Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Inti irt4n-.f 1 In.:aw,:,. . ^ 1 040 aaruraoy, rvovemner 4j, 1 V(36 5 music 7aB By R. A. PERRY Anyone interested in music, theatre, young talent, color, comedy, love, wine, poetry, sex, cats, or chocolate mousse should see the School of Music's pro- duction of La Boheme. Once again, d e s p i t e unavoidable drawbacks of occasional ama- teurism, the enthusiasm of the singers and the quality demand- *ed by the team of Blatt and Herbert make for an enjoyable evening of opera. As in Zef- ferelli's Romeo and Juliet, it is invigorating to see young lovers, not routine professionals, act out their destinies with con- vincing ardor. Although I saw the last dress rehearsal, it should represent the finished product-lacking only the tension of the audience to goad the singers to fuller characterization - and thus criticism can. Justifiably be made. There are only two adverse comments to mention before happier facets of the perform- ance can be explored. First, the singers have not been adequate- ly rehearsed with the orchestra, and too often the timing be- tween the two is off. This proves rather disasterous in the first act horseplay among -the four theatrically inexperienced B- hemians. La Boheme's popular- ity belies the precise coordina- tion required between singer and pit. Although conductor Josef Blatt obviously hates to let er- rors pass (within the limits of his performers), insufficient re- hearsal time does take its toll. Secondly, the role of Ro- dolphe requires an outstanding lyric tenor who can command several octaves; such young men are hard to come by. Alexander Chmil though he tries heroial- ly to fill the bill, lacks the re- quisite power and range. His voice almost always sounds from the throat, with little reserve, and though one cannot blame him for bringing down an octave his Act I final "Amore!," one can takeshim to task for the way he slides into notes, ad- justing until he finds the right pitch. These things said, wonderful moments abound in performance, James Berg is magnificent as the Rabelaisean Marcel. He not only possesses a potent, rich bass voice,. but he also uses it with subtlety and dramatic expres- siveness. His Act IV duet with Rdolphe was especially moving, and itAis easy to foresee a suc- cessful career for this young singer. As Marcel's sometime mistress, -L-nda Oakley adds another clear tiumph to her still Ann Arbor career. Turning from the co- quettish Susanna she gave us in Figaro this summer, she has assumed the role of the vampish Musette with a stage assurance that is always arresting. She uses het strong and never shrill soprano voice with dramatic ef- fect and no doubt her captivat- ing waltz scene will stop the show. Joann Gustafson (Mimi) is one beautiful women, and if she came knocking at my door, I'd light her candle, T.B. or no T.B. loheme invigorates Alookcat... 'A Flea in Her Ear" By Henry Grix While boasting the cast and color to give it guaranteed popularity, A Flea in Her Ear, now showing at the Campus, is a miserable flop. It is not only contrived, boring, deja vu; it is bad. Beautiful people, veteran comics in impeccable clothes and sumptuous decors can't divert the viewer's awareness that he is seeing an embarrassingly unfunny bedroom farce. Of course, Rex Harrison and Rosemary Harris are not bad to look at, but they are simply given nothing to do. The flimsy film collapses about them, Rachel Roberts and Louis Jourdan. If the movie had not been made, the actors would have saved quite a bit of face (although they would have been out a good deal of money.) And meanwhile, the audience could have had, presumably, more fun at home. For what its worth, the blame is not hard to place. Writer John Mortimer has an academic comprehension of the stock elements of French bedroom farce; unfaithful wives, jealous husbands, a dull nephew, a mealy mouthed maid, a drunken bell-hop and a bordello-hotel decorated in Art Nouveau. He compiles this standard fare, with the film's ample budget and abundance of talent in mind. He wastes Harrison, in two roles, casting him both as a jealous husband and a sot. But, Mortimer forgets the jokes, or figures the audience knows them so well, they can't bear re-telling. Ignoring the still funny tradition of Feydeau's Hotel Paradiso, or Labiche et Martin's La Poudre aux yeux, Mortimer omits double-entendre and lets two Harrisons fill in for double-take. The script is alternately dull, boorish and silly. Harrison the barrister (he poses for a Daumier lithograph) wins in court: "Could this daughter of France ruin the flavor of one of our national dishes with so much as a touch of arsenic." Miss Harris, the suspicious wife, suspects her spouse of in- fidelity: "My husband's braces (suspenders) ! And he didn't leave them in the Christian Science reading room!" Ever her emotive eyes can't save this one. Harrison, the sot, says to Miss Harris, the apologetic: "Piss off." Partially because of Mortimer's ridiculous script, and par- tially because he has no sense of comic timing and no flair for the sight gag, director Jacques Charon gives no life to A Flea in Her Ear. Birds flutter, silk shimmers, and breasts heave beneath gauze blouses, but nothing ever unfolds. 7:00 Salurday, November 23rd I. BLONDE VENUS and DEVIL IS A WOMAN Both Starring MARLENE DEITRICH Directed by Von Sternberg A 75c DOUBLE-FEATURE BARGAIN- McKENNEY UNION (main lounge) Ypsilanti (across from water tower) I* I I * U I The enthusiasm of the singers and the quality demanded by the team of Blatt and Herbert makes for an enjoyable evening of opera. Her voice excels in the upper octaves and she can call on de- cent reserve power; in the lower registers she is not as secure. Her acting improved as the eve- ning aged and her death scene, preceded by memories of days with Rodolpherleft a lump in my usually adamant throat. Franklin Dybdahl brought maturity and stage assurance to the role of Schaunard, and David Rohrbaugh, looking more like the Mad Hatter than a philosopher, delivered his fa- mous soliloquy to his overcoat in a sober and moving manner; elsewhere he seems somewhat in his role. It is important to add that these singers represent the Sat- urday and Tuesday cast. On Friday and Monday, Robert Zajac sings Rodolphe; Edward Huls, Marcel; Gwendolyn Schef- fel, Mimi; and Lynda Weston, Musette. In the pit, the orchestra play- ed with amazing pitch control (at least in contrast to Figaro's orchestra) and a decent amount of sensitivity to the dramatic situation. The droll Prof. Blatt, who conducted from memory con amore, can obviously work wonders in a short time; too bad he could not have scheduled more rehearsals. On stage, the direction of Ralph Herbert (a dead ringer for Walter Matthau) never al- lowed static situations to devel- op. In fact, he overfilled the stage in Act II with a corps of stand-ins and gags that were more distracting than amusing. In Act I the four artists seemed bewildered, if not overcome, by all the activities demanded of them. Alice Crawford's sets were ef- fective, I felt, especially in the way the garret opened up behind a scrim "window" to the build- ings "across the street." The opera was sung in Eng- lish-a noble idea certainly-to a translation by Blatt himself. Except for a few bad moments, the libretto was lucid and un- obtrusive, the latter quality being rare in such translations. about the production was not the occasional sloppiness, but the way in which, when Marcel cries "Courage!" and Rodolphe moans "Mimi, Mimi' over the expired body, a chill crept down my spine. The effect is inherent in Puccini's sublime music, and Blatt and company get it across. TONIGHT at The Three Penny Opera (Folk trio from Oberlin, Ohio) 421 Hill St. 8:30 P.M. singing ragtime, ballads, and contemporary folk music accompanied by 6 an! 12 string guitars and fiddle. NEXT MONDAY: Movie-"The Best Years of Our Lives" sI- TONIGHT: JULIET of the SPIRITS DIRECTED BY ELLINI1 One very bad couplet comes to ~~ mind, however. Just before the liid iiiarvin is sexy . exquisite "Cehe gelida manina," Uldll SSi Rodolphe tells Mimi: "As for your key don't mind it. It's Mad Marvin presents: much too dark to find it." Such 3020 Washtenaw, Ph. 434-1782 doggerel should be corrected.USaturday Su y Between Ypsilanti & Ann Arbor UneF at he Y h Forum The most important thing Saturday and Sunday 5th Avenue at Liberty 761-9700 -_-_l- ---Thursday, Friday, Saturday & Sunday: 11 p.m. ATIO NAL EA NERN THE RATR 7 u e r a t io n A b o litio n Separate admission required. and}Ei s IA'FRI EROS FILM PROGRAM 375NOMAPLE RD.-7691300 and- Seven provocative Films." Wilson Lindsey, Det. Free Press ENDS TUESDAY PORTRAIT OF A GIRL by John Bale. 5N6300_5Operation Correction tSONG by Ron Taylor. _SSAT.--345-6NG30-9:15Matte by Ron Taylor. SUN-:00-345-6:30-9:15 OPERATION ABOLITION is a 45 minute film o C0L0R .are LOVE AMONG THE CHRISTIANS. MIRISCH PICTURES presents about the student demonstrations against the House VIBRANT NUDE. Un-American Activities Committee's session, in MY POLISH GIRL. May, 1960. The film, anctioned and produced by S~H UAC, attempts to prove that the student uprising; was Communist led and Communist inspired. HUAC -- believed that Operation Abolition was the code name for the Communist plot to destroy the Committee. In the film a member of Congress says students have WELLHERE WE GO AGAIN- been "toying with treason by demonstrating aginst the Committee. Unlike many of the Leni Riefenstahl Nazi propa- ganda films, OPERATION ABOLITION is not "pret- ty." As Stanley Kauffman, film.,critic for the NEW STARTS WEDNESDAY REPUBLIC, said, "many of the people for whom this film is intended might be as suspicious of a "pretty" IEA Y film as they are of fancy foods and foreign accents." SEAN OPERATION CORRECTION is the American Civil Liberties Union's answer to HUAC. In the ACLU - CuNuNERY version of the film, inserted subtitles and a revised sound track expose the obvious factual and tem- r BRIGITTE ' ' distortions of the original.isco n.recordsi c BARDOT 7:00 & 9:05 ARCHITECTURE 662-8871 75Y AUDITORIUM S 10 MAJOR LABELS ON SALE TECHNICOLOR* Try Daily ClassIfieds WE CAN'T TELL YOU WHAT'S ON SALE BUT IT'S WELL WORTH YOUR WHILE TO STOP IN AND FIND OUT. TOMORROW-SUNDAY, NOV. 24-11 A.M.-5 P.M. The New -169 JAZZ BAND LARRY DAVIDSON, Director SATURDAY, NOV. 23 3:00 P.M. ABO OUTHASORORITIS Hill Auditorium FREE Admission ABOUT SORORITIES? Go to the source for facts, not rumors FLY WITHPahleiTa UNION-LEAGUE W rThe: ~1 OL Charter group that flys from the CL IH ontinent-SavesPh11ae n a 2. ONLY Charter that flys regularly scheduled, I.A.T.A. air- planes (SABENA and PANAM). Union Room 3 R-S 3. ONLY Charter backed by The University both verbally and 1+ * I