THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven T . __ _ theatre .Ardele': To laugh like a fool By MICHEL BENAMOU cical provocation and his attack you are a French student, SEIZE BUILDINGS: CSJ reopens Students urge end case against of Harvard's ROTC SDS loch-in or Memories. Of the Theatre Gaston Baty 20 years ago, when I first saw Jean Arlouilh's Ar- dele. Marguerite Jamois. She yelled from the top of the stairs. Shouting, peacock lovecalls to her husband, "You deceived me witbtevery female you saw" her. digist with all the sex-crazy. insects of life. Faulknerian. The whole respectable, chateaued family, gagging the scandal: Ardele, the hunchback, in love, with. another hunchback, so- ciety would laugh at the grotes- queness of' their love (the two- backed -.beast of it, the horror of, sex)..So they gang up, on Ardele, the burning one. And they win. And their children, wVaiting in the wings to have their turn at the gkme of tender .words aiid sharp claws. The play, curtains out on their frengzied parody- of love. A bitter play. ut a very funny play. The performance hurts you with laughter. "'you have a' peacock, general?- No, sir, it's my wife . A few cruel vignettes: 'ou will remember Jon Kaiser- as' the general, hoarsely in love with live, snatching heightened momnents from healthy Ellen Co- f)6Wos, "the -maid. You will re- member Pam Drydtn, asthe Countessir love with herself; she has a, very fine voice, car- ries off the affair with Villar- dieu (Charles Stallman, crisp gesticulator) -.with the perfect "ton juste," you will love foxy Olivier Carduner as Toto, and his'desultory playmate of ten, who acts out Madame Vitiello' offstage' But 1 bet you will probably~ prefer ,the, play's only sensible character, and its best actor last night, Patrick Lobert, '"2, the mouthpiece of Anouilh's, disenchantment and mirth. Wit- ty Lobert, as the cuckololgd par- agon of savoir-vivre ("Villardieu is my alier-ego") ; gentle Lobert; wise to~what keeps him near his wife and the general at/ his wife's .bedside ("You pay up for a moment's passion with a life- time of sham"); cynical and compassionate Lobert, suffer- ing, smiling, and always true. Ardele is a 'voxnedje noire. How could you take a hunch- bapk wonan's love seriously? You laugh likeall the other fools (In French, we say rire comme un bossu). But tirector Michael Spingler, a veteran of four seasons in Ann Arbor, succeeded in maling you ag hwith +hp knife rf ho rn at our own shams. It is love, our use of the disguise, which is on trial. Its enemy is life, for love is a scandal. You get this slammed at your face while laughing: a chill with a thrill; Prof. Spingler has this neatly bagged in Scapin's sack. I forgot to mention that Ar- dele is performed in French. If remember being one, go, tonight, you will enjoy a very fine per- formance, a deeply stirring play, and may learn something to boot. If you are not, were not, for- get it. You are the poorer, and Ann Arbor the richer for hav- ing a foreign-language theatre of high quality. (Continued from Page 1) American flag to reviling police and resisting arrest. Most students had left the campus by midafternoon at the request of school authorities who said the university would be closed for the remainder of the day. Dean Emmett W. Bashful, one target of the student protest, said classes would resume today. How- ever, a student who said he was a member of the Student Griev- ance Committee told newsmen there would be no classes today or tomorrow. "We are coming back here on Monday mad as ever for our de- mands to be met," he said. The students have demanded, among other things, the removal of Dean Bashful, a cut in tuition fees, a course in black liberation, a department of black studies, more library books and a better education department. The trouble yesterday erupted "when six Negro students shoved aside three c a m p u s security guards at the flag pole in front of the administration building, low- ered the American flag and raised their own black, green and red liberation flag. Some 200 students watched and roared their approval as the American flag was removed from the pole and folded carefully. Police then moved in and arrested some of the demonstra- tors. The black liberation flag was lowered, the American flag was returned and a contingent of nine police officers guarded the flag pole for several hours. Indulgences save holiness (Continued from Page 1) ecclesiastical codes were commuted to fines, and the selling of indulgences came into being. Guild House, by the way, has been having financial dif- ficulties itself lately, and money was needed for the continuation and extension of its operations. Noonday discussions and weekly symposia, Guild House's way of providing a forum for controversial issues, costs. Money was needed. In addition, Guild House is the home of Ann Arbor Resist- ance and provides counseling service for everything from pre- marital problems to conscientious objection and the draft. The money raised by St. Hereticus will serve to complement Guild House's now deficient budget. But the 50 cent indulgences aren't all. For those of us who are really bad (or who have friends who are really bad) there is always the super-indulgence for only five-dollars. Will wonders never cease? Looking back at Nelson (Continued from Page 2) My own favorite among his ; work is a short film called Hot Leatherette. As its title implies, it is a parody - a perfectly con- ; trolled reductio ad absurdum of all those speeding car sequences j so dear to the hearts of ad- 7 venture filn makers. The speed of this cat be- comes so incredibly fast that it is hilarious, and horrifying at the same time When the car careens off the road and rolls down the hill (I bet you've seen that nn hafnra ) Nl snn o rria.- The proceeds of the G u i l d showings go to the film makers, who have only the slenderest means for financing an expen- sive art form and often need outside support to keep produc- ing. (Nelson himself was recent-_ ly awarded a Gugenheim). Cinema Guild is thus to be com- mended for providing both in- depth retrospectives for Ann Arbor film goers and some fin- ancial return on artistic invest- ment for fpim makers. JOIN THE DAILY SPORTS STAFF BRING US UP TO DATE Come In Any Afternoon 420 MAYNARD I fii3 t . ,, . f :. 0 r ::. .OR 4FA cuglWal . e ne e rll r o l1iiu l le Felu ,.1 elsnl Cares at your throat. His success, not it on and on and on until we marred by a single awkward, are laughing at ourselves for pmoment for his actors, comes ever having clutched. the seat from months of hard work with arm at the Saturday Fun Club. the cast, excellent coaching by And the death of the car -- Jeari-Paul Villevieille and a fine -gasping, wheezing, flopping over control of movements up and one last time - is not unlike, 9own the ingenious set. What but rather funnier, than the Spingler has caught is the grim oft-parodied death of the opera balance between Anoulh's far- tenor. HEAR DARIUS Perform Jazz and Rock and Speak on SCIENTOLOGY the MODERN PH ILOSOPHY TONIGHTT8:30 P.M. 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EURCPE '69, UAC is happy toobnnpunce-a limited number of one way tickets Ovgiloble on this summer's European flight: EASTBOUND JFK-London-May 9 WESTBOUND r THUR COR "k t i Journalism Department Program SDAY AFTERNOON-APRIL 10 THE ROLE OF AMERICAN FOREIGN RESPONDENTS-TODAY AND TOMORROW < RACKHAM AMPHITHEATER ture by EDGAR ANSEL MOWRER stinguished Chicago Daily News Correspondent in Europe and Pul- er Prize winner-(From 1914 through the Second World War); World v' fairs columnist and author sentation of Honor Awards and Special Scholarships to urnalism Students F -I- ><- 1:30 P.M. 2:45 P.M. Lec Dis itzE Afi Pre JoL I H. smo. ... r ® Y rrr r I I SI I