Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursdcav, March 13_.1969 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thu rsrlov My nrr~ t-I' bi1 .J 1 7,17 "'. . ----I. . .rrr Ys 7 - film festival Man upe Ii's Dr. Clhicago music It pays to know the score II By BRUCE HEMSTELL The highlights of the second night of the Ann Arbor F II1 m Festival was the premier of George Manupelli's Dr. Chicago, the first episode in a projected twenty-film series about the mystical and fully architypical Doctor Chicago. The film, to be brief, was of- Stenbrilliant and always inter- ~esting and amusing.With this filmit becomessclear thath an- ."upelli deserves some of the ac- claim and recognition that has been awarded John Korty. Kor- ty is, like Manupelli, an "under- ground" film-maker but one who has emerged to have his features shown in commercial release and at various festivals. Manupelli, like Korty, is work- ing with the future: feature- length films. Dr. Chicago will perhaps (hopefully) be picked up for a future, major festival. Doctor Albert (sometimes Al- vin) Chicago is a fugitive from the law, an abortionist qua sex- change specialist with a dream of a future clinic is Sweden. His accomplices are his three female assistants: his woman Shelia Marie Marie, his nurse Peg and his nurse's woman Jan, short- ly to be a man. The action takes place in their temporary hideaway }where they meet an equally mysterious fig- ur called Steve. His name is indefinite - it might not be Steve - he never speaks throughout the film. But he practices a medicine, a folk medicine, far more skillful than Dr.Chicago's, and dies as a de- coy when the slick spade cops finally arrive. Dr. Chicago is the last of the American primitives: truly an innocent, whose marvelous skill is not in his hands but in his mouth. The action of the film isall "talk"-long sequences of Dr. Chicago's comments the best of which rival Taylor Mead and suggest that in Alvin Lucier, who played Chicago, Manupelli has a talent of major propor- tions. As Chicago and his women talk, the last stand of primi- tivismi emerges. It is in wit, in humor and verbal skill. Manu- pell's characters are as one re- marks, "children abandoned in the woods" - partly their own doing (it is they who have driven here) and mostly because therein is something of the quality of life today. This is fully accented with the arrival of the police. They are slick and cool, admire each other's "pieces" and refuse to give chase into the woods be- cause there are snakes in there. It is Chicago and his band which offer the last, best hope for survival. Their travels, we begin to see lose a return. A return tothe primitive, to some more base existence, base oc- cassionally to the point of gross- ness, but in innocence enlight- ened, hopeful, and at least (and this is a lot) outside the norm. By R. A. PERRY Hill Auditorium's stage was + occupied last night by the ,ser-+ ious, Jack Dempsey-ish men of one of Russia's finest orchestras, the Moscow State Symphony. In this special concert sponsored by the University Musical So- ciety, Maxim Shostakovitch con- ducted an all-Russian program ; that presented to the less than filled house both exhilirating and depressing fare. In the beginning there w a s Ginka, the silly, repetitive over- ture to Russian and Ludmilila and here the orchestra immed- iately exhibited its extraordin- ary thick, solid, and precise sound. Following thistbit of mindless excitement, the audience heard a very dreary performance of Tchaikovsky's potentially love- ly "Variations on a Rococo Theme." Cello soloist was one F. Lu- zanov who performed in a beau- cratic manner with an ascetic, dry tone and an arid lack of feeling. The conductor himself was too busy reading the score to mold the string accompani- ment or refine woodwind detail. Twenty-six year old Nikolai Petrov, winner of the 1964 Brus- sels competition, immediately brightened the atmosphere and heightened the quality of music-making with a virtuosic performance of Prokofiev's Third Piano Concerto. Here again the conductor, son of the composer Dmitri Shosta- kovitch, seemed to indicate that he had little to recommend him other than his patronymic. Throughout the concerto, he kept his back to the cellos and bass in his intent to follow the score. He built no climaxes and shaded no dynamics, just mere- ly followed along-a far cry from Rozhdestvensky's accom- paniment on the Angel recording. However, with his superb management of his father's Fifth Symphony, the y o u n g conductor was almost complete- ly exonerated. This most popu- lar of Shostakovitch's s y m - phonies possesses incredibly stirring and martial outer movements, a largo of brood- ing beauty, and an allegretto al- ternately boisterous and pre- cious but always witty. Massed strings sounding - like organ swells, and exceptional flute and brass playing indicated the true potential of this orchestra. The University of Michigan Players Department of Speech presents Anton-Chekov's THE SCHERRY ORCHARD Lydia- Mendelssohn Theatre I MARCH 12-15 8:00 P.M. Saturday Matinee-March 15 2:30 O.M. ADMISSION March 12-13: $1.25-$1.75 Matinee: $1.25-$1.75 March 14-15: $1,75-$2.25 BOX OFFICE March 10-11-12:30-5 P.M. March 12-15-12:30-8 P.M. e r CORRECTION Contrary to Wednesday's ad interviews for Cinema Guild Board Members are over 10 U 'Ieffie'Heris a C~oydi Huntec ONE SHOW TONIGHT ._~ . . . 1 ZUr ..-& - i .lnc I I 0 9.w A scene from Dr. Chicago >_-. ORGANIZATION NOTICES ..*: ev::w:: *::****:**":* :.*** "***r*tn.".*,e**r.*ro**.":., ,* {r STEAK and EGGS with hashbrown potatoes, toast and jelly $1,10 STEVE'S LUNCH just west of SAB NOW OPEN SUNDAYS, TOO 1# Organization of Arab Students: Lec- ture: Dr. Mohamed Shokier, "The. Cur- rent Middle East, Crisis: March 14th, 8:00 p.m. multi-purpose room of the UGLI. ** * * Hillel Foundation, 1429 Hill St., Thursday, March 13, 8:00 p.m., A Sym- pgsium on the question of legalized abortion with Sen. John McCauley. Father Michael Donovan, Dr. Robert Jaffe, Rabbi Max Kapuston, Last day to register for the leader- ship conference March 21st-23rd at Highscope Conference Center. Mr. Will Smith will be the Trainer. Register;now at 1011 SAB between 8:00 - 5:00 p.m. * * * * Bach Club Meeting: Thursday, Mar. 14, 8:00 p.m., Guild House, 802 Mon- roe. Program: A talk by Chris Broder- sen on "Baroque Instruments," featur- ing a live performance of a baroque sonata on original instruments. Fun and jelly donuts afterwards. Everyone welcome. For further information call 769-0995 or 763-1614. Ann Arbor Fa hdom, meeting Thurs- day, March 13, in Greene House Lounge. East 'Quad, 9 p.m. Meeting will include disetssion of a possible trip to Marcon or St. Louiscon, and the unveiling of the new club magazine. Fonma. * * * * U of M Oceanological Society regular meeting, Thursday, March 13, 7:00 p.m. room 1040 NR. Special program wi t h Navy films on careers in oceanogra- phy. All welcome! -0 in the PAUL NEWMAN pridction of rachel, rac hel I I Mg$ mwmho MICHIGRAS S 0 1965 SUPER HAWK. $300, well taken care of miles Will sell to highest offer by Nov. 1. Andy-761-5930.Z2 with xn i Power! Michael!!! (is here) 2 Homecomings are always better than one! I love you! lap FF Read and Use DAILY Classifieds SUBSCRIBE TO THE MICHIGAN DAILY starring PETER O'TOOLE, JAMES MASON, CURT JURGENS, ELI WALLACH SATURDAY, MARCH 15-8 P.M. ADMISSION-75c (proceeds to U.J.A.) Following the movie, at 10:45, PROF. ROBERT F. HAUGH of the English Dept. will discuss the film in relation to the Conrad Novel from which it was taken. HILLEL FOUNDATION 663-4129 1429 U1.11 St. APRIL 11-12 * SKIT NITE * * CARNIVAL * I i 141 CLI Program Information 662-6264 SHOWS AT 1,3,5,7, & 9:05 14 EASTWOOD GIVES NEW YORK 24 HRS . . . TO GET OUT OF TOWN! U N Ir E R f: 3 A L P C T R ,. , old '0 f I w I I