Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday. April 11. 1969 Page Twb THE MICHIGAN DAILY theatre poetry and prose Anon and Anon Hot, heavy Lysistra(a' By MICHAEL ALLEN Blessed are the peacemakes for they shall be called the chil- dren of God when you get them to bed. Aristophanes' Lysistrata notorious for its bawdiness, and there was the hoped for abund- ance of it last night in the Uni- versity Players racy production, directed by James Coakley. We had Spartan erections; the heroine in a diaphanous blue whatsit and her rebel wives in a Spring selection of frilly bed- wear; we had one poor Athenian, Kinesias, in a fine fit of frustra- tration right outside the Acro- polis. What's more, every war refer-j ence is a dirty joke. Word after' word, which we would normally associate only with death, in the mouths of the Athenian women becomes charged with life. In fact, the bawdiness itself is a festival of lif: there is nothing depraved or depressing or sick about 'it. It simply points up the sense of health and warmth which should be the natural con- dition of man. It is here that the director scored. Scene after scene was charged with gaiety and exuber- ance and invention--verybody on the stage seemed marvel- lously happy. For one thing there's the music-Beethoven's fifth, jazz, bee-bop, the sugar plum fairy. There's the dancing which made us feel completely at home in the Greek chorus. There's the wonderful fight when the tracksuited sorority girls of Athens beat up the old incompetents left to guard the city while the younger ones are off fighting the Spartans. This reached its climax when the whole, stage was transformed into a movie screen by pulsating strobe lights resulting in stills of the two choruses following each other in rapid succession. Here the dancing became a sequence of live photographs; and some of the effects start- lingly rich. In all this the director was helped by the translator, Dou- glass Parker, who has recreated Aristophanes into a completely modern experience, Literal equi- valence has been sacrificed for a metaphorical or, indeed, cul- tural equivalence. So, we. get Homer, as Chaucer;r the Spar- tans as lads from Arkansas; Concord as Miss America. However, Aristophanes was also writing about piecemakers out of bed. The play, as we well know was written at the height of the disastrous Peloponnesian war when Athens was about to go under. Lysistrata (Georgette Weremiuk) is a symbol of all those things that war destroys -.love, good sense, home, pros- perity. She's someone that any man would love to sleep with and yet be proud to have as his prime minister. She's like those Shakesperian heroines who see so much more clearly what is' good and natural than the grown-up b o y s surrounding them who are just playing at being men. She makes them see what is natural by forcing the women to be unnatural. She too fights an inane war with Spar- ta, but only to reduce the whole thing to the level of the ludic- rous. And there is nothing more ludicrous than the two Athenian and the t w o Spartan envoys standing there in public say- ing, "T'aint the heat, it's the humidity." Inevitably, at times the pace was overstrained, the gestures too wild, the romp too much of a burlesque. The Commissioner of Public Safety (Richard Bee- be) was a case in point. Though, much of what he did and said was funny, too often it was hea- vy-handed with the comic ten- sion degenerating into slap- stick. Indeed, some people might feel that there were too many gimmicks throughout;-too many over-obviously topical allusions distracting us all the time for the more serious heart of the comedy to come across. But it seems to ie that t h e energy' and liveliness carry the day. We accept the caryatids in the set with their ban-the-bomb flags, and the choruses going into hud- dles and suchlike. They make the comedy alive for us here and now; and they make the tragedy that underlies it alive also. Af- ter this feast to the honour of right reason, the Players' sea son has been happily laid. By ELIZABETH WISSMAN The vagueries of the title notwithstanding, "Anon" is here and "Anon" is now: a review of prose and poetry connected -umbilically or directly-with the University and making its second annual appearance. Al- though I am frankly a partisan of this particular review, as a "pure concept" of publication it deserves genuine, non-sectarian attention. When even the nice glossy, good - to - your - fingers, type of magazine is folding, the "Little Review" is an especially, sensitive plant. Love it, honor it - for without it, Literature above the level of pablum might be dead. Not that- "Anon" is remark- ably adventurous; some of the best work is by established authors in a language grown long ago comfortable and fa- miliar. The poetry at times be- trays a nostalgia for what con- tinues to be called "modern- ism" or for the safe, essentially timeless rhetoric of a Dickey. (Perhaps this reflects its roots in the academy.) But, there is equally little that is sloppy or rash in the collection, with no adolescent lust for easy opposi- tions and avant-guardism. In fact, one of the finest things about "Anon" as a whole is the obvious rigor of selection. But I began by saying "Anon" was here and now, and it is so, effortlessly. Even its defects are contemporary. The dearth of prose fiction (there are only five pieces, and at least one- "Duellas In Time"--is a hybrid prose poem) is no greater than that which faced the selection committee for the recent Na- tional Book Awards. Indeed, the longest story is a translation from Zamyatin - not even au courant, but part of the "dis- covery" of those satirists of Rus- sian Revolution such as Bulga- kov. The purist will be offended further by Zamyatin's use of- oh hideous-conventions of plot and suspense. (But oh doesn't it feel somehow fine to read once again with a; sense of discovery and combat? To experience the dynamic accretion of insight, and to arrive at an irony-or comey or tragedy-that is not, for once, automatic?) John Conron's and Myron Kantor's translation seems excellent; es- pecially so since the story turns upon puns and _ifinitessimal repetitions. Overall, the range of success and failure of "Anon's" in- genue authors can be gauged according to their embarrass- ment of voice. How to credibly limit the vantage of the poem, how to create both drama and unity right at the tonic surface, is a problem confronting every creative writer. At its worst, the poem becomes a subterfuge, -like a handkerchief dabbed at an oldwoman's mouth. But this is very rare-more often the poetry in "Anon" is fully auto- nomous. The multi-foliate dic- tion of Lemuel Johnson, the tangled and intricate construc- tion of Lardas, are rewarding, even though expected of Hop- wood winners. Along with Pro- fessor Hall, the faculty are Well represented bypoetry ranging from the dense organics, of Squires to the delicate picares- que of Stilwell. But, for me, one of the most exciting and fully realized of the poems was by an unfamiliar name, Warren Jay Hecht. It is for moments like these; when language ex- pands into an activity, that a literary review strives through all its eclectics: There the hour one o'clock holds different meaning than the hour struck one hour away from home .. . I - SEPTEMBER 16-28 SMRYAN'S Another delightful APA revival of an American classic! I -j 4 SEPTEMBER 30-OCTOBER 12 r A Ghlelderode 's "A whiff of satanical sulphur" by the author of the APA hit "Pantagleize" 4 Directed by John Houseman THURS. and FRI. MURIEL dir. ALAIN RESNAIS 1954 OCTOBER 14-26 I i OCTOBER 14-26 Gogol's JThe Directed by. Stephen Porter I1 K' NATIONAL GENERAL CORPORATION I Held Over 2nd Week FOX EASTERN THEATRES FOR VILLa5E 375 No. MAPLE RD. -769.1300 Feature Times Mon. thru Fri. 6:30-9:15 Saturday-Sunday 1 :00-3:45- 6:30-9:15 I I a 1, 1 -0 I ' , !14 .~ ' 'll '' t J ., !; 1'i't : -7-7-- I