Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, September 26, 1969 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, September 26, 1969 -cinema Name PTP fellowship 1 ,~'.-, ~1 A good weekend for film freaks By GORMAN BEAUCHAMP For film freaks Ann Arbor can sometimes be an exciting place. This week is one of those times. For the film fare on and around campus is as interesting, im- portant and varied as one is liable to find in the desert that stretches between New York and San Francisco. Thus if one has the stamina, time and tarriff, he can take in Renoir's Diary of a Chambermaid, C o e' e a u 's Blood of a Poet, Resnais' Night and Fog, De Sic a' The Bicycle 'Thief, Leni Riefensthal's Tri- umph of the Will, Sternberg's Shanghi Express, plus a week long festival of little-seen Ger- man expressionists films. Folks, that ain't bad. If anything, it. is an embarassment of riches. Cinema Guild offers as a dou- ble bill today J e a n Cocteau's Blood of a Poet and Jean Re- noir's (N o t Bunuel's as their schedule states )Dairy of .a Chambermaid. Like Dali-Bun- in their surrealist cinema, Coc- teau takes film about as far as it will go toward the abstraction and metaphoric tableaux vivan- tes of painting. That path prov- ed a deadend, but his film re- mains a fascinating early ex- periment by one of the most complicated minds of the age. Pauline Kael wrote of it: "The first time you see Jean Cocteau's 1930 film, you're likely to find it silly, auto-erotic, static, ab- surd, and you may feel cheated after having heard so m u c h about it. But . . . you're n o t likely to forget it -- it has a suggestiveness unlike any other film." Renoir's 1946 Diary of a Chambermaid was h is second version of Mirbeau's novel. Made in the States w i t h an American cast, it has been call- ed by Pierre I ephron the only French film ever made in Holly- wood. Like his earlier master- piece Regle de Jeu, Diary deals with the decadance of bourgeo- ise society, but with that wry Gallic mixture of irony and un- derstanding that is Renoir's trademark. Renoir is currently being given a retrospective showing at toe N. Y. Film Fes- tival, part of the long-due reco- gnition in this country that he is one of the truly great film makers of all time. Cinema II is also providing an impressive, if somewhat in- congruous, double bill today and tomorrow - Resnais' chilling documentary Night and Fog and Vittorio De Sica's Bicycle Thief. De Sica is considered the leading figure of Italian post- war neo-realism and this 1949 tragedy of the poor is consider- ed his finest film. It was select- ed in 1960, by a poll of interna- tional film critics, as one of the ten best films ever and Parker Tyler calls it "an unchallenga- ble peak of the art of motion pictures." This strikes me as a bit excessive, but without a doubt Bicycle Thief is a wonder- ful film - honest, gentle, hu- mane -- which involves one to- tally. Night and Fog (1956) is one of Resnais' earliest a n d per- haps (my personal prejudice) his best film. Certainly few films make s u c h an impact. Part of this impact is inherent in the subject - the Nazi death camp at Auschwitz; but Res- nais' restrained, unemotional yet technically superb approach always lets the facts speak for themselves, and they tell a tale of horror and inhumanity that is at times simply unbearable. Quite by coincidence Cinema Guild's Sat, and Sun. showing is an official Nazi film - Leni Riefensthal's 1934 Triumph of the Will. T h e connection be- tween the mass hysteria lauded in this film and the mass mur- der of Night and Fog is too ob- vious to call for comment. But we are faced with the paradox that a propagandist for the ug- liest of political systems h a s produced a film of epic beau- ty, 'as morally distasteful as it is shattering cinematically," one critic writes, Based on the Nazi mass meetings (real mas- ses, not the SDS handfuls) at Nuremberg, Triumph pictured, the frenzied glory of the Third Reich, which time has judged with fitting irony. The Ark film group is show- ing an altogether different kind of film (Mon.>i - and one of my favorites -- Sternberg's Shang- hi Express. In the 30's, Stern- berg made a series of films with his star, Marlene Dietrich. They are now considered classics of high camp, and certainly this film is campy - as in Deit- rich's immortal line, "It took more than one man to change my name to Shanghi Lily." But it is also much more. Sternberg is the master of rococo style; his characters move through a den- sely textured mise en scene like a great spider's web with Diet- rich as the beautiful, glittering creature at its center. It's hard to say whether she is an exten- sion of Sternberg's setting or whether the setting is an exten- sion of her femme fatalism. NATIONAL eENERAL CORPORATION FOX EASTERN THEATRES -- FOR VILL U6 375 No.MAPLE RD.-769-1300 Mon.-Fri.: 7:20, 9:30 P.M. Sat., Sun.: 1:00, 3:05, 5:10, 7:20, 9:30 P M. The Professional Theatre Pro- gram has announced the win- ners of a nationwide competi- tion for eighth fellowships in the area of theatre and speech. The fellows were chosen from more than 100 graduates from the nation's leading university drama departments. Profs. Wil- liam P. Halstead, Claribel Baird, and Richard Burgwin of the theater area of the speech de- partment participated with Prof. Schnitzer and artistic director Marcella Cisney of the Profes- sional Theatre Program in the auditions held in New York, Ann Arbor, and San Francisco. The fellowship winners will each receive a stipend of $2,400 plus tuition and work in the theater area of the department of speech while earning credits toward advanced degrees. The five winners in the acting category were William Tate, a graduate of the University of Birmingham in England; Kath- leen McGill and James Hos- bein, University of Michigan; James Baffico, University of Ne- braska, and Donna Haley, Clarke College in Iowa. A technical and design fel- lowship was awarded to Stuart K. McDaniel, a graduate of the University of Redlands in Cali- fornia. Donald Ellis, a graduate of the University of Kansas, was awarded a fellowship in ad- ministration and public rela- tions. The Shubert Theatre Founda- tion Fellowship in Playwriting has been awarded to Ransom Jeffrey for his original play, "The Guest," soon to be produc- ed by La Mama Workshop Off- Broadway in New York. Jeffrey comes to Ann Arbor from the University of Iowa, where he did graduate work, and will be in residence during the 1969-70I term while working on a new play. He was awarded the ANTA Playwriting Prize last season and has been a winner in sev- eral other playwriting competi- tions. The eight fellows have arrived to commence work with the APA Repertory Company in its eighth Fall Festival in Ann Arbor in three new productions, "Macbeth," "Chronicles of Hell" and "Private Lives." They will also participate in the world premiere of E v a n Hunters' new play, "The Con- juror," in early November. Pro- ductions by the theatre area of the speech department will fea- ture Professional Theatre Pro- gram fellows during the f o r t h- coming season. FRIDAY, SEPT. 26 9-12 PM UNION BALLROOM FEATURING -,The Irat 4tore IAT ALL CAMPUS MIXER ,I BUFFY SAINTE MARIE October 4! 3020 Washtenow, Ph. 434-1782 Between Ypsilanti & Ann Arbor SHOW TIMES: Wed., Sat., Sun.- -3-5-7-9 Mon., Tues., Thurs., Fri.--7-9 a.Y IHA presents BUFFY SAINTE MARIE Saturday, Oct. 4 - 8:30 P.M. HILL AUDITORIUM TICKETS: $2.00-$2.50-$3.00 On sale at SAB Sept. 29-Oct. 3 Mail Orders and Block Ticket Requests (Sept. 22- Oct. 1) IHA Concert, 1511 Student Activities Bldg. University of Michigan, Ann Arbor A PROGRAM OF LN\E ' POLW VISION FOR A NEW WORLD Just arrived from Australia Bewildering-Fascinatinq POON-TANG TRILOGY by Ben Van Meter Completely uninhibited New American Cinema film FALL OF THE HOUSE OF USHER Rare 1928 avant qarde classic Visually influenced by THE CABINET OF DR. CALIGARI Highly expressionistic THE MAGICIAN Powerful anti-war fantasy FLAG Extremely creative satire on 'OLD GLORY' Excellent creative cartoon surrealism SNOW WHITE Cab Colloway sings "St. James Infirmary" LINES VERTICAL Subtle abstract film from The National Film Board of Canada UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN BANDS present VAR SITY NIGHT SHOW, 1969 featuring -4 FLI P WiLSON and SRAH VAUGHN SATURDAY, September 27 8:00 P.M. UNIVERSITY EVENTS BUILDING TICKETS STILL AVAILABLE TODAY: Student Activities Bldg. BOX OFFICE 8:00 A.M.-4:30 P.M. SATURDAY: Events Bldg. Box Office Before and after the game and 7:00 P.M. on $2.50, $3.00, $3.50, $4.00 4 I --m-nummmmJ I MO.2 P I Subscribe to The Michigan Daily IIl MONDAY, SEPT. 29 8:00 P.M. PIONEER HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM, ANN ARBOR ETS: :x AVAI TICKE ILABLE: 16 1 %#. $3.00 Advance* DISCOUNT RECORDS Ann Arbor GRINNELL BROTHERS Ypsilanti, THURSDAY and FRIDAY Double Feature DIARY of A CHAMBERMAID -Renoir Blood of a Poet dir. JEAN COCTEAU (1930 ) t $3.25 at Door ! 9 q , ' 1 KI , l 1,. I I. I f Ll , , 'li 1I I I' 7 & 662-8 Both films each show, come twice 9 ARCHITECTURE 3871 AUDITORIUM ;PPTH 1'oruM FRI.-1 1 :00 p.m. SAT.-3:00 matinee and 11:00 p.m. .4 I I Not continuous with "STAIRCASE"-separate admission 1 A'-". , .. .. ,. .. ., S "" ±:+ 6 -- - - - ------ VITTORIO DESICA'S The kydle Thief TONIGHT AT 8:00 P.M. and ALAIN RESNAIS' SEPTEMBER 26-27 7-9:30 Aud. A 75c (cheap) "EXCITING EXCEL LE ;, ;, "ALL FIRST RATE" 41! 11 -Toledo Blade -Detroit Free Press Fri.-Sat. I Sept. 16-Sept. 28, 1969 A "Irresistibly fascinating . . Ann Arbor News t SHAKESPEARE'S RICHARD EASTON i e ;' , INI