re Two- THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, February 20, 1969 I I theatre 4 curtain call of OVER NATtONAL E'JFRAL COPOrAT'ON H ELD FOX EASTERN THEATRES q 3RD WEEK FOR VILLBGE 375 No MAPLE RD.-769.1300 an. entertaining bastard The Theatre Will Be Emptied After 7:00 P.M. Showing Fri.,-Sat. By MICHAEL ALLEN John Osborne's The Enter- tainer, though written over ten years ago is still fiercely con- temporary. It rages at us; it indicts us; it tell us we're sick and tired and beaten; it tells us that we're bastards; it tells - us. that despite all this it's bet- ter to know the truth than to pretend that everyhing's all right, when it isn't. However, Osborne's rage is at times also childish; it becomes, a lower middle class tirade at an establishment that no more resembles the MacMillan one than it does any other. The play is accordingly, a curious blend of bitterness and genuinely de- structive energy. When it is get- ting at the draft or the govern- ment, it is surprisingly up to date. but weak minded: when it is uncovering the network of family and personal tensions it is as fierce as anything in O'Neil or Albee. Directed by Mack Owen, last night's production by the Uni- versity Players was fine: he consistently controlled planning; of each scene, for each actor knew what to do. With a f e w minor exceptions, he is to be congratulated. Genuine dra- matic tension was created and maintained from start to finish. Grandad (Richard Beebe) set the standard from the begin- ning with a wonderfully can- tankerous, kind, bluff perform- ance, veering from a bearish sweetness with Jean (Mary Joan Negro) to bearish rage when ribbed by his son, Archie (Jack McLaughlin). For the whole of the first half he dom- inated the stage from his cen- tral armchair and made the play around him. He is the real entertainer; in him are united the appearance and reality, which are so tragically and pathetically at variance in his son. Jean is the idealist of the family, but she also believes in a realistic approach to change, finally abandoning the world of Trafalgar Square . rallies with the pigeons for the job of look- ing after Phoebe (Maureen An- derman) after Archie is jailed. These two women made an in- terestingly contrasted pair; Jean' was still; Phoebe fluttered and flustered and groped and screamed and hugged herself in a performance in which initial nervousness changed into hair- raising neurotic energy. Both women were completely convin- cing and their handling of the emotional' curves of the play never degenerated into scread' ing. However,( it it Archie w h o dominates the play. He has to. The play stands or falls with him. It is an enormously diffi- cult role, and in some ways a highly disagreeable one. Archie is a, bastard; he is cruel to Phoebe and grandad; he is a failure who moans about life without doing anything about it; he is pathetically lecherous; he is often dishonest; he smiles and smiles and is a villain. But he tries once or twice in the play to be honest with himself, and I suppose this redeems him. His pr i va te life event-*.. ... ually manages to break through the tawdry of his public life as entertainer and engage us; when he leaves the stage in his raincoat we miss him; perhaps even in a way we admire him for being able r to laugh and rage: we feel he has regained his re- sponses. Jack McLaughlin suc- ceeded admirably in getting most of this across. In'the stage scenes he was a little limited; he hadn't' got enough of the professional tricks. But in t h e world, behind the stage he was very .real and switched, f r o m jocularity to intensity with com- plete naturalness. derriere slapstick PARAMOUNT PIC1TURES p~W~nut A 6N F FILM FRANCO ZEFFIRELUI Pr'oduction or ROMEO 'JULIET Showings Dcily 1:30 4:00 7:00 9:35 9 ZAZIE DANS LE METRO Directed by LOU IS MALLE, 1960 French, color CATHERINE DEMONGOT "There's something not quite innocent or healthy about this fQ mn." -'osley Crpwther 7:00 & 9:00 y5 ARCHITECTURE 662-8871 AUDITORIUM. -Daily-Sara Krulwich 7Black Comedy' By LESLIE WAYNE Remember George Burns' mag- ical television set? With this set, George would sit back in de- musted delight watching . his friends and neighbors trying to pull the wool over his eyes but never quite making it. As Gracie and Harry Von Zel thought their attempts to plaster o v e r their wrong doings could gg un- noticed, George's all-seeing, all- ko wing TV set,.revealed their' -farcical actions.3 And while the anonymity that surrounded Harry and Gracie's action proved illusory,' the "pro- tective darkness" that both trig- gers the dilemma in Black Comedy and might have provid- ed the needed solution similarly proves illusory in face of the. wrongdoings of the various characters. t Peter Shaffer's Black Comedy milks all the laughs from an absurd situation by keeping it on an extremely simple and to- tally absurd level. A power fail- ure brings a strange group of characters-a homosexual, an artist, the artist's ex-girlfriend, his fiance and the fiance's father all into the same room. Where, in many cases, the basic situation in this type of of a comedy can be pushed aside by tricky plot ievelop- ments, the basic simplicity of a power failure makes this a comedy of sight rather than of wit. While, the actors grope and grov lin the dark, bumping and thunping, the resulting mis- taken identies and "guess-who's- hiding-in-the-closet-effect" land each character in the wrong place at the wrong time. And the tenuously arranged situa- tion created by the artist to meet his greedy ends falls in shambles. The hilarity comes from the bawdiness of the sight gags and their immediate reaction to screech or surprise rather than from any type of dialogue de-' velopment. Girls walk around with their heart-shaped, red- pantied rears waving in the air, the artist grabs at the chest of the stogey old maid, neighbor by accident, and the cast constant- ly manages to trip over its dwn " feet for the security of a chair. , Sometimes this type of humor 1can get a bit tiring; the con-, stant bumbling and tripping at times becomes the only humor; the dialogue is mainlysin reac- tion to the sight gags .- and often ignored in the wake of the gags.1 range from the farcically hilari- ous to the innanely silly. Slap- stick manages to carry the eve- ning-or most of it. Just as Black Comedy was de- pendent upon the extension of a single gimmick, White Lies is dependent upon a similar, single idea. Yet while the success in Black Comedy lies in a constant return and a development of all the situational absurdities of this gimmick, the theme of White Lies doestnot receive this care in development. More ''importantly their own self-deception is laid bare. While this is an intriguing idea in it- self, it degenerates into pendan- tic preaching. White Lies becomes melo- drama, a too-serious parody of its principals. The heavy hand of Shaffer's pen is oppressingly obvious. Through comedy and melodrama Shaffer attempts to cut through the veneer that we define as our identity and real- izes the absurdity of efforts to maintain this special coating. DIAL 5-6290 TODAY Shows at 1:00- 3:00-5:00-7:05-9:10 P.M. BOB SEGERSYSTEM Original Charging Rhinoceros of Soul Tea garden and Van Winkle Fruit of the Loom FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28 8-12,midnight TONIGHT DISCUSSION S.D.S. and NTERVARSITY 'U 1421 Hill St I.- 4 1. EMU BOWEN FELDHOUSE Ypsilanti, Mich. Adm. $1 FRIDAY and SATURDAY Playing Guitar with original he incredible rGYPSY music it very original Humor' TICKETS AVAILABLE: Discount Records, Ann Arbor; Hudson's; Grinnell's; McKenny Union, EMU . _ __ __ - __ . t Violence increases on Berkeley campus TODAY 2 SPECIALS r Unclassified ' 1 m Program informations 18-6416 O AA D L (Continued from page 1) highway patrolmen, suddenly charged the' crowd, driving them. back onto the steps of nearby buildings. The police swung their clubs randomly at the crowd and made several arrests. 'That set off the melee. After the trouble subsided, Wil- liam Bouwsma, vice chancellor for. academic affairs, sent a letter to all departments warning t h a t employes and teachers who par- ticipate in any violence wduld face dismissal. The student strike demands in- clude creation .of a college, of ethnic studies, recruitment of more non-white university em- ployes at all levels, and admission of more non-white 'students. t In Madison, Wis., by a close ,vote, the University of Wisconsin 'faculty 'recommended that the lthree students expelled from Osh- tkosh State -University not he ad- Tnitted to the Madison campus. 'Their admission had been one of the request of striking students. Students from more that seven colleges in the Philadelphia area are sitting-in at the University of Pennsylvania's administration building, protesting their school's involvement in a science research corporation. . Three-hundred students entered college hall about noon' Tuesday, and their number increased to more than 1000 during the night. Less than 100 waited last night for a special meeting offthe. Uni- versity Pennsylvanis -trustees to consider te issues raised. The protest is directed against the construction of a new build- ing for the University City Sci- ence Center (UCSC), a research corporation jointly by nearly a dozen colleges in the area but most heavily financed by the Univer- sity of Pennsylvania. But at other times, the co bination of sight and line g can bring out quick, one-: burlesque humor. The ar accidently grabs at the derr of his old girl. frienda screams, "Clea, I knew ita you." Yet the question remains h long a gimmick can stretch a still not sag. Dependence on the immedi sight gag makes Black Come DM- ags line tist iere and was how WINNER EST OOI I ACADEMY AWAFDINLUDISwN t t. 4 U .I_.a arya I.JI W!I iP 0 !% I I I ,j I I I I NSNI nate tedy th am *4lClrofltfl (KmpfirO .s,4,n WAt ".) Orvo Sbf dtll LtefiAll A~gt At t-d I COLUMBIA PIARAE FRED ZINNEMANNS ALL SEASONS5 Fromdie playby ROBEBT BOLT -"II nW " SHOWN AT 9:00 P.M. ONLY " -----_" PLUS COLUMBIA PicURES PRESENTS IN THE' TUU iECII1UIJIIIYIIIWI BUR U NIFFIREI IU A ROYAL FILMS PfOOUctIO NOF INIERNAIIONAL/fAl IFTE IntWs'' " Shown at 7:00 P.M. Only " Next: "Rachel, Rachel" & "Heart Is the Lonely Hunter" E' I NoI 1 '' 'E' I I February 21, 22 MAGiNI-FICENT ,SEVEN Yul Brenner Steve McQueen James Coburn Eli Wallach "MAGNIFICENT"-Rhone *F0 F- FH-H A COLOR ~by e United Artists G-General Audiences Next: Cliff Robertson "CHARLY" ... ... m __ . ---- - THE DRAFT A discussion with Dr. Charles Donahue . . . . . . . . . . . . . PITY POOR PAXTON GUIGLEY He went to college to learn about love. Now he's locked in an attic with three beautiful girls, who are going to teach him, and teach him, and teach him that too much learning is a dangerous thing I AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL PRESENTS U-M LAW PROFESSOR Dr. Donahue.is involved in a lawsuit against General Hershey. He is fighting to establish I . J 1 . .L L IJ-1 Guess what the self-appointed dorm snoop )'VETTE Mi mi EU/ Vy C+ OsroNFRJONEs, Pei U Iim~.A~,~Im I I I - - U 0