I Poge Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, January 25, 1969 y .:_.... The short, sad stay of Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. arts festival By DANIEL OKRENT . Feature Editor Kurt Vonnegut, Jr; is going home. Contracted for a two week stay as the second of this year's Writers-in-Residence, Vonnegut is leaving Monday for his. home on Cape Cod. He says he's saving money for the Writer-in-Residence Committee. But it isn't simply a philanthropic urge that will be sending Vongut home, just halfway into his planned stay. Rather, he's ruri out of things to say.. . A few nights ago, he visited an American Studies seminar and, with the conversation not going all that well; 5onnegut commented, "I don't particularly like to talk to people, or listen to people." One student asked, "Why are you here?" Vonnegut .replied, "We aren't necessarily rational beings, you know." Yeah. What do you ask Kurt Vonnegut when you talk to him? He's written six novels, five of which have been popular: in our age group and the forthcoming one, The. Slaughterhouse Five, will probably do even better. He started writing to make a living. He kept with it because it was a good thing for him, personally, to do, So what do. you ask him? What does Kurt Vonnegut know that you don't know, but that you wish to know?, He's not a literary historian, a political commen- tator, an anti-science crusader, a nuclear physicist. He writes down words. "Little marks on paper," he says. "Words' are just theselittle -marks on 'paper. A man once wrote to me arid told me he cried when the robot took himself apart in Sirens of Titans, He cried! At little marks on paper!" Someone, outside of Rackham after Vonnegut's opening lecture said that the big man with the self- pleasinglaugh arid the quick wit was all form, no content Vonnegut might not disagree. "There's too much explaining, -too much asking why. Explainers are tire- some." S he keeps away from it. He's been asked to do too much 'explaining, and -he's going home. In his room in Sunday! At the South Quad, he sat drinking straight White Horse in small, silver shot glasses, and said, "If you were my PR man, I'd tell you to tell the paper that I felt I had to wind things up after one week, instead of after two weeks." No explaining. But Vonnegut doesn't needf to explain. His audiences, which consisted first of his cult (which is considerable in size) and second of the curious or those dutifully respectful of visiting dignitaries, may have realized there was only so much to say. Especially with speeches every day, consultations every hour, people to see at every meal. They all ask the same things, too. But; still, Vonnegut came to Ann Arbor. And he's done it before; he spent a week at Notre Dame once, too. Its not entirely like he didn't know what he was in for. "I came here," he says, "to have a good time." He says he hasn't had a good time, though. And he doesn't feel he owes an obligation to his reading public, that he owes them the chance to see him in the flesh. "It makes more sense, for me and for my audience, for me to go home and write more." That's the thing about writers., They're safer in print than in person; they can edit their comments, or they can take time off and do nothing for a while. Vonnegut agrees. He's better in print, and he knows it. But certain of the elements of his writing rub off in his speaking. His sense of humor. His feel for an anecdote. His awareness of exactly what his limitations are, exactly how far he can go without boring himself and his readers, without spouting words because he feels he has to. He's going home to Cape Cod thisMonday. By BARBARA WEISS Innovation. Experimentation. The Creative Arts Festival has come to town. And, they say, "Spend Sunday at the Union." First on the program is Clive Barnes, drama and dance crit- ic for the New York Times. He sees the aims of his profession as three fold: "First, serious criticism . . . Second, a certain amount of entertainment .., Third, a consumer service." Don't treat critics seriously," Barnes advises. "Treat them as amiable springboards." Barnes. who is especially in- terested in avante-garde thea- tre, has reviewed The Believers, The Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre, and Dionysus in 69, all of which may be seen during the two-week Festival. His own role in the schedule involves a speech entitled, "Theatre '69: New and Living." Barnes may be seen and heard at 2:00 p.m. Sunday in the Union Ballroom. Admission is $.75 for students and $1.25 for non-students. Barnes will be followed by Les Levine, creator of "dispos- able environmental art." From a career which moved from making spray paintings of chairs to chair environments to plastic-coated chairs,. Levine took the mediums of plastic and electricity and turned them into artistic experiences. "When I invented, disposable art, I wanted to create a non- object," Levine says. "It con- cern is not with ownership. It is concerned with active experi- ence." "Environmental art that is concerned with imagistic kinds of things is merely electric painting, nothing more." Levine is bringing his en- vironment along with him as his contribution to "Experi- ment in the Arts." The environ- ment he creates utilizes color, light and electric current to produce a total effect of "elec- tric shock." Les Levine and his environ- ment can be experienced on the CAF's special Sunday, tomor- row at 6:30 p.m. in the Union's Ropm 3-C. The "Electric Shock" exhibit will remain on display for the duration of the Festival. Later that same, and also the following, evening, Dionysus in 69 will probably be staged. A contemporary adaptation of Euripides' The Bacchae, Diony- sus is in thetrealm of "environ- mental theater." Coming to the University from a successful Off-Off-Broadway run, "Dionysus" places empha- sis on participatory, theatre in, a Greenwich Village garage- based play of casual atmos- phere, The production may be seen, unless Lt. Staudenmaier finds it too casual, tomorrow a n d Monday at 8:30 p.m. in the Un- ion Ballroom. Admission is $2.00 for students and $3.00 for non-students. On Tuesday evening, Greek artist and sculptress Chryssa will speak on her latest work, a synthesis of art and technology Union!f through neon sculpture. Crea- tor of the "Experiment in the Arts" poster designed especially for the Festival. Chryssa is an artist whose imaginative ideas are put to work in machinery. "When the vision of the ar- tist and the technology of light coalesce, there is a miracul- ous moment," she says. Chryssa will discuss her work at 7:00 p.m. in the Union As- sembly Room. A limited num- ber of "Experiments in the Arts" posters signed by the artist are available to the public through the Creative Arts Festival by calling 763-2102. Following Chryssa will be a performance of mixed-media theatre given by the Eastbound Mound. Guitars, druniW, an or- gan and drama all combine to form a fully sensory experience in which the audience in invited to participate. The Eastbound Mound will be in the Union Ballroom Tuesday, Jan. 28 at 9:00 p.m. And there's lots more to come. 0I SATUkDAY and SUNDAY THE SOFT SKIN Directed by Francois Truffaut, 1964 From the director of The 400 Blows, Shoot The Piano Player, Jules and Jim, Starring FRANCOISE DORLEAC "Truffaut was born to make films." -Stanley Kauffman 7:00 & 9:05 lARCHITECTURE 662-8871 75c' AUDITORIUM HELD OVER! F(F~~fil- .-1. A m0 - do Aolk so wo% I I insasrd Experimental chickens shed no blood A, By RICHARD KELLER SIMON The Theatre of Cruelty pro- duction of Paduma put itself together during the last two evenings of performance at Can- terbury House. What began on Thursday night as an awkward rehearsal became a serious theatrical ritual on Friday night. Flaws that remain should disappear for the final performance Sun- day evening. Paduma, a nineteenth cen- tury Burmese play, attempts a definition of Buddhahood and of the forgiveness of "Karma. Paduma, the Prince, is sent out of the city of civilization by the King, who explains, "It is for your own good that I hate you." During his wanderings with his royal family, Paduma comes to an understanding of the neces- sary and unnecessary pains of life. The play begins with the cere- monial execution of a living chicken, and ends on a state- ment about the jaws of the al- ligator. Paduma, dressed in beak and feathers, with a bird on his hand, refuse the animalistic cannibalism of his brothers, and eventually accepts the more na- utral wisdom of the alligator, The play -does not attempt to communicate wildom in any rational way. Mysteries remain mysteries, although glimpses of the process become clearer. Pa- duma's wife deserts her hus- band for an armless, legless, earless, noseless man during the exile. At first she is revolted at the sight and calls the stars "ugly." She turns around and, without any explainable transi- tion, proceeds to talk the Stump into marrying her. Whether she has found her own necessary answer to fate, dr is merely one of the women the play dumps upon, is never made clear. But this may be an unfair criticism. The production is after all, non-verbal and ritual- istic. Paduma dances as he speaks-and is always followed around by a female alter-ego. The characters in the play walk and speak among the audience. Four musicians sit on the floor performing. The theatre is fill- ed with incense (unfortunately, on Friday night it was straw- berry-scented) and a black light flashes intermittently. Char- acters speak at the same time that the speaker system calls their lines out to them. The co-directors of Paduma, Mel Gordon and Gail Lenhoff, have presented their own inter- pretation of the Theatre of Cruelty-more humanistic and meaningful than Julian Beck's Living Theatre. "Paduma" did not, assault the audience-al- though it certainly required it to participate, and it did rely on shock techniques. "Paduma" works best with a sympathetic audience; the Living Theatre works best in hostility. There was a certain' amount oft nudity, or partial nudity in the play. Mary Barkey has ex- ceedingly fine breasts. Her role, as the alter image of Paduma, was vague at best, but certain- ly pleasant. Whatever hint herI breasts provided (in contrast to the other women) was totally obscured by the sudden appear- ance of a male-in-jockstrap at the very end of the play. His partial nudity seemed grat.uitous, and rather too late in the play for any shock effect to have value. Richard Keller Simon is the temporary playwright laureate of Marquette, Mich. He is cur- rently visiting Ann Arbor for a week, offering himself as a pos- sible replacement for Kurt Von- negut, Jr. Rent your Roommate with a Classified Ad Program Information 2-6264 6th Big Week IKTITAF Shows at 1 :00-3:00-5:00-7:10& 9:20 ONE OF, THE, BEST MOVIES I'VE SEEN THIS YEAR. -Saturday Review PLEASE CHECK YOR A D The Michigan Daily makes every effort to avoid errors in advertisements. Each ad is carefully checked and proofread. But when you handle hundreds of ads each day, m i s t a k:e s do slip through. We ask, therefore, that you check your ad and if you find an error, report it to The Michigan Daily Classified Dept., 764-0557 be- tween 12:30 p.m. and 2:30 p m. We regret that we can- not be responsible for more than one day's incorrect in- sertion if you do not call the error to our attention. Thank You. I bad cops and thcr re good +cops--and thin~ Ih~u litL I 1 music: Hague Philharmonic: Balanced brilliance STEV[ IC4UEEN AS TBUIJIT ' jnsaiearTO m RMATrnl Asj UENT NICOLORO ROM WARNER BIOSAIMYNRS ODI 01 I I NATIONAL OENERAL CORP By JIM PETERS Way back in the early days of the 1900's, The Hague was a, pretty important city, t h e league of Nations and every- thing, you know. And though you don't hear The Hague men- tionedmuch on the Huntley- Brinkley report these days, it can still take ~credit for having an excellent symphony orches- tra in residence. "Under the gracious patronage of Her Majesty Queen Juliana of the Netherlands," the Ha- gue philhariinoriic' (Het Resi- dentie-Orkest) stopped in Ann Arbor last night at Hill Aud. on their wide-ranging tour of the United States. Conductor, Willem Van Otter- loo's program was anything but light; and yet the - balance- in the pieces-.performed; :-and the- all-round brilliance of the per- formers, 'made the evening very worthwhile for even the.spclety concert-goer.- Hendrik Andriessen's "Sym- phonic Study" was the f ir s t piece. I wondered about open- ung a concert that would even-. tually conclude with a long Bruckner symphony on such a serious note. The "Study" is a series of variations composed in 1952 in four movements. I expected much more from it than I should have; in fact, it was a fine concert-opener be- cause although it isn't very good music, it is bright and enjoy- able. The listener hears pretty music with an overpowering theatrical flair, which would probably do very well as a score for some movie or television show. The basic problem is orches- tration; with the harp solos over sugary strings, the harp and cymbals runs over orches- tral turbulence which sounded very much like a ship in distress on the high seas, the piece lost -all serious character for me. But the Philharmonic played it very well, squeezing all t h e emotion out of the atonal lines, especially in the adagio section, and establishing themselves as splendid musicians. The up mood continued with Mozart's 38th symphony, the "Prague.", Here was music to r match the greatness of the or- chestra. Composed after Mo- zart's big success with "Le Nozze di Figaro" in Prague, the sym- phony is a gift to the city. A long adagio begins the work with tr.umpet and drum flour- ishes; this must be controlled and sustained in order for the allegro section to explode with the proper effect. Van Otterloo understands Mo- zart very well; the lively melo- dies of the first movement, very reminiscent of the overture to "Figaro," bounced along; yet the nuances were there, the shadings in a turn of a phrase. A Bruckner symphony is something to reckon with. You can thro.w around words like "tour de force" and "jugger- naut"; but when you ask most people to listen to a Bruckner, they invariably ask "How long is this one?" And even music- ians tire at the complexity built from meager resources. You sit there and are over- whelmed with the massive scope of his compositions. But Bruck- ner's "Symphony No. 6 in A Major" is of reasonable length even for a disciple of Wagner. The four movements introduce theme after theme which are mixed and singled out in long, long development sections. How does one keep an orches- tra going strong for such a long time, playing their best and playing with intelligent under- standing? I don't know what the trick it, but maestro V a n Otterloo has found the secret. The fanfares of the third move- ment, the real beauty of the melodies In the second, the sav- age principal theme of the first -all were superb. POSITIVELY ENDS TUES. FOX EASTERN TM EATRES~i FOH VILLAGE 375 No. MAPLE RD.-"769.1300 Monday-Friday 7:00-9:15 Saturday-Sunday 2:15-4:30- 6:15-9:00 I E _..hw..... ffiLFI 77fRS~ * STARTS WEDNESDAY MGM presents-the John Frankenheimer- Edward Lewis Production of ef x Metrocolo 4 '0 DA I LY AT 1-3-5- 7-9 P.M. -A- I HIA DIAL 5-6290 i "The Best Suspense Western Since'High Noon" -Los Angeles Herald-Examiner - __= ij I Ceative Arts Festival announces that ticketsfor January 24-25 THE RUSSIANS ARE COMING, THE RUSSIANS ARE COMING, E with III .1 I I,