Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, November 9, 1969 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, November 9, 1969 theatre=- A self-righteous look at 'The Boys in the Band moo"lor t jJ4IIc ; LAST 7 DAYS 1 :30 and 7 :30 P.M. ACADEMY AWARD WNlNER! BEST ACTRESS! BARBRA STREISAND By DEBORAH LINDERMAN The Boys in the Band is play- ing with a New York company in a new theater in Detroit call- ed the Vest Pocket. As you may very well have heard by now, the play is about homosexuals and their profound ups and downs. It has been a great hit in New York and London for reasons which are puzzling to me but which probably have not a little to do with the "scene" being eminently recognizable in these places. It is, however, doubtless less familiar to thea- ter-goers in Detroit and I be- lieve that the performance I saw bombed rather badly there. For one thing it felt as if it were taking place in a great yawning vacuum, a large chasm separating the people in the au- dienece from those on stage. Like thunder coming after lightening, the first, laugh was separated from the first one- liner by a tell-tale time lag, and I guessed that the play would progress resolutely to its end in this deadly atmosphere of "no rapport." Although "no rapport" improved to "little rapport" as things went on, the cast never managed to emerge from the handicap of the first ten minutes. But evenif it were the case that the performance and the audience could not on any way be faulted, the play decidedly still could be. It is about six homosexuals who give a birth- day party for a seventh. This is ADA meets "A Response to Nixon on Vietnam" will be the focus Sun- day evening of an Americans for Democratic Action Open Forum. The featured speaker will be Prof. Allen Whiting, former. State Department Di- rector of Research for the Far East and American deputy counsel at Hong Kong. A reaction panel consisting of Daily Editor Henry Grix, Ann Arbor News Editor Arthur Gal- lagher and Detroit News Asso- ciate Editor John O'Brien will question Mr. Whiting following his prepared remarks. Questions and discussion from the audi- ence are encouraged. The meet- ing will begin at 8 p.m. at the First Unitarian Church, 1719 Washtenaw. an occasion to carry on with squabbles, jealousies, and long ex- positions of personal misery il- lumined by trenchant insights from the analyst's couch. The festivities are curdled, however, by the half-expected appearance of an eighth guy- Alan, the former friend of one of the boys in the band-who is straight. Or at least he thinks he is until they all spitefully conspire to prove to him that he is a gay and degraded as any- one. The motive is revenge for the complacency of the hetero- sexual world. The heterosexual world, how- ever, triumphs in the end and they are punished for their an- ti-normative attitudes. One of them initiates a cruel game, with an elaborate scoring sys- tem, designed primarily to ex- pose the straight friend and shatter his he-man smugness: Each of them has to telephone someone he has lusted for and confess his love. This game provides a wedge for long stretches of self-reve- lation in which they all b a r e .their most tender wounds. By the end of the party, their de- fensas are in shreds and hetero- sexuality carries the day as Alan phones -- of all people - the wife he has left and tells her he loves her very much. He wins the game of ,course. The play ends with him-whose- birthday-it-is delivering to him- who-has-been-the-host a final devastating judgement w h i c h runs along something like this: You are a sad and pathetic man, you are a homosexual and you don't want to be, you may someday be able to pursue a heterosexual life but you will never be able to shed your homosexuality till the day you die. Exeunt. It is my opinion that this play fatally lacks charm. It fails to be funny and it fails to be deep, and the one direction is at cross purposes with the other. Whenever the play starts to say something that seems interest- ing, it is quickly. laced through with a rather impoverished humor the staple of which is sexual expletive. The gags are like placards reading "laugh now," and the Detroit audience laughed, if not "now" at least loudly, at every slightly sexual word as if they were unexpectedly let in on a bonanza of dirty jokes They also appeared to derive much hilarity from the simple fact of homosexuals calling themselves such t h i n g s as "screaming queens" and "tired faggots" right there on stage. But despite this formidable honesty, and despite the char- acters revealing themselves in all the depth and complexity of their misery, they are never moving or even touching. With all its waspish ferocity the play is unappealingly self-righteous and pleading. Though Director Robert Moore has poked, slapped and fussed over it, he has evoked little from his actors that is genuine and the production obdurately refuses to come to life. The sin- gle impressive set, sleek and stylish, is by Peter Harvey. The Boys in the Band will be at the Vest Pocket for another month, and will be followed by a series of plays from New York. Among these are Hair, Adapta- tion and Next, and Little Murders. It COLUMBIA PICTI BARBRA SIREISAN I The WILLIAM WYLER- RAY STARK Prod ucton URESand RASTARPRODUCTIONS eseni OMAR SHARIF TEHNCOOR"PNA45ON 3020 Washtenaw, Ph. 434-1782 Between Ypsilanti & Ann Arbor NOW SHOWING SHOW TIMES Wed., Sat., Sun. 1 :00-3:05-5:10-7:15-9:20 Mon., Tues., Thurs., Fri. 7:00-9:05 Filled with Maglc? ~~0X the Litll'ept TECHNICOLOR u Saturday and Sunday-Nov. 8-9 LA STRADA dir. FREDERIC FELLINI, 1954 Giulietta Masina and Anthony Quinn act Giulietta Masina and Anthony Quinn act in this classic performance of Italian Cinema. 7 & 9 75C ARCHITECTURE 662-8871 AUDITORIUM C QrgtnaSoundTrackAlbumonColumbtaRecords OPENINGS FOR CHILD CARE WORKERS -HAWTHORN CENTER Work-Experience Opportunity with Emotionally Disturbed Children Hawthorn Center offers mature students a unique opportunity to work directly with disturbed children in a creative, well-supervised, in-patient treatment setting - a particularly rewarding experience for potential -professional workers in Education Psy- cholog y, Social Work, Medicine and related Behav- ioral Sciences. Hours: 32 or 40 per week. Must be able to work days and weekends. Potential openings on evenings and midnight shift. Age Requirement: Minimum-20 years. Education: Minimum-Two credit years completed and good academic standing in third year. Salary: With Bachelor's degree-$7078 per year Without Bachelor's degree-$6410 per year Call or Write: Director of Nursing Hawthorn Center Northville, Michigan Telephone: Area Code 313- Fl 9-3000 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. BOGUE ENTERPRISES Presents Cornell University, School of In- dustrial and Labor Relations Unilevel Limited Chemical Abstracts Service University of Chicago, Graduate School of Business Michigan Department of Social Services EDUCATION DIVISION The following schools will interview OPEN MEETING SDS prospective teachers in ou office dur ....:' tugtheweek of November 10. Addi- DAILY OFFICIAL tionalinformation concerning dates Placement Bulletins and posted on BU.LiEIN bulletin boards on campus. 817tpryIlimitem SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 9 Dearborn Heights, Mich. (Sch. DiAt. ____No.7 ) Flint, Mich. (Kearsley Sch.) DayLivonia, Mich. St. Clair Shores, Mich. (Lakeview) Monroe, Mich. Sigma Alpha Iota Musicale: School Mt. Clemens, Mich. iL'Anse Creutse of Music Recital Hall, 2:30 p.m. P.S Degree Recital: Brenda Krackenberg, Royal Oak, Mich. soprano: School of Music Recital Hall, Southfield, Mich. 4:30 p.m. Warren, Mich. International Center Film Series: Dearborn Heights, Mich. (Fairlane Body and Soul: International Center, Sch.) 7:30 p.m. Fraser, Mich. Midland, Mich. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 10 Wayne, Mich. Milford, Mich. (Huron Valley Sch.) Physics - Astronomy: High S c1 o o Taylor, Mich. Colloquium: F. Harris adn J. Smith, To make appointments for inter- "Recent Tests of the Triangle I equals views with these schools contact Mrs. z Rule in Hperon Decays"; P & A Krieger, 764-7459. Collokuium Room, 4:00 p.:. Department Of History Lecture: ' Prof. Karl Bosl, University of Munich, "Why Did the European Middle Ages ORGANIZATION End in the Eighteenth Century?":I Aud. C. Angell Hall, 4:00 p.m. NICE Department of Physical EducationT for Women Speed Swim Team Meet: U-M vs. Michigan State: Margaret Bell :. . ........................... ....... . Pool, 6:00 p.m. Hear both sides of the story from Degree Recital: Mary Ida Yost, or- native representatives of Biafra and gan: Hill Aud., 8:00 p.m. Nigeria at a meeting of the Interna- tional Students Association, Nov. 10, 17Up.m. at the International Center llacemen t Service, (exttothUno) Monday, Nov. 10 Rooms K, L, MICHIGAN 8:00 P.M. M, and N UNION 'I loo 100I I I I VI IRI V STEVE M~C4DIEEN AS II3ulitt-- se other hind oft cop. DIAL 8-6416 SDeaking of Togetherness i I w IIs 'Elk- m LIZ RICHARD IN MIKE'S ~ui s1 FO AT.f AU nU6E'. TECHNICOLOR FROM WARNER ROS.SEVEN ARTS W SAT. and SUN.-- :15-5:05-8:55 WHO'S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF? They're young... they're in love .and they kill people. Week of November 17-21: Interviews Held at General Division,j Placement Services, call 763-1363 toI make appointments and inquire if you are eligible for what these organ- rations request: Pence Corps all wek Department of the Army, civilian personnel National Labor Relations Board I Department of Housing and Urban Developmnent :nternational Voliuntary Services Southern Methodist University, Gradtiate School of Business Thunderbird Graduate School of International Management U,S. Marine Corps U.S. Navy (OMPUTA-DATE "Finds People for People" CALL 662-4401 CIN A The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $3.00 by carrier, $3.00 by mail. fl LAST 3 DA Are you sure S. I. Hayakawa started this way? "This is the Liz I knew." -Eddie Fisher NOVEMBER 7-8-9 Friday-Saturday-Sunday 7:00-9:15--Aud. A.--75c (peanuts) Doors open 6:00. Please come early -I EcHIIF ACE yWrA w t' QWOT W4 tliiIUN ra L )Mby UVI M tJL ARIIEFW TE+CHNICOLOR 0 FROM WARNER BROS.-SEVER ARTS U GREAT BRITAIN IN DYLAN'S WHIRLWIND TOUR OF 1965 O.:: "A Fascinating Picture" (New York Times) CANTERBURY HOUSE-Monday, Nov. 10th 7:00, 8:45, 10:30, 12:15 $1 .00 -READ AND USE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS- SAT. and SUN.-3:09-7:00 Coming: "MIDNIGHT COWBOY" and "STOLEN KISSES" C kys I ends tuesday "For those with the good sense to recognize the deft satiric wit of one of the most unorthodox and brilliant young film makers at work in America today." -Newsday -. w, SNEAK PREVIEW TONIGHT 8:00 a complete feature length. Showing of a new "X" rated film. "Makes Hugh Hefner's Playboy penthouse look I II I I 1 II