THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, February 4, 1969 Tuesdov February 4 1 9f9 -, ~ -, -- festival set-down, simply-good By STUART GANNES The puns get hissed, some- times the jokes flop and at other times the audience misses a line, but the performance of the Second City comedy team is original enough to win en- thusiastic applause, and crea- tive enough to prove that cut- and-dried night club stand-up monologues and Bob Hope studio skits are not inevitable mediums of American comedy. In fact, the Second City's act, in Trueblood Aud. last night successfully included a wider variety of entertainment forms than any live comic perform- ance I have ever seen. While the backbone of the Second City's repertoire re- mains the same ironic political quips and stale references to sexual voyeurism which Amer- ican comedy seems irrevocably chained to, individual skits bas- ed on sharp, psychological in- sight are truly worthy of being considered classics. One in particular, a mono- logue by Carol Robinson about a person's changing attitudes to- ward society and religion, achieved in five blunt minutes as much as some three credit sociology courses at the Uni- versity do in five weeks. The sketch begins with M i s s Robinson speaking in the dia- lect and the context of a ten year old girl explaining why her grandmother wanted her to go to religious services and confes- sion every week. Then she be- ja comes in quick success gum-chewing teenager, gum-c h e w i n g teenag pseudo-intellectual coe pregnant girl, a young ban housewife, a sociall, scious woman, a church arch and finally a cri grandmother warning grandchildren about the sity of going to Churc saying confession. The Second City 1 don't rely solely on di though. Many of the sk built around creativel mime, an art which see be disappearing as TV ar absorb the last few live m shows and mime troup: forming in America. Pantomime comes acr live performances where on television. On a live a pantomime artist can enormous tension in th ience simply 'through contact, physical presen good piano accompanime TV, even great pantomir tists like Marcel Marcel to come across. In a theat audience's eyes are glued actor, on television, the er's first reaction is that time is wrong with the tube on his Magnavox. At one point last ni member of the cast ap alone on the stage and to arrange the chairs (th props) in a straight ro that point, he took out a 'humor' sion a the audience to laugh, but as he a - walked off, two other actors ap- :er, a peared on the stage and began d, a a skit which used the chairs as subur- a couch. Even the stage-hand y con- manipulation of props ' was matri- turned into a joke. rochety Another technique employed her by the actors at the beginning ne d of both portions of their show ;h adnd was a singing, dancing, yelling charade of one line. "stop-'em" players caricatures on American- .cul- alogue, ture, all performed in front of its are a strobe light. The effect of the panto- yelling, dancing and especially ems to the strobe was to accentuate the nd film 'grotesqueness of the lines and instrel make the message of the chorus s per- -you'll never get out of this alive-plain eerie. 'oss in Of course, the skits derive it fails their momentum from quick stage, one-line jokes which on the Sbuild whole were quite funny. e aud- a visual For instance, a speech by an ce and IBM executive: "Glib-dib- nt. On bleep-beep-bop." a drunken me ar- white says to a black soldier "I mu fail want you to know how we're all ter, the behind you." To which the to the soldier replies: "yeah, I noticed view- that." some- sound ght, a peared started e only I1/T1 IT AC W. C. FIELDS HELD OVER BY POPULAR DEMAND Everybody's favorite dirty old man is back in town. Putting it down once more for a whole new generation of potential Fields' cultists. And a whole generation of devoted Fields' addicts. Whatever the subject, whatever the treatment, W. C. Fields' humor is more up-to-date than the hippest of contem- porary flicks. Catch "My Little Chickadee" with the incomparable Mae West. Then see "You Can't Cheat An Honest Man." That's all it should take to make W. C. your favorite dirty old man, too.'. "YOU CAN'T CHEAT AN HONEST MAN" MON. thru FRI.--7:00, 9:30 "MY LITTLE CH ICKADE E" with MAE WEST-7:30 MON. thru FRI .-8:10 RG PnwIP I J 40 w. At wand and told the audience he had changed the chairs into a couch. His self-confidence inspired IN I\III -Daily-Larry Robbins I - - -- -music Marlboro of a different color HURRY! ENDS TUESDAY NATIONAL !GENERAL COftPOfATI0W, FOX EASTERN TEATRESo FOX VILLarGE) 375 No. MAPLE RD.-"769-1300 MON. -TU ES. 7:00-9:00 SUNDAY 1:45-4:15- 6 :40-9 :10 SYMPOSIUM By R. A. PERRY' The Marlboro Festival in Ver- mont has served as a summer chamber - music workshop for professional musicians s i n c e 1950. Occasionally recordings have been released by ensem- bles formed at Marlboro and re- cently Marlboro personnel have offered traveling concert4 series. Normally, one associates Casals, Serkin, Bloom, Laredo, Schneid- er, Parnas, Levine and Barrows with this festival but Saturday night in a Rakham Aud. re- cital lesser- known musicians performed under the aegis of the Marlboro, trademark. The' concert was one of the least memorable in this year's out- standing University Musical So- ciety series. What pleasures the program provided were offered almost exclusively by the young singer,. Thomas Paul. Mr. Paul's bass voice cannot extend too greatly in either direction (into either the cantante or profondo range) and though his reserve power is limited, he uses his rich, pleas- ing voice with artistic subtlety. Excellent in diction, he pays attention to the dramatic exig- encies of the text. Mr. Paul, first sang five songs of Schubert. While' the quality of vocalism was high-rhyth- ically interesting, dramatically sensitive, and tonally ingratiat- ing-I do not feel that the es- spntially rich quality of Schu- bert can be expressed in a heavy bass voice. In "Dithyrambe," for example, the thickness of Paul's voice naturally obviated the easy lilt of the song. In Moussorgsky's "Songs and Dances of Death," however, Paul was in his element. Moussorgsky once wrote that "my stage peo- ple should speak like living people - my music must be an artistic reproduction of human speech in all of its finest shades . . . that is the ideal toward which I strive." In his "Songs and Dances of Death" the composer indeed achieved dark drama dependent not on Romantic lyricism, but upon the artistically molded natural in- flections of the bass voice. Mr. Paul managed fine, careful readings, which, if they did not stir the listener a l London or Christof, at least evoked the somber colors and' passions of Moussorgsky's landscape.{ Accompanying Thomas Paul at the piano was Richard Goode, his name being not very indi- cative of his pianism. Goode is one of those pianists whom one finds more interesting to watch than hear. Certainly it is unfair to resent the leaps and swoons performed at the bench, but such actions almost always de- tract from the artist's own con- trol of the score. Goode's play- ing was heavy and limited to either loud or soft, with very little dynamic modulation. Goode was Joined by violin- ist Pina Carmirelli for the-'Bar- tok Sonata No. 2, which opened the concert. Miss Carmirelli com- mands a respectable technique, if a rather musky tone, and she got through the technical hur- dIes-about as many as Bartok could invent!-but added little in the way of interpretation. Goode pounded and bounced away behind her, and there was little communication between the two. Their performance was one thing Bartok should never be: boring. Join The Daily Sports Staff M (M presents the John Frankenheimer- ' .vEdward Lewis Production of the fixer STARTS WEDNESDAY NOTICE!! Continuous Showings Daily-Off Office Opens 1:15 P.M. '69 * V 0 S V 4' FEB. 13 Union Ballroom 10 p.m.-Dawn Admission free LOVE; SEX and RELATIONSHIPS A teach-in conducted by Robert Rummer, author of "The Harrad Experiment" PARAMOUNT PICrTUES prn.e. A IE nu FRANco ZEFF1RELIU ROMEO A'ULIET SHOWINGS DAILY 4:00 '6:40 9J10- Feb. 16 WAYNE MORSE Union Ballroom 2 P.M $1.00 Feb. 19 & 20 GENESIS I : League Ballroom An underground fim festiva 7 P.M. and 9:30 P.M. $1.50 .I I I 1MtOirBtrtlf~ I? I " r 'nratsxwaoir/f ~~~/Ia11'W~/ MlW1 I'Slfl a/MQ f YO( /J. 1 GCfEIVE It~ts~apa / -- P EAIN/ I D lIIQIo.... MTiMJl/N!iIcnaaPMYR8l11fln~, nU. W c". N 0M Nd~ffirIaVR-AN Na~aMN AEU/WfIMO N/14J fIIJJUw MaMAWt FEB. 22 Rackham Aud. Admission FREE ARTS FESTIVAL TODAY John Perrault Audio-Visual Poetry, Aud. A, 8 pm. U-M Gamelon Society Concert Ancient Javanese music and theatre Hill Aud., 8 p.m. TOMORROW' Stanley Kauffmann New Republic's Film Critic, speaking on Richard Lester's "How I Won the War," immediately after its screening, Architecture Aud., 8 p.m. DR. ROLLO MAY, PhD. Existential Psychology 04 I _.__ I of i~iF98 (Very Insidious Plan to Pusb Pizza) I presents THE ALVIN AlLEY AMERICAN DANCE THEATRE I I I SHE'S YOUKDATE, CLYDE. YOU TAKE HER TO DINNER!" You'll enjoy.the cozy, intimate atmos- pherc of Village Inn ... whether it's a first date or a frequent occurrence. Dine at Village Inn where Pizza is Always ia. Good Taste! 3411 Washtenaw-Ann Arbor Piano and Banjo Entertainment 7 Days a Week 8 p.m. 'til 1 a.m. Open 1 1 a.m. to 1 a.m. Weekdays 'Til 1 :30 Fri. & Sat. 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