THE MICHIGAN DAILY RTTVnAV- VTrRR.TTA'P.V-1 ft Iftill THE _._ICI__ A_ _AILYxgaiaiujia~PIK'~YA'7 AIfr£L.LLJ~,LJV D. v ,JDMUAnx lu, lyti3 3 Poetry To Enhance APA Show Violinist Describes Toscanini 2-6264 ' Now Shows at 7-2:50 4:50-6:50 & 8:55 Feature 30 Minutes Later 4 I Fi - really dangerous. After that it was a joy to rehearse with him be- cause we never knew what to ex- pect." If a musician made a mistake Maestro would pretend to ignore it but would get his "burning eyes" which meant that he was angry. "And when he was angry each player thought he was looking di- rectly at him!" Mischakoff chuckl- ed. Exclusive Rehearsals It was not Toscanini but the orchestra officials who would ad- mit no one into the rehearsals to watch and listen. "They were afraid that Maestro's 'semi-viol- ence' might cause a scandal. This is unfortunate because his best performances were his dress re- hearsals. Maestro, who had a great sense of stage presence, was always a little inhibited in front of an audience, curtailing his facial ex- pressions and gestures to a mini- mum. But in the final rehearsals he was at his best," Mischakoff noted. "Unlike other conductors, the audience never could tell when Maestro' was nervous or angry. Only his eyes told, and only the musicians could see his eyes." Mischakoff explained that Tos- canini only rehearsed when it was necessary. He did not consider himself a school teacher, but a conductor. His main concern was in "the line of the piece"-the whole effect, rather than in small details. Proud of Strings "Maestro rarely changed my bowings. He had great.respect for me and my knowledge of the string orchestra and always let me make suggestions during rehearsal. He was especially proud of the string section of the NBC Orchestra and tried to assist the string players as much asshecould. (Toscanini played the 'cello.) He had the unique quality of being able to unnoticeably hold back the tempo in difficult string .-ges so that every note could be heard. "I remember how Maestro tried to understand modern music. His apprentice Canteli would often conduct Bartok or Hindemith and Maestro would listen attentively during the rehearsals but just couldn't find any meaning in the music. Yet, he sincerely wanted to learn to appreciate the moderns!" Memorization Easy "Maestro always conducted from memory, even in rehearsal. He was very near-sighted and whenever he had to check something in the score he had to put the manu- script right up to his eyes. Mischakoff explained that, al- though Toscanini was a fine musi- cian, he was avery bad adminis- trator. He didn't have the heart to fire a musician, no matter how poorly he thought his tone sound- ed, because the player's wife and children would lose their income. His first chair men usually chose the musicians who were added to the orchestra; other people had to handle the union dealings. Concertmaster Mischakoff, now concertmaster of the Detroit Symphony Orches- tra, listed the duties of a concert- master. Before rehearsal he pre- pares the bowings, notes danger spots and checks dynamics for the violin section and learns any violin solos which might occur in the piece. During rehearsal ie is always alert to make sure that the bow- ings and dynamics are appropri- ate, making corrections where needed. In addition Mischakoff performs oneconcerto each sea- son with the Orchestra. Mischakoff entered the St. Pe- tersburg Conservatory in Russia on a full scholarship at the age of 10 and graduated six years later with highest honors: a .gold medal, and the Anton Rubinstein prize. He is the youngest person to grad- uate from that institution with such distinction. Lovers, lunatics and poetry will enhance Trueblood Theatre this week, when the Association of Producing Artists presents Shake- speare's imaginative romantic comedy "A Midsummer Night's Dream," Wednesday evening through Sunday afternoon. A play of exquisite fun and fool- ery, "Dream" weaves three de- lightfully distinct stories, trans- cending the world of reality into the realm of fancy. The supernatural world is rep- resented by Oberon and Titania, to be played respectively by Ellis Rabb and Rosemary Harris. Ellen Geer will portray Peaseblossom, the first fairy, and Clayton Cor- zatte will be seen as Puck. In the real world, the story of the group of young lovers, De- metrius (Jonathan Farwell) and Hermia (Kate Geer), Lysander (Edward Cambria) and Helena (Laurinda Barrett), is played against the royal court of Athens. Theseus, Duke of Athens, will be portrayed by Sydney Walker and Egeus, father of Hermia, will be played by Gordon Gould. Nancy Heusel, a resident Ann Arbor ac- tress, will appear as Hippolyta, Queen of the Amazons, who is bethrothed -to Theseus. Will Geer, Keene Curtis, Ed Flanders, Richard Woods, Larry Linville and Rod Blandel will be seen as the clown-actors who furnish amusement with their ad- ventures in the woods near Athens and their presentation of the play Pyramus and Thisbe. Written by Shakespeare for a court entertainment, the play, as produced by the APA, has many masque-like qualities, including an abundance of music and dancing and occasion for elaborate cos- tuming. Shakespeare Festival "Dream" is the first presenta- tion in the forthcoming Shake- speare festival, sponsored by the Professional Theatre Program. "The Merchant of Venice" and "The Tragical History of King Richard the Second" will follow. A single unit setting has been erected on top of the open stage of Trueblood Theatre for the APA festival. Simple, but effective, the set consists of a contemporary adaptation of Elizabethan ele- ments which can flexibly be em- ployed as playing areas for all three productions. A curving stairway, a balcony and varied platform levels upon a raked floor will be used imagin- atively to suggest many different locales and backgrounds. The set was executed by APA's design technician Geoffry Brown, who was production stage manager during last fall's APA drama fes- tival Constructed in Ann Arbor under Brown's supervision, the set will change visually with the use of colorful banners, tapestries and decorative props, assembled by Ag- nes A. Gordon, a PTP fellowship student. PIZZA KING -1308 S. University- NO 5-9655 NO 5-3800 Free Delivery from 12 Noon, Daily PIZZA, CHICKEN and SANDWICHES With Guests From The "Other World" THIS When You Ring KEY WILL ANSWER YOUR a QUESTION TO SCREAMING MYSTERIES... Secrets Of The "BLACK MASS" Revealedl .:"- 1963'S FIRS - & NEW HILARIOU Toysg- Wove 5 4 Tru $e 36-4-3 FAIRIES AND LUNATICS-Titania and Peaseblossom console Bottom in the APA's production of Shakespeare's romantic comedy, "A Midsummer Night's Dream." Titania is played by Rosemary Harris, Peaseblossom by Ellen Geer and Bottom by Keene Curtis. OBSERVATORY: Astronomers Take Picture Of New Nova Three University astronomers are believed to have taken the first spectrographic pictures of a nova, an exploding star, found earlier this week. Prof. Dean B. McLaughlin of the astronomy department and two of his students, Charles and Ann Cowley, recorded the nova at 5 a.m. yesterday morning using a 37-inch reflecting telescope at. the Observatory. The nova lies on boindries of the Lyra and Hercules consella- tions near the star Vega, several hundredf to 2000 light-years from the earth. It had been discovered independently by an observatory in Sweden and by Leslie Peltier, an amateur astronomer in Ohio. The University received notifi- cation from the Harvard Obser- vatory, the regular clearinghouse for such information. The nova, barely visible in the, morning sky, has freed two clouds of. gas traveling through space at approximately 500 to 1000 miles per second, he added. s yc. CINEMA GUILD pejen4u TONIGHT at 7 and 9 RENE CLAIR'S THE ITALIAN STRAW HAT From the Farce by Eugene Labiche Starring A ALICE TISSOT --ALBERT PREJEAN "The Funniest Film of All Time" Plus SHORT: SUNDAY Coming Next Week: THE CAINE MUTINY Luis Bunuel's VIRIDIANA ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM 50 cents LARRY STM MARY MURPHY ED WARD ANDREWS-KAREN SlEEILE"KEVIN MCARTHY HODWARD MORI WARREN SIU8Y AYE-WrittenbyMARION HARGROVE.'Directed by NORMAN .EWISON in EASrMANCOLOR.-PANAV/siONO Shows ..----------------------- at I AS 1, 3, 5, 1 STARRING 7 9L------------ L--.. E U T E" U Coming Starts UESDAY TUESDA MICHIGAN PREMIEiE A Gold Seal Classic!* To thos people who take uncommon pleasure in good books, music and other works of art, we offer Sophocles' I Y ---- BA TIHE GOTHIC FILM SOCIETY ANNOUNCES 200 SUBSCRIPTIONS AVAILABLE immortal masterpiece ! :1 e 91 FOR ITS SPRING 1963 SERIES REALITY and CINEMA A series of films illustrating five cinematic approaches to reaulity February 11 Expressionism DESTINY by Fritz Lang March 4 Realism THE CRIME OF M. LANGE by Jean Renoir March 25 Documentary THE SILENT WORLD by J. Y. Cousteau and Louis Malle "A MEMORABLE AND REWARDING EXPERIENCE." -Cook,. World reI~gf "LIFTS ITSELF ABOVE ANY EXPECTED OR FAMILIAR LEVEL. COMPLETE AUTHEN- TICITY! IRENE PAPAS IS MARVELOUS." --Wimlan, ?od "DIRECTOR TZAVELLAS HAS BROUGHT FORTH THE SURGING EMOTIONS WITH FLUID STAGING AND FINE PHOTOG. RAPHY. HE PROVES THAT ITS POWER AND ANGUISH CAN AFFECT AUDIENCES TODAY. STRIKING AND BEAUTIFUL." -Alper, Scurdory Review "POWERFULLY POETIC PRODUCTION AND PERFORMANCE ... LYRIC BEAUTY!" -Zunser, Cue **** "PLAYED IN A CLASSICAL STYLE THAT SUITS THE ACTION OF THE ANCIENT DRAMA. IRENE PAPAS MAKES THE EVENTS OF THOSE ANCIENT TIMES April 22 Expressionist Realism THE LAST LAUGH by F. W. Murnau May 13 11 Ii liI I i