PA+GET O , THE MICHIGAii DAILY WEDNESDAY. APRIL 12.1987' PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY " + L 4:ia3 L7L'$, Al 1lil1J 1 i 1 JU 4 THEATRE Anouiblh's Masterpiece: 'A Vision, Dream' As Performed by Meadowbrook Players Salisbury Criticizes Govt. Asian Policies, Reviews Vietnam Travels in Recent Book By THOMAS SEGALL break the production down into its component parts. Director Robin The John Fernald Company at Ray has made of them a unity, Meadowbrook Theatre, Oakland so skillfully has he and his actors University, has staged an all-but- breathed life into this vision of tiansparent production o° Aro- Anouilh's. ulh's "Waltz of the Toreadors." Successful Man That's a funny kind of compli- Let's make a tentative attempt ment. at visisection. The play is about Robert Edmond Jones, the an outwardly successful man who famous American stage designer is inwardly lonely and cowardly. (O'Neill's designer), once said that General St. Pe (Joshua Bryant) each play is a vision, a dream, has never given his all in life or which belongs to everyone, and to love, and longs to. He can't bear which the actor must remain to make people suffer, but doesn't t r a n s p a r e n t. He must move realize that by not doing so, he through it gracefully and silently will make them suffer a great deal, so as not to upse its rhythm, not and will suffer a great deal him- to break its spell. For the proper self. He lives in the past and is job of the actor is not to describe, unable to see the present for what present together? An amused ex- pression, a slow, measured step backwards, and we begin to real- ize that he is cleverly passing the romantic buck by playing the daughters against one another. They square off"and slowly build to a cat and dog fight. With the audience knowing what to expect, one awkward move would ruin everything. The fight was danced as cleanly as it had been choreo- graphed. As so often happens in real life, we do get one glimpse of the man himself, as the General and his wife (Angela Wood) trade des- tructions. In this one scene Ano- uilh manages to do what took Albee a whole play in "Virginia Woolf." The General has stayed with his wife, not out of a sense of honor, but because of his own fear of life. She is in her sickbed; he sits in her wheelchair. Two In- valid souls. It is a pathetic and terrifying glimpse. Just like Aris- totle said it ought to be. The lie has been given to the General's aphorisms. Life is not one long family lunch, to be per- formed according to a long-estab- lished ritual. What Anouilh, Robin Ray, and all the Meadowbrook ac- tors are saying to us is that you must not play the little games if they aren't worth it. You must have the courage to hurt and be hurt, to love and to give your all. Life goes too quickly for anything else. The crusty and wise Dr. Bon- fant (Booker T. Bradshaw, Jr.) has the last word and the only stated moral in the play: that one must never try to uhderstand life, or it will be the death of him. One must lead life like a cavalry charge. What a gift, to be given, instead of a performance, a vision and a lesson. This is what theatre is all about. "Waltz of the Toreadors" will run through April 30. For the theatre box office, phone 338-6239 in Rochester. but to reveal, bit by bit. Rare Occasions it really is.' Isn't this the lesson of tragedy: On the rare occasions when a that the terms of life are ruth- theatrical company is able to do lessly simple and the terms of our this, as the Fernald company haf, imaginations ruthlessly complicat- what is the audience left with? ed; that life is never exactly the They age left face to face with the way we think it is? Yet the piece playwright's vision and with the is hilariously funny and is played reality beyond, which the vision as broad farce. What makes this reflects and refracts. And when broad farce work is careful plan- such a vision touches you some- I ning and bold execution. Let's take where deep inside and moves you, one small example of how actors, as does Anouilh's at the Meadow- and director can conspire together brook Theatre, you can feel it, but sorcleverly as to become trans-r you cannot always understand. parent. We might say the play "works." Two Daughters that semi-literate and wholly The General has two unattrac- mystical comment that theatr e tive daughters (Jill Tanner, Pau- buffs enploy whentthey can't an- lene Reynolds) who are both in swver.the q u e s t i d n "How?" love with his handsome secretary Well, it does work. But it is diffi- (Curt Dawson). How, asks the cult to talk about the production! young man, can he give attentions and the play separately, or to to either when they are always Wiseonsin Students Protest CIA Interviews on Campus r .7 NEW YORK R)-Even a settle- ment in Vietnam will not banish the problems of Southeast Asia, Harrison E. Salisbury says in a new book critical of Washington's viewpoint toward that area. "Establishment of neutralized regimes in Saigon and Hanoi would only be the start," the New York Times correspondent writes in reviewing his travels to North Vietnam and nearby areas. "It seemed to me that Laos rep- resented an equally dangerous problem. Laos had become a mere fiction, a land which was in the hands of an uncertain number of guerrilla operations, some spon- sored by the United States, some by the Communists, some of! purely Laotian origin. "Unless Laos could be quieted and sanitized, the whole theater of struggle might simply shift westward from Vietnam, with the warriors of the CIA and the Chi- nese International going at it hammer and tongs. "This would undermine thearea dangerously. Cambodia had man- aged to stay out of the war, but it needed economic and probably political support as well. Thailand would be in trouble if it lost its burgeoning war boom prosperity. "Many considerations dictated the creation of a strengthened in- ternational control commission with a broader mandate and gen- uine powers not merely to police these countries but to aid and guide development. What political DIAL 5-6290 form this might take I did not know, but it should not lie beyond the competence of American di- plomacy to establish a structure in Southeast Asia which would make the region a going concern. "This was the chance which had been created by the unex- pected developments in Peking and their repercussions in Hanoi. It might well be the chance of a century. "But I was not certain that Washington could grasp the op- portunity. Washington was tired and Washington was stale. Wash- ington, I feared, was filled with too many men who had committed themselves to so many past mis- takes that they lived only for some . crowning disaster which would bury all the smaller errors of the past. "Perhaps those generals were right who believed that the only way to deal with China was to atomize it. Bu I hought that there must be another way." Salisbury, one of the few.Amer- icans admitted to North Vietnam in recent years, pegs his book "Be- hind the Lines-Hanoi" to his visit there Dec. 23-Jan. 7. It is published by Harper & Row. He says he believes he got a visa because Hanoi authorities "had decided that the time had come for active exploration of the possibility of peace by negotiations in Southeast Asia." He adds: "I departed from Hanoi with that TATE Dial ,NO 2-6264 suspicion transformed into posi- tive conviction." His findings on the effects of American bombing and his inter- view with Premier Pham Van Dong were previously reported.! Dong asked Salisbury if he agreed! with Charles de Gaulle's view of the war and the French president's! call for American withdrawal. Salisbury says he replied that he agreed in general.' He speaks of "perhaps the fatal fallacy of our whole bombing pol- icy" against the North. "When you totaled all the 'military ob- jectives' in North Vietnam, they didn't amount to much," he con- cludes. "The best of them from the military standpoint were the roads and railroads. We were hitting these with a tremendous amount of muscle. But the supplies for the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese forces in South Vietnam still went through. "North Vietnam was paying a tragic price in order that the architects of our bombing policy might prove its validity. But I wondered whether, in the end, the heaviest price might not be that paid by us Americans for our stubborn pursuit of a military theory which seemed to have little connection with reality." He expresses belief the war can be ended immediately by secret negotiations if the United States takes the initiative. 4, SW 4 W V V . V VY T Y iTWV y yV t y w w yw wy 14 s s pS , 1 1 1 1 ! 1 S i The Pit' Portrays Man's Neglect of Fellow Men THURSDAY, APRIL 13 2:10 p.m.-The Center for Rus- sian and East European Studies will present a seminar led by Leonard Schapiro, professor of political science at the London School of Economics and Political Science on "Changes in Soviet Party and Government Since the Fall of Khrushchev" at the East Conference Room of the Rackham Bldg. 7:00 and 9:05 p.m.-The Cinema Guild will present Herbert Biber- man's "Salt of the Earth" at the Architecture Aud. (Continued from Page 1) The CIA had originally been scheduled to conduct its interviews at a motel in downtown Madison but was given space in the moot court room of -the law building upon its request to hold the in- terviews on campus, according to the-Daily Cardinal representative. Later the place of the interviews was switched to law building classroom 231. Interviews Rescheduled Haslach indicated that the CIA's interviews had been rescheduled from the downtown motel whenE officials learned of,. a full-scale student march to the hotel that had been planned. Robben W. Fleming, recently named to succeed retiring Uni-. versity President Harlan Hatcher, was not available for comment. He had told student teach-ins in the wake of the Do. sit-1n crisis ear- lier this year that he defended the right of students to be interviewed by any prospective employer. Dow Sit-in During the Dowsit-in, several students were arrested for dis- orderly conduct when they block- ed the door of the room in which Dow Chemical Co. representatives were interviewing prospective em- ployes. Students 'were not able to enter the office as a result of that sit-in. Fleming put up bond personally for the arrested students. They are presently challenging the con- stitutiality of Wisconsin's disor- derly conduct laws in federal court. - After last night's rally, a meet- ing of the demonstration's ad-hoc steering committee met to decide what the protestors would do to- day. The CIA will continue its in- terviews in the law building. According to one source close. to the demonstration, the steering committee is expected to recom- mend that demonstrations be re- peated today. 'Tremendously Successful' The three learn-ins conducted so far have been termed "tre- mendously successful" by their sponsors. Over 400 students at- tended the learn-in held yesterday afternoon after the rally. The sub- jects of the learn-in were the "actual and ideal role of the CIA" and how the CIA ties-in to United States foreign policy. CIA recruit- ers were invited to address the rallies but did not accept the offer. Paul Sogrin, a member of the National Student Association stu- denticommittee read the protestors a telegram from NSA National Ar- f airs Vice President Ed Schwartz in which Schwartz "regretted" that he "couldn't be with you to question CIA recruiters.' Schwartz said he thought the university was "an open forum" and that stu- dents should have a chance to ask questions of the CIA recruiters. Ann Arbor playwright Norman1 Hartweg's bizarre one-act playt "The Pit" will take the stage in Trueblood Auditorium at 4:10 p.m. Thursday, April 13. From it will1 erise a commentary on man's at- titude toward his fellows in thes world today. The admission is free.' Playwright Hartweg received his BA from the University of Tulsa after spending three undergradu- ate years at the University in the- atre. He returned to the Univer- sity speech department for his graduate work and received his MA in 1959. Hartweg worked as the artistic director 4or the The- atre Event in Los Angeles until 1966. He has also produced several films. "The Pit," under the direction of University student Fritz Lyon, '68, will be presented by the Stu- dent Laboratory Theatre. "The message," says Lyon, "concerns man's unwillingness to take re- sponsibility for his fellows. We follow the hero through his trials of trying to find someone to help a little girl out of a deep pit into which she has fallen; and after successive appeals to a passerby, the police, the newspapers and a congressional investigating com- mittee, he is arrested as a crimi- nal, having threatened society's conscience and disturbed the! policy of non-involvement." "The Pit" was published in the Tulane Drama Review, from which it received the John Golden Award for Drama in 1965. It hasrbeen done "all over," in Hartweg's words, including radio dramatiza- tion and an educational television production in Boston.' Hartweg views his work as a! statement on the attitudes of peo- Cinema II presents RITA TUSHINGHAM in Richard Lester's "THE KNACK ... & How to Get It" FRIDAY and SATURDAY- 7 9 & 10:30 P.M. Angell Hall, Aud. A 50c FLINT STRIKES AGAIN! : In the Virgin Islands where the bad guys ,:. are girls! l 2MCENTURYFO X PRESENTS The new... Flint adventure... A SAUL DAYID PRODUCTION JAM COBURN Cinemascope Color by DeLuxe Sat. Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9:05 P.M. May 12: SOUND OF MUSIC ple today, "on their fear of be- coming entangled with others." It is a statement on the attitudes of authorities and citizenry alike, in that it becomes an illustration of what happens when people won't accept a moral responsibility for others. READ AND USE DAILY (LASSIFIED ADS WINNER OF 4 ACADEMY. AAWARDS. INCLUDING BEST ACT RESS AND BEST SUPPOR TING ACTRESS I U I J IN ERNEST LEHMAN S. PRODUCTION OFEDWARD ALBEE'S IMPORTANT EXCEPTION: NO ONE UNDER 18 WILL BE ADMITTED UNLESS CCOMPANIED BYIHIS PARENT. Also Starring Screenplay by Directed by GEORGE SEGAL- SANDY DENNIS " ERNEST LEHMAN MIKE NICHOLS Produced on the Stage by Richard Barr and Clinton Wilder." Music Alex North r Presented byWARNER BROS. .- - - - - - - - - - a a PRESENTS I THE T H E REPERTORY COMPANY ... ...:. .... . r.... . . . . . . . . ... ,: .. ..... .:.. .: o ".v ::"y.. .ao... .a ..... . S .n$...S.n...... UNION-LEAGUE ART. PRINT \\N .ww~y t ^ #9'J p I... WINNER OF S ACADEMY AWARDSI "Nations's Finest Company!" *th FALL FESTIVAL or 3 NEW PRODUCTIONS BEST PICTURE OF including BEST DIRECTOR FRED ZINNEMAN BEST ACTOR PAUL. SCOFIELD BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR ROBERT SHAW and others .5 LOAN PICTURES DUE! SEPT. 19-24, Sit. 26-OCT. 1 Te bnUant BWgion dramatist Michel de Ghelderode's Mrce to make you sad," OCT. 10-15, 17-22 The AMERICAN PREMIERE of Eugene Ionesco's"A~ One of the classic American comedies of the Twenties. by Pulitzer Prize-Playwright George Kelly OCT. 24-29, OCT 31-NOV. 5 COLUMBIA PICTURES senis FRED ZINNEMANN'S iqtr A MAN FOR ALL SEASONS Pm n fi., aPORIWRT ROT T' G' I II I UI Translatedhby Donald Watsom I 1 I