I HE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, September 10, 1968 I HL MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, September 10, 1968 theatre cinema The no-gray mind of Lerot Jones Some notes on the Horseman'' By DEBORAH LINDERMAN Leroi Jones talks only to blacks, not to whites. He refuses the principle of dialogue. The first piece done by his Black Arts Theatre, The Great God Goodness of Life, was annopnc- edly "a play about our fathers and some of ourselves, and what happen~s if you get your mind hooked up to other people's val- ues." He means it, one thinks; it is not a pose, yet the exclus- ion has its ambiguities, f o r whites are admitted to the thea- ter. If not a dialogue, then, this makes at least a confrontation, as well as a clear dramatic per- spective; for the point of view and the identification must be monolithic - whites are left out. But they are watchers, they are told where they can go, their "guilt" is dramatized by the very choice of the preferred reference group. Thus the auditorium situa- tion is duplicitous, almost as in a Genet play, where the aud- ience becomes part of the per- formance. At the same time, the principle of separatist theater gives the pageant dra- matic. distance. It makes the issues starker, and, insofar as it makes issues at all, the propa- ganda purer. Yet art, as distinct from propaganda, is something exalted from messages about life; it offers a curve of exhilar- ation that overarches life and makes one feel ambiguities, not choices. Thus the Jones-led perform- ance in Hill Aud. Sunday night was both good and bad. That is, it was aesthetically short, but one felt good because one got a purity of perspective, addressed to blacks, for blacks, ostensibly excluding whites. Yet whites looked on, and were probably forced to. measure, to some de- gree, how far they were them- selves alienated, how far seduc- ed. There was probably a lot of playfulness that most whites didn't get; it can be called in- jokism, though some doubtless call it rabid and militant. In any case, you can become very uneasy because of it, as in any process of self-appraisal. The first piece Sunday night was a bit out of Kafka: Mr. Nice White Negro who has be- haved well and worked in the Post Office as a "supervisor," a '"good man" for 35 years, gentlemanly, polite, middle- class, not even apologetic, is suddenly accused and sentenced by an anonymous amplified voice for harboring a murderer (himself? his ancestors? black murderers of blacks?). He denies, pleads not guilty, is given Legal Aid in the form of an inanely smiling black auto- maton. The hice Negro asks for "his lawyer" (Jim Breck by name), and the automaton, who looks like the black mannikin jockey that used to garnish the lawns of suburbia, turns out to be what Jim Breck has really been all the time. Mr. P.O. is advised to plead guilty, his lawyer robots off the stage, the accusing unseen voice laughs hysterically, Mr. P.O. goes through some break- ing down, admits his guilt, his confusion, cries his true good faith, shivers epilepticly. Then he is confronted with the "cold ploiter who finds it convenient to project onto the black effigy all his guilt and fear about him- self. The genial black does a moment or two of genial wrestl- ing, and then, rotten to the quick, kills his son, who under- lines the whole historical syn- drome by the utterance of the word Papa as he falls. NoV the 35 year P.O. clerk is adjudged safe and clean and free. End the first part. Enter Leroi himself. He read his poetry, flanked by two blacks, one standing with hands behind his back, the other with arms crossed. Thus the pride and tesque white watches from a box, accoutred with long nose and what look to be diapers, like some travesty out of Waiting for Godot. He emerges creakily from his box, limb by limb, hav- ing to sometimes move a leg by forcing it with an arm, finally unwinds, flexes his separate muscles, steals the sleeper's car- pet, and his scrolls, quickly cribs what he can, and unable to capture any of the real en- ergies of it, looking as though he were put together all wrong, tries an imitation. Negroes accept the mock identity forced on them by a shrewd, but soulless, white. Finally, out comes the proud new Negro, clad in white, hand- some, takes back his scroll and carpet, takes away the African token that the overseer had been wearing, gets the blacks, all together, bends them in unison in the direction of some meta- phoric mecca, and the white is left to creep into his cage, snort- ing and making chewing motions like a tobacco-spitting paw in some western. The Negro-in- white takes the time to get up and bend the white's head, too, rubbing it ironically in his own proper dirt, as he withdraws back into the neat, safe, appro- priate confines of his own box. There was a segregated clump of seats for Negroes, roped off in front. They stood when they clapped, and laughed when (some) whites didn't. A few whites, but few, stood when they clapped too. One may have felt so genuinely iden- tified, within the purity of the propaganda, although not with- in the complications of real life and the discomfort of most people with the, complexity of race relations in this country today, that one could clap and stand honestly, but not to be a false joiner, and riot to prove something in the doing. So one had to decide that to stand was how one felt at the moment, that something true and resonant had been said not merely about one issue but about the wider war against all that one faces in the jungles of human relationships from day to day. Clapping and standing was not joining, or guilt com- pensation, but yea-saying to the "universal" metaphors for the hatred of victimization, the smugness and indifference of tates to say it, rhythmically en- man does this on his own) by himself, when faced by the trite but ineluctable games of life and deathmanship. Within the pure, and relatively subtle terms of the propaganda, one said yea and stood and clapped, along with the soul brothers who un- derstood the in-jokes maybe only a little better, James Baldwin has said that "whatever white people do not know about Negroes reveals what they don't know about themselves." Leroi Jones is not trying to do any melting, is sk- ing no pittance, using no touch- stones. Blacks are to "blame" for their own dispersal as much as whites. There is no enlisting, nothing missionary. But whites do have their black, as blacks have their white. And outside of the purities and subtleties of propaganda, in art maybe, in life naturally, things are im- moderately difficult and on this account one's soul is gray in more senses than one. For it is not that people are just people: they bring their whole color history with them, and, if they are canny, exploit the current issues by using it, on both sides. Maybe this is the purest thing that Leroi Jones' denial, his refusal of interracial commerce has to say. He dram- atizes only the struggle for an identity, not the reciprocal dis- honesties to which that current struggle may be put. Perhaps the blacks have it good, as well as bad, these days. For the formulation of black identity has as its object the victimizer - depersonalized and mythologized as he may be, and a certain unity and solidarity in the job of reclamation. Jones never lets this become too easy; his focus is as much on the be- traying white Negro as on the stupid dead white. But the job of "existential work" is no easy thing for him who seeks species- hood independently, and not an easy group identity. At the end of the evening, all blacks we're invited to a recep- tion for Leroi Jones, and so the real confrontation and drama was avoided. I would probably not have gone, yet I was glad I clapped and stood. I know very well the deeper traps and allures of the experiences that I saw dramatized, but lay in- sistent claim on the differential that make them mine. By PHIL BALLO never knows what next to expect. Because of the cruelty, poverty, never understands the totality of, and violence he knew as a boy, what is happening. Maxim Gorky would always trea- sure the insight of his grand- At the end the gestapo chief sure the inespightre otisad-yimpatiently defies the people to mother: people are not bad; they admit who informed on the old are only stupid. To a grief-ridden doctor. Because the audience is Russian people and to the new nevertold who was the informer, Soviet State Gorky became a liv- everyone - on the screen and ing legend from his lifelong cru- watching the screen - is held in sade for the hope and courage of passive suspense, As the gestapo the human spirit, chief angrily stalks out of the Two years ago a Czech film re- buildingrthe shock is equally great instated Gorky's insight that vio- for him and the audience to con- lence and oppression has its roots sider that it was the doctor him- in the human spirit. Shop on Main se wh stmone the geto - Stret uggste tht Jws ereself who summoned the gestapo - Street suggested that Jews were and the audience - to sit in killed not simply by "The Nazi" ignorance, impotence, and sus- but by the everyday weakness pense as witnesses to his own common to human nature. , personal integrity. the audience into a dumb and fearful submission to that same drama. When oppression and violeng rule the world - who is to blame? Maxim Gorky's grandmother taught the young writer to look into the human spirit. Shop on Main Street similarly traced vio- lence to the impotence of will. The Fifth Horseman is Fear also asks who is responsible for the horrib experiences of our times. The b guys cannot be simply the Nazis for here they are instead revealed as drunken lechers, unaccountable except to their own wild passions. The Fifth Horseman shows that disaster's roots lie not in any pin- up bad guys - not in any of t e four horsemen who are merely W- they contexvt Qrin is th e ominouls The Fifth Horseman is Fear destruction of Europe's Jewry. therefore succeeds remarkably by complices - but in us, the riders, Where Shop on Main Street un- showing how not only the sub- who, as Walter Shapiro said after rolled with the monotony neces- mission to fear and impotence lets the Chicago fiasco, ". . . sit at sary to show the hero's everyday reign the most disastrous of his- their television sets and let them- impotence, Fifth Horseman pro- torical drama, but also by a style selves be tossed by the winds of ceeds with an uncanny cadence which at the same time forces unplanned change." of suspense. The Fifth Horseman's maze pro- .- - - w '" sm Dial 665-6290 ceeds as the story line is presented EkTWICE DAILY from at least three interchanging _at 1:30 and 7:30 perspectives. Row upon row of confiscated property and the E sense of doom are seen through C P E the eyes of an old doctor. The pettiness and affairs of the adult A . world are seen as offbeat curio- E sities through the eyes of a boy. One expects a third person nar- rator to present an objective pic- E N UT A ture but instead, as in the days of Friday and Saturday {0 $lOh German Expressionism, the cam- Eves, and All Day PeAll Other era itself participates subjectively SLunday Performances as another dumb (rather than all- knowing) observer. Information is withheld so the audience, as the NATI GRLAST TIMES TODAY mass of characters themselves, _---_FOX ILL 6E "SECRET LIFE AMERICAN WIFE" 375 No. MAPLE RD.-769.1300 7:15-9:15 STARTS TOMORROW G _ _ _ _ _ 20th Century-Fox presents DEBORAH KERR DAVID NIVEN H -Daily-Larry Robbins UNIVERSITY shadow" of the "murderer," a black boy in the brutal but clearly black hands of two white hooded Klanners (the Negroes have conspired against them- selves). The cold shadow, says the disembodied voice, is already dead. Hence, he can have his own guilt whitewashed and his false white soul restored, by killing the murderer (of the black peo- ple, the historical existential sell-out victim who is already dead anyway). Or he can refuse to kill this shadow (his son) and assume all the terror of his own sentence, along with the burden of freeing the black from complicity with the white vic- timizer. The burden of self-affirma- tion, separation from the ex- solidarity are choreographed. Some of the poetry was hip chant, and, though one hesi- power, selling out (and each. ticing; some in privacies of language that made it just hard to get at, some not very inter- esting at all. Next a religious mime called The Insurrection of Misplaced Love. The "original" Negro spreads a fabulous piece of colored cloth, doeshis homage to the whole wide universe, not in any ritualized way, but full of the energy of life and free vitality which is the true af- firmation of self. T h e n he stretchesout full length and goes fabulously to sleep. A gro- THE MICHIGAN BANDS- Lost 2 Days 1 :15-3:45 6:25-9:10 n i I a guide to: Apartments Bars Restaurants with maps and hints on life in Ann Arbor $1.OQ Take Great Pride in Presenting JOHNNY CARSON, IN PERSON with Doc Severinson and Orchestra Marilyn Maye Bud and Cece Dance Team in 2 Shows at 7:00 and 10:00 P.M. on Saturday, October 5 at the UNIVERSITY EVENTS BUILDING o ALL SEATS RESERVED. Tickets priced as follows: Events Building Floor: $5; Blue Section: $4; and Gold Section: $3. Mail orders may be sent to Johnny Carson Show, 1024 Administration Building, Ann Arbor 48104. Accompany your order with a check made payable to the Michigan Bands. Orders will be filled, beginning on September 27. General sales will begin on September 30. ORCH ESTRA Sponsored by G&S MUSKET A.A. Civic Theatre "Gondoliers" Camelot More! "A continuing music experience for non-music majors" 0 MASS MEETING Michigan Union Sept. 12, 7:30 FRIDAY, SEPT. 13th--11 :00 P.M. ONLY * THE MASTER OF THE MACABRE BRINGS BACK TO THE SCREEN ROMAN POLANSKI'S Limited One Showing only :v. - 11: 00 P.M. F -n FIELDER COOK'S A KAHN-HARPER PRODUCTION SMA, Mon. thru Fri. 7:00-9:00 Color by De LuXe Sat.-Sun. 1:45-3:30-5:15-7-9 #1 I --~.~-- - ~ -. I M WINNER OF 3 ACADEMI FilmEditing /Sound Effects / Te ,Mor Y AWARDS Sound I I * Starts Thursday-"HANG 'EM HIGH 0 ENDS WEDNESDAY DIAL 8-6416 The Incredible CHARGING RHINOCEROS OF SOUL at CANTERBURY HOUSE Weds. Nite, Sept. 11 9 P.M. $1.00 4 "EXCEPTIONALLY POWERFUL, IN BOTH CONCEPTION AND EXECUTION! A HIGH LEVEL OF CREATIVE CINEMA!" -Time Magazine "DAZZLING AND TO THE POINT!" -Penelope Gilliatt, The New Yorker 'BRILLIANT! REMARKABLE!" -Joseph Morgenstern, Newsweek "FEW FILMS ARE WORTHY OF BEING CALLED ARTISTIC. THIS Ik~ONE! Brilliantly accomplished!" -Hollis Alpert, Saturday Review THURSDAY HORSENlAn 'THERESE nd IS FERR ISABELLE" A CARLO PONTI PRESENTATION DISTRIBUTED BYU SIGMA lILA FILM WAYS COMPANY Go Go Bahamas! YEAR-END SMASH-Dec. 26th-Jan. 4th 10 Fabulous Days-9 Glorious Nights $19900 For Person quad occ. (doubles or triples available on request) TOUR INCLUDES: * Round trip jet air transportation non-stop Detroit to Freeport * Round trip transfers and baggage handling airport-hotel * 9 nights accommodations at the Freeport Inn (where the action is!) .l. taxes and tips * Round trip beach transportation hourly I i AMIUMuJAOAFU i i STARRING J AMS ER BSAN' h T MOTND ~UNE BEIMFOD WALTER introducĀ§ t09l SA O UGLAS & IEy rODUCTION . screen story and screenplay by ROBERT ALAN AURTHUR 0 drected byJOH: FR/NKENHEIMER -produced by EDWARD LEWIS.music by MAURICE JARRE IN SUPER PANAVISION'AND METROCOLOR MGM TUES. & WED.-ONE SHOW ONLY-8:00 P.M. NTION! Petitioning for SGC SEATS oh il i