Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, November 5, 1969 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, November 5, 1969 music ____-cinema TONIGHT 7:30 P.M. It's nothing to write home about By NEAL GABLER The Virgin President, current- ly playing at the C a m p u s Theater, poses the question, "What is someone monument- ally incompetent became Presi- dent?" Believe it or not, this is not a documentary. Rather, it is the story of a mythical pres- ident Fillard Millmore whose in- nocence makes him vulnerable to the diabolical forces of William Salvo, Secretary of De- fense, SchuylernColfax, Secre- tary of State and Jock Steele Chief of the C.I.A. This is a black comedy, de- tailing a president's helplessness when faced by a bureaucracy bent on the obliteration of Coin- munism. Because it borders on reality it is occasionally fright- eriing. A little box allows the president to "dial his attack" anywhere in the world. Presi- dent Millmore's press confer- ences, all words and no sense, could have been taped off the television. And the cabinet it- self could have been appointed by Nixon. The believability of the char- acters poses a problem. They are so real they are no longer the caricatures they were designed to be. Four years ago this film might have been a sensation. Today, neither the situations nor the characters are outrag- eous enough to warrant laughs. I guess I've seen too many ex- cellent black comedies to be stirred by a mediocre one. The Virgin President is mildly amus- ing, but it isn't a rollicking comedy; it isn't insane enough. There are some very funny episodes, but it is the character- izations, not the situations or the characters, that spark the laughter. The cast, veterans of the Second City cabaret, are brilliant in their improvisations. Severn Darden gives one of the best comic performances of the year. He is hilariously scenile as Henry Millmore, Fillard's fa- ther and predecessor, and his naive Fillard looks as if he just ate a lemon. Darden has range and wit, and the film's funniest moments are his. Perhaps partly due to budget- ary limitations, the film is gen- erally shoddy. It has the quality of a second-rate home movie. A case may be made for improv- isation in performances, but that is no reason for mediocrity on the other side of the cam- era. Maybe director Graeme Ferguson thought his camera technique should match the cas- ualness of the rest of the film. I think he has made a mistake. If you want to be mild- ly amused and mildly disturbed, The Virgin President is the fare. I just wish the new breed of personal film-maker didn't en- tirely eschew the standard tech- niques of Hollywood - they aren't all bad. I must say a word about the short preceding the feature at the Campus Theatre - the word is retchy. This is the only way to describe Follow the Sun, an obnoxious, thinly ,veiled com- mercial for, of all things, Camp- bell's Soup. Without doubt this is the most worthless short I have ever seen. You know you have a bomb on your hands when the audience starts to hiss. My advice is, come a half an hour after the program be- gins. Don't say I didn't w a r n you. Tom Miller, an old friend of mine, is writing a piece for Rolling Stone about Lou Chris- tie, Twyla Herbert and the re- turn of pre-Beatles rancidrock. If any of you have any personal anecdotes about Lou or Twyla or anything like that, call Suzy at The Daily and I'll pass them on. 4 ____ Vietnam Film Series at the ECUMENICAL CAMPUS CENTER 921 Church "The Rag Doll" "Children at Play" A prezentation of the Vietnamese people Is PETITIONING NEW MEMBERS Sign Up Outside Rm. 2528, S.A.B. "SEE THE WORLD" j _ _ _ _ _ . ._ .. . . . _. _ _ . . .. _ _ . _.. _ _ _. . _ _ _ _ . __- - . . - _ . _ _ _ . . _ . _ . /11/et ALL U RDaily-Richard Lee RoyalChoral Socety: B rn T G By JIM PETERS It was in England that the theatre-goers finally put an end to H andel's reign and to the tradition of national composers writing Italian opera; simply, they wanted something they could understand and something more fun to listen to. Last night at Hill Aud. Britain's Royal Choral Society presented a pro- gram no doubt designed to be pleasing and pleasant; but ac- tually, it was just boring. Conductor Wynn M o ' r i s changed the order of the offer- ings as printed, placing the more serious Beethoven work out of the way before the intermission; it was a mistake. For me, the evening was a combination of some bad musi- cianship, and more importantly, a bad choice of pieces. Beet- hoven's "Mass in C Major" has always irritat ed me: it strikes me as one long forte passage with thundering timpani rolls pisced together with softer and slower bridges which are noth- ing but trite. Beethoven's publishers were reluctant to publish it, and I think they wicere right. And the problem last night was that the Choral Society did little to deemphasize the bom- bast. No matter which of the five movements one picks, it ends up sooner or later with brass, timpani, and screaming sopranos. Now the Choral Society did sing well; they have an excellent sound, and their ensemble is not too loose. But there's more to music than this craftmanship. Morris conducted for sound alone; there was no subtlety to his phrasing, no feeling in the vocal lines. I was more enter- tained than moved. The four soloists displayed somewhat m o r e sensitivity, Biggar and tenor Alexander though only contralto Majorie Oliver seemed to feel anything of what they were singing. And I could hardly expect much from their alternate passages with chorus in the "Benedictus" which must be Beethoven's most belabored piece of writing. This dryness also affected the orchestra. The Royal Choral Society Players are good per- formers, but last night they must have forgotten what ex- pressiveness is; their work con- tributed to the festive noise but gave little support to the solo- ists. It seemed that, after the in- termission, the orchestra a n d chorus were willing to give a little more of themselves to the music; but with the selections that followed, it really made lit- tle difference. Alun Hoddinott wrote the cantata "Eryri" for the Investi- ture of Prince Charles in July, extolling the pleasures and won- ders of Wales intraditional Welsh poetry; his music is .un- interesting. Once again, how the music sounded was more impor- tant than what it was all about. The bright opening which moved to a broad introduction in the lower strings led no- where, and cadence after ca- dence soon proved there was little substance to the work. Bass Rodney Macann achieved the required lyricism, struggling through the Welsh consonants, as did the chorus-which is an accomplishment; however, the melodies offer nothing, and the piece concludes with a trite and, in fact, ridiculous coda. What conductor Morris term- ed the "surprise" of the eve- ning was only shocking for its e f f u s i v e sentimentality. Sir Arthur Bliss must surely have known Frederick Delius, for his cantata "Pastorale" shows the same tired style. There must be techniques for tone-painting a sylvan scene other than continual flute trills over shimmering strings. The text was taken from classical poetry telling the story of Leda and the swan in a seemingly Victorian translation that jars the ear with its formality, es- pecially so in the contralto solo which Miss Biggar approached with added seriousness, One of G. F. Handel's 'Coronation Anthems" written for George II closed the pro- gram; it is stirring music and was sung with masterful bril- liance by the singers; but, again, it is a relatively unimportant work. As the audience began to leave during the ending of "Pastorale," Morris remarked before the Handel how li k e Grand Central Station Hill Aud. seemed to be, His remark was quiteaccurate, since there was nothing on stage to really hold anyone there. FR IDAY, NOV. 7 4-6:30 P.M. Music, Food, Drinks H I LLEL HOUSE 1429 H ill St. r Read and Use Daily lassifieds i rr I IFrLu=h lbI ,; / let - - - - - - - - presentation SPECIAL DANCE ATTRACTION-Non-subscription event from 1INDONES IA in HILL AUDITORIUM {presented in cooperation with University's Center for Southand Southeast Asian Students) THE PROGRAM: Fifteen of Indonesia's greatest performing artists will present a broad cross-section of Indonesia's performing arts by relating-the story of the Ramayana through different art forms-depicting a comic scene through wayang orang (live actors); a scene from the love story of Rama and Sita through Javanese dance; and a battle scene through woyang kalif (shadow puppets). A gamelan orchestra will accompany the performers,and a narrator will relate the events depicted on the stage. TICKETS: $3.00-$2.50-$2.00-$1.50 UNIVERSITY MUSICAL SOCIETY, BURTON TOWER, ANN ARBOR Office Hours: Mon, thru Fri. 9 to 4:30, Sat. 9 to 12 (Telephone 665-3717) (Also at Auditorium box office 11 2 hours before performance time) DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 'he Daily Official Bulletin is an otficial publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form tb 35'8 LSA before 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sun- day. Items may appear only once. Student organization notices a r e not accepted for publication. For information, phone 764-9270. IUDNESUAY, NOVEMBER a Day Calendar Vanslyke. Associate Prof. of Indus- mary Russell ,Lynda Weston, soloists: trial Engineering and Operations Re- Rackhamn Lecture Hall, 8:40 p. n search and Electrical Engineering, Uni--- versity of Califoria at Berkeley and Net- /" AT. work Analysis Corporation, "Optimal Gener;a, NO ICCs Capacity Sizing on Networks": 229 West' Engineering, 4:00 p.m.. Physics and Astronomy: Physics Col- A representative from the Woodrow loquisma: D. R. Yennie, Cornell, Wilson School of Public and Interna- "Photonuclear Interactions as a Test of tional affairs of Princeton Univ. will be Vector Dominance"; P & A Colloquium in the couseling office to interview Roomr 4:44op.m. interested students. Info: 764-0312. Statistics Seminar: Dr. Edward Roth- . man, "Tests of Coordinate Independ: Placement Serice once for a Bivariate Sample on a Tor- us"; 435 Mason Hall. 4:00 p.m. ,umrPaemn evce 1 Ai -- Botany Seminar: Dr. Bernie Rubin- Lower Level office. Anatomy Seminar: Dr. Peter Coyle, stein, Mich. State Univ., "Analysis of Dept. Anatomy, "Cat Parahippocampal Hypocotyl Hook Unbending in Eaen"; Newspaper Fund, Inc., o p e n i n g s Gyrus Cell Projections and Firing Pat- ' 1139 Nat. Si., 4:15 p.m. throughout the U.S. with newspapers, terns"; 4804 Med. Sci. II, 1:00 p.m. Festival of Contemporary Music: Juniors with interest in journalism Department of Business Administra- Michigan Chamber Ensemble, Theo Ai- and no professional backround. Appl lion and Industrial Engineering Mathe- ' cantara, conductor; The Stanley Quar- before Dec. 1. matical Optimization Seminar: R. %. tet; Elwood Derr, Michele Derr, Rose- Inspiration Consolidated Coppen Co., ~~~~~~~........ ..,....... .. .:... u~oilpogaxchmxaitinxt~ n mechanical. Apply soon, I LI i j / ^ / :rnmy and Air Force Excehance Serv- I .KI I. "\ J (,,,f t, ,, izrH allas, Texas, offers Summer in- ORGAN IZA T IO~N NOT JIG le ""gf tern progran for sophomores and jun- fors throughout the co. good nmgmt. ttrainin.fine salary. Conce rt lUatce rgan:,,izat ion Meeting FREEi UNIVERSITY Nov. 5, 7:30 p m. in.;:':>:::<'s:.">« i>:::::..... : Program Information 662-6264 HELD OVER 5TH W EEK (Friday & Saturday Late Show) now you can SEE anything you want at"r starring ARLO GJTHRIE n COLOR by DeLuxe United IArtIstS Shows at: 1,.3, 5, 7, 9 P.M. OPENS TONIGHT 8:30 ! THURS. MATINEE 2:30! 1 Vecdncday, Nov. 5, at 7:15 p.m. in Barbour Gym .Advanceci Modern Dance 'I'echinmtue: The Jose Limon Techimque will be taught. 'niversity i.utheran Chapel, .1511 Washtenaw. Nov. 5, Wed., 10:(0 p.m, Mid-week Devotion, Rev. Arthur Spom- er, sp:aker Room 3524, Student Activities Building. If you'd like to teach a class or take one - any class - come! All invited. S* * Luncheon at Guild house, 802 Mon- rue Wednesday, Nov. 5, at 12:00 noon sponsored by the American Culture Student Association. Seaker: Prof. Dav- id Steinberg, History Dept. Topic: "Vietnam Withdrawal"'. f r ' i::a shmaks ha'rf.sic a Way i dulcirne WORLD PREMIERE MON., NOV.3-SAT., NOV.8 13 1'addlcball (i'b Organizational 1969 Festival of Contemporary Music, Meeting: Nov. 6, 7:00 p.n., Rm. 3532 November 5, 8:00 p.m. Rackham Lee- Stud. Act. Bldg Beginners welcome. If ture Hall, works by Berry, Shifrin, and unable to attend and interested in Webern. joining, contact: Sandy Morris at 761- 3730 or Craig Finger at 662-8634. Wednesday Luncheon sponsored by +- the International Students Association Education has many dimensions. Help every week at the M. Pound House. dlevelop omne new ones at the nebu- orner of E. Univ. and Hill, across Io:s organizational meeting of THE fronI E. Quad) at Noon. B E NEFIT FOR CHICAGO CONSPIRACY 8 Thursday, Nov. 6th 8:30 P.M.t LIZ RICHARD MIKE'S WHO'S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF? LINDLEY JAMES WHITMORE CATHERINE BURNS wXFwN.h WO ? S Su 1*a r ir .r.I Tile b EVAN HUNTER I