PAGE-TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 0,1965 PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY ThURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 30. 111C5 '. .'.. e m v +v .r p.Fa ulvav VV iVVV 'Madame's Earrings' A Sensitive Portrait APA OPENING: You Can't Take It With You': Successful Comedy Revival ,...m. . ' .a.. .s....... .. c~ DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN :{--... - .... -*......-. .. . By PAUL SAWYER At The Cinema Guild As a tragedy of love, "The Ear- rings of Madame de X" is moving and convincing; as a study of adultery, it is subtle and sensitive; as a total film, it is a work of art. And it proves its director, the late Max Ophuls, to have been one of the modern cinema's most gifted craftsmen. The plot, set in pre-war France, is a love triangle between a wealthy, unimaginative . French general (Charles Boyer), his beau- tiful but vain wife (Danielle Dar- rieux) and a dashing Italian dip- lomat (Vittorio da Sica). Fate enters into the situation in the form of a pair of earrings, given to Madame de X by her husband, which she sells in order to over- come a debt. Infidelity In two instances, they become the means by which the general learns of his wife's infidelity. The earrings are in a like manner given as a gift and then resold by the recipient three times in the course of the film, by virtue of which they become the symbol of all the elaborate trivia this so- ciety has been substituting in the place of meaningful, personal re- lationships. Yet the most remarkable -part of this remarkable film is not its portrayal. of a decadent society, but rather the subtle, almost im- perceptible transformation of Ma- dame de X from a vain and fickle fashion plate to, a tragic heroine. Lavish Sets. It takes a while to realize this transformation, partly because Ophuls' :lavish sets, in addition to emphasizing the superficiality of this society, keeps the characters for awhile at a distance. Madame seems always to be partly lost behind gowns and drapes. Vital clues to character come from ran- dom snatches of conversation and seemingly trivial actions. But once we have become in- volved, the gracefully flowing photography, the constantly, mov- ing and glittering objects and the gradual increase of tension sweep us onward, and the climax is one of somber beauty and great power. nUMber '65'. . 10/15-16 I FRE UPEOR The luxurious decor, which was one of Ophuls' trademarks, car- ries us off to a faraway world which has the mistly elegance and impermanence of dreams. The frequent scenes of diplomatic con-' cultations just previous to the war remind us that like this civili- zation, Madame's illicit happiness is doomed. Yet the pervading mood of this film is not one of stark gloom, but of nostalgia and the ache and longing that accompany shattered dreams. ORGAN IZATION NOTICES Use of This Column for Announce- ments is available to officially recog- nized and registered student organiza- tions only. Forms are available in Room 1011 SAB. * * *' Baptist Student Union, Discussion: "Salt of the Earth?", Fri., Oct. 1, 7:30 p.m., 1131 Church St. * . * Cervantes Club, Meeting to discuss "Courtship in Latin America," Part I, Sept. 30, 7:15 p.m., Room 3-D, Michi- gan Union. The Christian Science Organization, Thursday evening- testimony meeting, Sept. 30, 7:30 p.m., 3545 BAB. Circle Honorary Society, Meeting, Thurs.,. Sept. 30, 7 p.m., The Cave at the League. Folk Dance Club, Folk dance with in-j struction Fri., Oct. 1, 8-11 p.m., Bar- bour Gym. Guild House, Friday noon luncheon, John Telfer, University planner: "The Human Scale of University Planning," Oct. 1, 12-1 p.m., Guild House, 802 Monroe. * * * Inter-Quadrangle Council ,House Aca- demic Chairman's meeting, Sept. 30, 9 p.m., 3511 SAB. Moss Hart and George S. Kauf-' man wrote "You Can't Take It With You" about a decade before the current crop of undergraduates was born. It has been, since then, standard fare for high school plays, civic theatre groups, and practically any off-Broadway out- fit in search of a tested comedy. The Association of Producing Artists Repertory Company has brought it back again as they open their fourth fall festival. From where I sat last night at Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, Ann Arbor seemed to think the revival a fine idea. "You Can't Take It With You" is a zany story of a family of ec- centric individualists, a well-mixed bag of nutty folk whose normal, all-American daughter falls in love with the boss' (well-heeled, but also all-American) son. Poor Alice! Poor, frustrated, fretting Alice (the daughter)! Her mother has fancied herself a playwright for eight years, since 'a typewriter showed up by error at her front door. Her grandfather hasn't worked for 35 years. Her father and his pal manufacture fireworks in the cellar, and explode them in the dining room. Her sister Essie has been prac- PHONE 483-4680 Entan~e On CARPENTER ROAD NOW SHOWING r:::> WILLIAM CASTLE'S ticing ballet (in vain) for eight years and gets her kicks by gal- loping about in toutou and tights. Essie makes candy in the kitchen and her husband sells it around town, when he's not playing his zylophone. They keep snakes in the sideboard, and a Russian ex- patriate is always stopping in for for a meal. Well Cast The actors obviously know what this brand of comedy is all about and they're very, very well cast. They all work hard, in other words, toward a very bouncy, comic evening. The question folks will be asking in the morning, however, is why the Professional Theatre Program chose to open with this play. What was hilariously funny in the thirties is still as humorous, but for different reasons. It's al- most impossible to see the play except as a vintage piece of American comedy. The play is delightful for this i 1 very reason-for the same rea- sons we now delight in Laurel and Hardy and W. C. Fields. It cap- italizes in 1965 on the same strains that have sparked the Lone Rang- er revival, Peter Sellers' spoofs, Bogart movie reruns and Andy Warhol. Vintage Quality The Hart-Kaufman script, re- member, won a Pulitzer Prize in 1937. It's straight thirties. Even the phonograph plays tunes from that decade and the music at in- The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan, for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Bldg. be- fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication, and by 2 p.m. Friday fortSaturday and Sunday. General Notices may be published a maxi- mum of two times on request; Day Calendar items appear once only. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, Day Calendar University Management Seminar - en awill be held from 8 a.m. to noon and General Notices I to 5 p.m.Monday. Tuesday, Wednes- :ay, Thursday and Friday between Fall Term Fees: At least 50 per cent Sept. 30 and Oct. 6. is due and payable on or before Sept. Upperclass students who wish to elect 30, 1965. physical education classes may do so Non-payment of at least 50 per cent on Thursday and Friday mornings by Sept. 30 will result in the assess- only, Oct. 28 and 29. ment of a delinquent penalty of $5. Payments may be made in perzon Regents' sleeting: October 22. Con- or mailed to the Cashier's Office, 1015 munications for consideration at this Administration Bldg., before 4:30 p.m.. meeting must be in the President's Thurs., Sept. 30. hands no later than October 8. Mail. Early I- Mail payments postmarked after due Statistics Seminar: Prof. Bruce Hill date, Sept. 30, are late and subject to will speak on "Testing for Constrained penalty. Sampling in the Random Model," 3201 Identify mail payments as tuition Angell Hall, Sept. 30, 4 p.m. amnd show student number and name. Astronomy Dept. Visitors' Night: Fri., French and German Screening Exam- Oct. 1. 8 p.m.. Aud. D, Angell Hall. inations: The screening examinations in John . Kirk will speak on "Observing French and German for Doctoral can- the Sun." After the lecture the Stu- didates will be administered on Sat., dent Observatory on the fifth floor of Oct. 9 from 9 to 11 a.m. in Aud. B, An- Angell Hall will be open for inspec- gell Hall. Doctoral candidates must tion and for telescopic observations- of pass thescreening examination before the Moon and Saturn. Children wel- taking the written test in French or comed, but must be accompanied by German, unless they have received B adults. termission will cause a pre-war Irene Place, associate professor, Grad- uate School of Business Administra- generation to remember and re- tion, "Managing the Departmental Of- member. It's not really nostalgia, fice": 5046 Kresge Hearing Research but the comedy gets an extra Institute, 1:30 p.m. boost from its vintage quality. i Mr. Schnitzer has, in other! words, scored a solid hit in the best pop-art manner! The mere appearance in town this week of "You Can't Take It With You" is a well-turned artistic comment. For it, while we are smiling at his production, we must congratulate him! -John J. Manning, Jr. Cinema Guild - "The Earrings of Mme. de X": Architecture Aud., 7 and 9 p.m. Professional Theatre Program Per- formance-APA company in "You Can't Take It With You": Mendelssohn Thea- tre, 8 p.m. School of Music Faculty Recital - John Mohier, clarinetist: Recital Hall, School of Music, 8:30 p.m. or better in French 111 or German 111. Those who fail the examination may take it again when the test is ad- ministered in December. Candidates are asked to bring their own No. 2 pencils. Physical Education-Women Students: Women students taking required phys- ical education who were medically de- terred for the first half of this se- mester should report to Office 15, Bar- bour Gymnasium, to sign for the sec- ond half of the semester. Registration Doctoral Examination for JailtiNusser- wanji Kerawalla, Mechanical Engineer- ing; thesis: "An Investigation of the Acoustic Emission from Commercial Ferrous Materials Subjected to Cyclic Tensile Loading," Thur7s., Sept. 30. 2323 E. Engrg. Bldg., at 2 p.m. Chair- man, J. R. Frederick. Student Government Council Approval of the following student-sponsored events becomes effective 24 hours after (Continued on Page 6) U 4 DIAL 8-641f 3rd WEEK I I HOMECOMING '65 PRESENTS "TWO TIMES TWO"... 4 IRIGHTEOUS BROTHERS andt PETER NERO I 0 HOMECOMING I I Go Go Girls: Opal Bailey. Linda Bloom Jo Bowerman Vicki Davis Gina Garrett Barbara Glang Susie Gross Rusti Hansher Jan Heim Sally Herndon Kathy Miller Nancy Mull Marilyn Pershin Connie Pope Jeannine Powders Michele Stagman 'Brooke. Tiley Chris Van Kampen Leslie Wahlin Lynn Wallace I IN 2 DOUBLE CONCERTS .. .7:00 A SATURDAY, OCTOBER 16 at Hill Auditorium Housing Units: Make Your Plans Now-Block Ticket Preferencing Is This Saturday! NUMBER '65 . . . . NUMBER '65 . . . NUMBER '65 .. . . NUMBER '65 .. . . NUh ND 9:30 P.M. A MBER '65 . . . . OCT. 15-16 Iii I Ii 1 111 Watch for them in the Friday afternoon pa- rade and at the Dance that night featuring the Four Tops ! nUMber '65 . . . 10/15-16 Read Daily Classifieds 1 / SHOWING TONIGHT 7 and 9P.M. * U MAX OPHUL'S THE EARRINGS OF MME. de X. FIRST ANN ARBOR SHOWING I I I Ik GRAVFW HA FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1 TUDENT MXE-12 .LL - 314.i LIBERTY $100 ill 11111 -. i