Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, October 2, 1969 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, October 2, 1969 theatre- APA: Death, decay, and demons, -poetry and prose- Black poetry: Spirit of the other world By MICHAEL ALLEN Sa "u Beckett's Play - powerfully if starkly directed by Jack O'Brien - has the wit of an absurd trompe d'oeil. But it is a theatrical trick that is also terrifying, Ostensibly it ex- plores a three-way relationship betwen a man, his wife and his mistress; but we are confront- ed by three human heads sticking out of the rims of three huge urns or barrels. The effect of the lighting, switch- ing as it does suddenly from one face to another, leaving the rest of the set in total dark- ness, is to isolate the heads completely. Each head tells his or her ver- sion of th story, but each is in a solitary limbo of his own. Each is apparently sharing me- mories and feelings with t h e others, but in fact there is no communication at all. There is just the staccato repetition of the same words, moving not to- wards a resolution, but to a break in the text; half way through we go back to the be- ginning of the scene and start all over again - only the next time the pace is hysterically faster. This is a modern nightmar peopled by machines that arti- culate what ought to be a wholly human experiencs calling forth wholly human responses with the impersonal precision of a computer. Beckett has created a modern Lilliputia, which the APA has made painfully effec- tive. However their handling of Ghelderode's Chronicles of Hell is even more exciting. The play is not uniformly sustained. It has too much unbroken narra- tive in it, parts of which not even the outstanding perform- ance of Patrick Hines as the auxiliary bishop could wholly animate. Moreover, the symbol- ism is both intractable and ob- strusive. But the play has a corrosive energy and a vivid- ness that mounts to a marvel- lous climax in this production. ' Directed by John Houseman, it is dominated by the great farting hulk of the auxiliary bishop who rivets our atten- tion from the moment he en- ters. He is surrounded by a pack of clerics who could have been painted by Bosch or Brueghel. They are hideous caricatures of men, seething with a deformed vegetable life. And their dance round the crouching Monsig- nor at the end both brutally re- duces man and hymns him with a Rabelaisian delight. What is the play about? Everything - bodies, God, death, men. The plot is satur- ated with Christian imagery; there's hardly a detail that doesn't have Christian under- tones. But it is all strangely free-floating and ambiguous. We jump at what looks like an obvious reference and then we havo second thoughts. What for instance, are we to make of NATIONAL eENRAL CORPORATION FOX EASTERN T11ZATRESM FOH VILL6E 375 No. MAPLE PD.-769-1300 MON.-FR.--7:20-9:30 SAT.-SUN -1 :00-3:05 5:10-7:20-9:30 By LARRY RUSS I could talk about Gwendolyn Brook's poetry as specific pieces of literature, criticize her tech- nique, trace her progress, try to find her faults and talents. But I would much rather talk about a central problem of her poetry, which I believe is relevant to contemporary black poetry - what it's about. Her poetry has a kind of split personality, one side dragging her backwards, the other moving forward. You find bad sentimen- tality, drippy cliches, t e p i d speech. On the other hand, there is a real toughness, a strong voice trying to get out of the muck (which it is doing in her newest poems). She really talk- ed about this problem in talk- ing about the goal of black poetry today. I think that it is a matter of the black poets, (Miss Brooks included) being unable to write in the mode of a world from which they have been shut out so thoroughly. And they should- n't. Black poetry is completely different from the worst and best of white poetry. Why should this be surprising? You drive people out, force them to be so different and they are not un- derstood, and people get scared. Probably, the only way for a white to dig what's happening in black poetry is to be at a reading with a lot of blacks in the audience. You can't talk about black poetry (as we are used to it), it's so different. But at the reading last night you could get something of what it's about by sensing the waves bouncing back and forth, feeling them touch you. For instance, Dudley Ran- dall's "Booker T. and W.E.B." is a terrible poem, but you could feel something human, alive, moving through people, a posi- tive spirit. You oppress people PAUL CAMELET MASTER TAILOR for Men and Women alterations and remudeler specialties in shortening ladies coats, slacks, and skirts. No longer with Camelet Bros. in business for himself 1103 S. University above the drug store 663-4381 in their outward conditions and they have to become greatly concerned with those conditions. The new black poetry is. I also suspect that what we would call over-alliteration and redun- dancy are the result of the same oppression. Physical pleasure, personal delight are what the oppressed have left, after being oppressed by puritanic tyrants Poetry series All readings will be held in the UGLI Multipurpose Room at 4:10 p.m. Galway Kinnell Oct. 7 Ted Berrigan Oct. 14 Anne Stevenson Oct. 21 Tom Gunn Oct. 28 Donald Hall Oct. 30 Student Poets Nov. 11 Bill Stafford Nov. 20 whose need to keep power then demands the putting of their energy into sterile manipulation. It is a marvelous thing that there are two worlds of poetry becoming apparent. There could only be one, because of the state of the nation, if the other-the black-was unable to make it- self. The wide response of black people shows it is happening. At the reading I could feel some- thing of what's it's about: about self-worth, about pleasure, about life energy moving towards free- dom in the outer world. Whites need to move inward more, to revive the inner desires and imagination; but poverty and persecution create a greater need to talk about the outer world.' Since poetry has everything to do with the genuine human needs of people, black poetry has to be different. The feeling at the reading was strong that it is moving the way it has to- the way it should. MEN: try a new hairstyle designed to your personality OPEN 3 NIGHTS Mon.-Thurs.-Fri. 10 to 9 Tues.-Wed.-Sat. 9 to 6 DASOLA BARBERS at Maple Village-Campus BAC CLUB presents RANDOLPH SMITH Bach Club president and founder speakinrmon "HOW BEAUTIFUL. INTERESTING AND EXCITING THE 1ST MOVEMENT OF BACH'S CANTATA 35 15" Thursday, Oct. 2, sfp.m. 1 236 Washtenow tat S. Forest near S. Univ'ersity) Refreshments and Fun afterwards Ever'vbodv Welcome! (No musical knowledge needed) For further information Call: 63-2827, 665-6806, 761-7356 Try Daily Classifieds 'I -Daily--Richard Lee Chronicles of Hell': Patrick Hines and Christopher Walkins the host stuck in the throat of the half-dead bishop Jan in Eremo and choking him? What are we to make of Jan in Eremo himself? his discovery as a babe on the seashore; his skill as fisherman; his long mys- terious absenice among the sav- ages; his his charisma; his tutelary spirits; his mother; his death? Again and again their are resonances, but little that we can articulate exactly as a clear and meaningful par- a le .l. In part, this very ambiguity of the details concerning the dy- ing bis hop accounts for t h e play's suggestiveness. We are compelled to susptind judgement and to hear all thv points or view, But beneath this subtle play of correspondencies t h a t teases the intelligence and ir- ritates the memory, there is thI raw stench of bodies. T h e clergy, who would normally em- body the spiritual drag us through the mire and make us wallow in it. In front of the corpse they all hated when it WABX PRESENTS_ was alive, they break wind and crap. Obviously Jan in Eremo had some sort of primitive chthonic vision of God that was obses- sively real and inspired the crowd and that was deeper than either heresy or orthodoxy. To exorcize this primitive sense of the holy the priests become ani- mals. They try to exorcise the spirit of a saint or demon or trickster, who had dominated them by some sort of vision, by reducing him and themselves to the earth-bound and the vis- ionless. Like masks in a Flem- ish carnival they mock at things they inwardly fear, above all at death. Ghelderode leaves us sus- pended midway between the fundamental contradictions in human nature. When we think back to the Beckett play it is reduced in stature next to this ferocious grappling with the hu- man condition. Beckett has given in to pessimism. Ghelder- ode continues to rage at man, in man, with man without sur- rendering any of the possibili- ties. We are lucky to have the APA tackling both plays with care and energy and imagina- tion. IHA PRESENTS Sainhte Ijiadie s9tr COL.g* . M ASON'IC Saturday, Oct. 4th 8:30 P.M. TICKETS: $3.50-$4 50-$5.50 Available at Masonic Temple Box Office and all J.L. Hudson stores UIMITED ENGAGEMENT 2 WEEKS ONLY.! "THE GREATEST!" * ACADEMY Y; AWARD ; "THE BEST iWINNER! FOREIGN FILM OFTHE YEAR. "BEST FOREIGN FILM" --New ,York Fim Cw s + -Nati, oa S 01 PReiew #WAR AND PEACE' IS A GREAT FL,.M... NOT EVEN 'GONE WITH THE WiNO' - OR 'BEN-HUR' InF.d Wnhip, UPI PART I NOW SHOWING THE TWO PART PROOUCiON OF PART STARTSWED. OT -TH LEO TOLSTOY'S WAHandPEACE PRESENTED BY THE WALTER READE ORGANIZATION AND SATRA "IN COLOR . RELEASED BY CONTINENTAL * SPECIAL DISCOUNT FOR CLASSES The Entire Production of "WAR AND PEACE" Will Be Shown In Two Parts. Each Part Will Be Shown For One Week! week sat. sun. cays fri. 1:00J P.M1. $2.00 $2.00 2 00 P.M. $2.00 $2.00 4:30 P.M. $2.50 $2.50 8 00 P. $2.50 $2.75 8:00 P.M. $2.75 $2.50 Children 14 and under $1.00 at all times TICKETS MAY 8E PURCHASED SEPARATELY FOR EACH PART F'TH I'or ulm SATURDAY, OCTOBER 4-8:30 P.M. HILL AUDITORIUM TICKETS: $2:00-$2.50-$3.00 on sole at SAB September 29-October 3 What keeps dynamic young engineers like Jim Bregi and Jeff Quick at Ford Motor Company? |I IOX)CUIll~Dl, uxL eUnied Artists i PERSONS UNDER 18 NOT ADMITTED 3020 Washtenow, Ph. 434-1782 Between Ypsilanti & Ann Arbor NOW SHOWING PattyDuke Coo Deue TONIGHT! "They tell us to do it...not how to do it!" I SEPTEMBER 30-OCTOBER 12 flmflc u[reie . TONIGHT I A m b....... Directed by John Houseman plus "PLAY" by Samuel Beckett r _ +q .{ "X' 1 l§Vhldt "The real world is out here," says Jeffrey Quick, Product Design Engineer in our High Perform- ance Engine Department. "These aren't academic problems... not when you've got someone waiting for a solution!" "My job is to make Jeff's de- signs work," says Jim Bregi, Manufacturing Enginoernt the ate engineers. His day might in- clude anything from solving a problem in thermo-dynamics to helping hire a new engineer. "I don't know of another job that would have allowed me to move ahead as fast as this one." "They're completely flexible," says Jeff. "Whether it comes to trvinn somethinn new nr rhann. gineering degree to good use, see our recruiter when he visits your campus. Or contact Mr. Richard Rosensteel, College Recruiting Department, Ford Motor Com- pany, American Road, Dearborn, Michigan 48121. An equal oppor- tunity employer. I I I I