PAGE TWO. THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1967 PAGE TWO TIlE MIChIGAN DAILY FRIDAY. JANUARY 20, 1967 THEATRE Drama of Racial Conflict and Traditional OJ'Neill Play Offer Provocative Double Bil DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETINI i ,_ ,; 3 , , , 1 KATHYO'BRIEN LINDA GREENBERG 'y ANN L. MARC10 the Jones' are keeping .good company this week in a double billing presented by ,the Dept. of ComparatiVe Literature The first of the tvo one act plays is "Dutch-. man"' Written by the contempo-. ,rary Negro playwright, . Leroi Jones, tpe play, tells the, post- Freudian infused story of a young bourgeois Negro, -played by Don Morrow, who iaccsted by a will- ful 'and eroti blond, Kathleen * Totmson. ; Provokedby the biting wit and "seductive mocking of Lula, Clay emerges from his role as what he calls a "middle class fake white man" to an angry representative of the Negroe's resentment of the whitein. Some 6f the languiage is harsh but very appropriate. Much of it i poetic. Upon first encounter with Clay, Lula tells him quie vividly "You look like you live in New Jersey with your parents and are trying, to grow a beard. You.look like you read Chinese poetry and drink lukewarm tea." The bitterness is often captured in a humorous allusion. For -in- starne,:at one.high dramatic poin Clay visualizes, a mirror and says "Mirror, mirror on the wall. Who's tie fairest of them all?" Then he turns violenitly o tula and growls "Snow White, baby, and you bet- ter elieve it." Here he refutes her attemp t to draw him into hex dark sensuality and her almosi complete identification with him Tiedtogether by a similar com- bina ion -of tbocology- and psychol- ogy but ina more traditional man- ner, is Eugene O'Neill's "The Em- peror Jone." Brutus Jones,.playe bY 'ai old Ann Arbor favorite Charles Thomas, is a runaway prisoner who has found employ. °ient as an emperor on a smal island. Paralleling the Oedipu F- 4 11U THIS WEEK: r J09ephvon Stenberg's y. ANGEL. Marlene Dietrich, Emil Jannings SATURDAY & SUNDAY Charlie Chaplin's MONSI EUR VERDOUX with Martha Raye Sunday night show followed by discussion with Leslie Fiedler 7:00 & 9:05 ARCHITECTURE AUD. STILL ONLY 50cin legend, Jones is destroyed by his pride. Confronted with loneliness and threat of an assassination, Jones not only relives the experi- ence of his race but comes to sym- bolize man who is powerless against the world. He is hurtled back down 'the long progressive trail of social fears, back to fear itself. Although O'Neill s play does not have as important a statement, as Jones, his style is quite reward- ing. Director Donald Harms has achieved a plausible rendition of the numerous scene shifts, and the alternation of the stage's darkness intensifies Brutus' ex- perience. After the abrupt message of the first play, the almost abstracted character of Brutus serves as a relief. Once again the audience is made aware of the common des- tiny of man and the subtleties of mistic, but he does not possess the acute severity of Jones. Another similarity of the plays is in their experimental nature. Although O'Neill wrote this play over thirty years ago, it still is representative of the break from the provincial theatre that preced- ed him. He was not content to stay within the boundaries of tra-- ditional morality. Almost all hisI work is a personal reflection of{ race. O'Neill is by no- means opti- I his philosophy. Marlene in The Blue Angel': Schmaltz with a German Polish The Daily Offiical 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 3519 Administration Bldg. be- fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday 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. For more information call 764-8429. FRIDAY, JANUARY 20 Day Calendar Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- inar - "How To Install Theory Y": Michigan Union, 8:30 a.m. Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- inar-" How To Plan, Install, Conduct, and Measure Management Training": Michigan Union, 8:30 a.m. Dept. of Psychiatry Lecture- Sally Provence, M.D., Child Study Center, Yale University, "Psychological and Physical Symptoms in Early Child- hood": Children's Hospital Aud., 4:30 p.m. School of Music Degree Recital-Susan Cowden, flute: Recital Hall, 8:30 p.m. Special Seminar: Dr. P. W. Le Quesne, University of British Columbia, will speak on "Total Synthesis of Nine- Membered Ring Indole Alkaloids and Related Compounds." on Fri., JTan. 20. at 4 p.m. in Room 1300 of the Chemistry Bldg. Southern Asia Club: A meeting will be held at 12 noon, Friday, in the Commons Room of Lane Hall. Election of new officers will be held and Mrs. Sontari Swvipakit of Thailand will Applications for Faculty Research (Continued on Page 8) ORGAN IZATION NOTICES By JAMES MAYO What Shakespeare didn't-have "The Blue Angel" lacks :too. The, plot is unbelievably bad, the characters corny, but somehow you like it. The players are -the thing as Marlene . Dietrich, _the leftover bombshell of World War I, comes to you in black and white with legs no multicolored peacock possess. No women hath the fury of Herr Professor Rath (Emil Jannings) scorried as he professes dying devotion to the sophisticated swinger Lola Lola (Marlene). This is a comedy where every- body laughs as Herr Professor teaches and a tragedy when no- body laughs as Herr Professor acts. You know the scene where the clown comes in and everybody cries. It's there. Or the one where the bird sings no longer as the professor does his swan song. It's there. Or even the floozy chorus girl who wants to hold on to her legs and forgets the old cuckoo, cuckolded fool who loves her. Long live the super, super stereotype. The movie is good if you like schmaltz, -not overdone, but en- gineered with a German precision. The touches are not always evi- dent. Note for example how the sea hooks on the dancing floor symbolize the poor fate :of Herr Professor, a blue angelfish who replaces the old sea captain in fighting for Marlene's love. Watch also the change in Herr Profes- sor's hats from the proud stove- pipe in the beginning to the crumpled mass on his head at the end. The acting is excellent. Mar- lene is beautifully inexplicable and her style is mother sex. Emil beautifully explicable as you an- ticipate his failures and future. This film while faintly suggest- ing the rising Hitler Germany of the punk kids defying their teach- ers and the teacher's wrapped up in their Victorian lives has some- how managed to escape from its time just as the character stereo- types escape into your imagina- tion and feeling. Then again may- be it's just Marlene's legs. and SUSAN SMITH 11 USE OF THIS COLUMN FOR AN- NOUNCEMENTS is available to officially recognized and registered student or- ganizations only. Forms are available in Room 1011 SAB. La Sociedad Hispanica, Una Tertulia, cafe, conversacion, musica, Mon., Jan. 23, 3-5 p.m., 3050 Frieze Bldg. Vengan todos. Newman Student Association, Com- munity mass and supper, Jan. 20, 5 p.m., Newman Center, 331 Thompson. Newman Student Association, Sister Francella, music coordinator of the Archdiocese of Detroit: "Contemporary Music-Is It Really Profane?", Jan. 20, 7 p.m., Newman Center, 331 Thompson. U. of M. Chess Club, Meeting, Jan. 20, 7:30 p.m., Room 3D, Michigan Un- ton. Square Dance Club, Dance, Jan. 21, 8-11 p.m., Women's Athletic Bldg. All students, faculty and staff are invited to come join the fun. * * * Hillel Foundation, Sabbath service, Dr. Michael Inbar, asst. professor of sociology on Negro-Jewish relations. Jan. 20, 7:15 p.m., 1429 Hill. III LOVE CORN ED BEEF and Sunday, We Promise To Have More Pastrami! HILLEL DELI HOUSE Reservations 663-4129 Today and Sunday SUNDAYS $100 members 1429 at $1.25 others HILL 5:30 STREET 4 4 m I I Dept. of Comparative Literature presents: it IHA PRESENTS: THE EMPEROR JONES by Eugene ONeill and SIMON AND' GARFU NKEL Jannings as Hrerr ±roiessr is I 7 LESLIE FIEDLER will controversially appear NOT tonight but Tomorrow at Cinema Guild Le Roi Jone's DUTCHMAN Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre WED.-SAT., JAN. 18-21 $2.00, $1.50, $1.00 Box office opens 10 a.m. Monday before performance January 28 I 8:30P.M. .4 Hill Auditorium $3.00, $2.50, $2.00 9- INDIVIDUAL SALES JANUARY 23-27 8:00 A.M.-4:00 P.M. HILL AUDITORIUM BLOCK SALE JANUARY 20 3:00 P.M. S.A.B. HELD OVER! DIAL 8-6416 a CINEMA I1 UAC MUSKET '67 ". i A "ON E 0F THE YEAR'S, 10 BEST FILMS!" -Archer Winsten, N.Y. Post GRAND PRIZE WINNER 1966 CANNES FILM FESTIVAL A DAZZLING DISPLAY OF VIRTUOSITY! -Saturday Review A FREE, VIGOROUS CINE- MATIC STYLE. INCIDENTS THAT HAVE POIGNANCY AND CHARM! -N.Y. Times :,."A AOMAN ANd A OMAN (Un Homme et Une Femme") IN EASTMANCOLOR presents TICKETS: @ut THE GUNS OF NAVARONE (CinemaScope and Technicolor) GREGORY PECK Anthony Quinn David Niven Individual Sales Of sta rt January 1 6 @ur the new musical Lydia Mendelssohn Box Office 10 A.M.-5 P.M All Seats $2.50 11 fI it 11 11 .."Ar HELD Shows at 1:00- -OVER ! -u, Ilk i 93:00-5:00-7:00-900 P.M. i HIS I4EW ALL-OUT ADVENTURE! MATT HELM OUTDOES MATT HELM DEAN ANN- MARTIN .MH KARLALDEN 1EREl' :.: 1 4 r 11 I 11 t Next 0 "The Endless Summer" Coming "ALF I E" C MIU.A SPARB-JAMES GREGORY-BEVERLY ADAMS ::{'i}:'e i} i y_. ____ ii:J,:.:':"i'i ____.._.._ ®..__ yititi" : :lll }!{N. 'i'P:'.14 h': i Y1 i'j %i n h i'i'}Ji.V::'. ii'i i 't:'::iti'n :'i i t:' : f: :'::"i': : i" '1} :i :'i iCr ':.. .. if SST ! d" P S M: ;1' P I. I i I i f m IPI'1J LLA1 r r tA-L' ,, MI 11 U inUUuU~ EEEUD'UEU EU - II I'll 11