Magazines Seek Prestige Status Laboratory Playbil ARev A Strange and Wonderful Selection of Plays Provides an Ex By MICHAEL OLINICK UNTIL a few years ago, the Sat- urday Evening Post's main contribution to American culture was a series of virginal short stories intermingled with uninti- mate glimpses of such notable personages as Peggy Lee and Hugh O'Brian. Today's Post still contains the asexual stories and vapid profiles,' but a new and laudable element also makes its presence felt. In a recent issue, for example, one found sandwiched between "Girl in the M\ddle" (What does a girl do when her father and the man she loves hate each other?) and "The Boy and the Bear" (The story of a young Alaskan's violent ascent to manhood) an article by theologian Rheinhold Niebuhr on "The Religious Tradition of Amer- ica." Niebuhr's serious and challeng- ing prose is part of a series, "Ad-v ventures of the Mind," which be- gan in the Post a little over three years ago on April 28, 1958. "ADVENTURES of the Mind" is an intellectual offering to low- brow Americans and is a clear example of the "intellectualiza- tion" of popular magazines that has so quickly transpired in these last 40 or so months. Magazines like the Post, Red- book and McCall's, which are slick and colorful guides for the Amer- ican woman and her status seek- ing husband, are seeking "easy to understand" and quasi-psycho- logical articles that can be ad- vertised as serious thoughtful es- says within the ken of the aver- age reader. The goal is an image of a magazine that is "education- al" to read and "smart" to have displayed on your coffee table. The Post's rationalization for "Adventures of the Mind" is per- haps the clearest and most can- did statement of this purposeful try. AS IT DESCRIBES the new proj- ect, Post editors are very care- ful to identify themselves with the common people and attempt to prove that the "intellectual" lives in a different universe, di- vorced from reality, but ultimate- ly having some effect on it and unable to do anything concrete without help from the mundane world. The intellectual may form de- cisions about what is to be done in areas of vital national concern because he is master of more knowledge or has studied the prob- lem more. The time, however, which he requires for this contemplation and fact gathering has been pro- vided by the common people's drudgeries. And the intellectual can do little without help from the layman. "WE HAVE BEEN deeply dis- turbed," quoth the editors, "at the obvious-and obviously dan- gerous-chasm that separates the intellectuals of our nation from the millions of citizens whose at- titudes and opinions determine national policy and set standards of national behavior." The editors see a need to bridge the worlds, and a series of schol- arly articles is their answer. The intellectual, however, is still re- garded to be the man apart. It is nice, and perhaps vital to the nation, that he discusses fun- damental problems, but he can never really do anything about them. It is, they glorify, the Con- mon Man who holds all ultimate governmental power, THE APPROACH in presenting the series is more an apology for the intellectual's inbreeding and a plea to do him a favor by reading his works than an ad- MICHAEL OLINICK, a math-philosophy major, is a night editor on The Daily. He reads Dissent exclusively. Page Fourteen Periodicals Initiate 'Intellectual Look' For Post-Sputnik Mass Audiences of so called "learned men' their pages. on Journals Attempt "Intellectual Appeal." monition that we must understand what these men have written if' we are to help correct the chaotic situation in the world. "Yet the fact is that what the scholar thinks, the artist creates, the scientist discovers, cannot achieve full reality without the rest of us. Without us no ideas or institutions can flourish. Without us there would have been no Salk vaccine, no practical application of atomic energy, no public educa- tion, no research to find a cure for cancer." Quite a list of accomplishments for the "ordinary layman" and one that underrates the impor- tance of the "egghead" who has "never met a payroll or a sales quota" and who goes "his cloister- ed way-toiling quietly in his laboratory, at his easel, type- writer or his blackboard, com- municating chiefly. with his col- leagues through lectures and scholarly journals." THE POST does not plead that its readers might consider the intellectual's life as a full time occupation for themselves but only that they have a little familiarity with "a kind of information not now available in popular journal- ism; pure knowledge which, while perhaps of no immediate practical use, is the stuff of which sound decisions are made." The Post series-which has fea- tured Oppenheimer, Barzun, Tay- lor, and Gropius-has been match- ed in other magazines by both authentic and pseudo-scholarly work in a host of other maga- zines. MADEMOISELLE, the magazine "for the smart young wom- an," still keeps its accent on fash- ion and beauty, but brings to its pages Ionesco, Mailer and Engel. In addition, editor Betsy Talbot Blackwell enlivens her pages by aidvancing the avant - garde, through art and fiction contests, and presenting the outstanding work of young college poets. The Ionesco interview is also part of a new Mademoiselle se- ries. This one is called "Disturbers of the Peace" and will include a lengthy talk with active and vi- triolic William F. Buckley, the young editor of the conservative National Review. The "first magazine for wom- en," McCall's, this month began to run John Steinbeck's new nov- el "The Winter of Our Discon- tent." The same issue contains a biography of Mrs. Rose Kennedy, a portfolio of paintings of Ameri- can roses and "Merry Play Clothes in Gingham and Stretch Terry." THE ONCE ROUGH and rugged National Police Gazette nas toned down considerably in its 116-year history of presenting "Sports, People and True Adven- ture in America's First Pictorial" but still deals primarily with the lurid and sensational. The gazette, however, has taken cognizance of the intellectual, if only in derogratory terms. The May, 1961 issue "exposes George Lincoln Rockwell and Marilyn Monroe's marriage problems while it reveals "How Eggheads Gave Cuba to Castro." The Gazette's reputation for he- man stories was once matched only by Esquire magazine. Esquire, however, always managed to in- clude some fine short stories (not- ably by Hemingway) between its semi-pornographic cartoons. While line drawings of nudes have died out from its pages, the "Magazine for Men" has increased the seri- ousness of its fiction and essay contents. IN RECENT MONTHS, Esquire has featured Buckley, Alberto Moravia, full length works by Tennessee Williams and Friedrich Durrenmatt and the continuing literary criticisms by Dorothy Parker. Even Playboy, which once sought to revive the materials Esquire has matured too much to publish,' has begun to de-emphasize sex and gambling and beckon out-+ standing male writers to fill a page or two with appealing fiction. . Concern with important politi- cal problems and a desire to ele- vate the "seriousness" of the mag- azine's image has led editors of previously light and breezy per-+ iodicals to leave the world of the optimum interior decoration or most uniquely saccarine shower gift for a few moments at least. This change in content has been one that was forced on the reader by editorial boards deciding what people ought to read. There were no strong demands on the maga- zines to alter their structures; at least, there were no strong direct1 ones in the form of letters to the editors or petitions threatening to boycott if changes were not made. But those at the top of the magazine hierarchy were not wag- ing their professional necks on a perilous gamble when they decid- ed to put the unillustrated prose THE "magazine revolution" be- gan long after Sputnik. It was born in an atmopshere generated by the Russian spacecraft, an at- mosphere of self-criticism, of new respect for education, of ques- tions about ultimate issues we need to resolve. By this time the American adult population had already become conditioned to this atmosphere and swallowed the propaganda of Rickover and Conant, or they real- ly felt an honest desire to explore these issues in their new found leisure time. The magazines which were re- lied upon in the past still were de- pendable in the new age of anxie- ty. As the editors added educated sophistication, the popularity of their publications remained high. IT SHOULD BE noted here, how- ever, that the number of new magazines which have arisen in the fields of male adventure, teen activities, or womanly charms is very high and many of them have survived. This indicates that a large proportion of the popula- tion has undergone very little change in critical taste, only in numbers of hours off the job. The popular magazines which have added serious articles to their contents have been hesitant about really presenting a dry, but im- portant piece of writing. The distinguished scholars they have asked to write have felt re- stricted to discussions of their field in general, and not to the new or most exciting area of his work which would presuppose too much information on the part of the reader, THE NUMBER of articles which have appeared in these maga- zines which have had any signifi- cant degree of scholarly validity have been eclipsed by the quasi- educational article, the essay which purports to leave you with a thorough knowledge of a recon- dite field. These unfortunate enterprises build up a false notion of wisdom among the reading public. A man thinks he knows all about atomic physics after reading a single ar- ticle, when he is probably cog- nizant of a thin and untrue sur- face region. As Pope warned, this smattering of intelligence may be worse than none at all, especially if sound political decisions are expected to rise out of it. FORTUNATELY, there is anoth- er side of the "magazine revo- lution" which may alleviate this situation in some degree. Portions of the mass audience of the popular magazines, driven by an increasing desire to know more and by dissatisfaction with the lack of substance in their tra- ditional journal readings, have turned to more serious periodicals. This second trend is clearly evi- dent in a visit to your local well- stocked magazine stand which now carries the journals of lit- erary analysis and radical poli- tical thought (The Arts, American Scholar, Dissent, Audience, World Opinion) alongside the Readers' Digest, ONE SUCH "newsstand" is in a large shopping center just out- side Detroit which caters to the buying whims of a middle class which has all the typical bour- geoise traits Marx and friends have pictured. The magazine counter at the shopping center handles several hundred magazine titles and their range of coverage squelches the most insatiable Id. - There he-man physique Jour; nals, political tracts, teen-age abominations and movie mags rub printed spines with philological works and Sewanee reviews. And all the magazines sell well. THE CLERK at the counter ex- plains the stocking of the more esoteric magazines. "We tried it as an experiment and discovered that people really want to read this sort of literature. "They pay a little more money for it in most cases, but they ap- pear very satisfied. I think it's because people now feel guilty about squandering time to be en- tertained; they want to be edu- cated at the same time." The question of guilt is an in- teresting one. Guilt and the de- sire for status are probably the chief contributing factors in this renaissance of the periodicals. After Sputnik, a man is not sup- posed to feel complacent; he's sup- posed to realize the importance of education. This education, however, is not synonymous with general enlight- enment; it signifies for the dec- ade of the sixties the power to strengthen defenses and secure our present forms of hollowly un- derstood freedom from an evil menace lurking abroad. THE IMPROVEMENT in con- tent and new popularity of the more serious journals reflect a trend of growing intellectualism and desire for understanding. The ultimatebreasons for it, however cannot be readily found in an examination of the magazines alone, Let is suffice to say that, since Sputnik, Americans want to know what our scientists and research men are doing to protect our lives from the Slavic hordes. This interest in one branch of intellectual inquiry has naturally extended into the humanities and social sciences, but only in so far as these influence the environ- ment. An appreciation of "knowledge for its own sake" and encourage- ment to satisfy curiosity is still not widespread, and perhaps will never be in political and social systems rooted to a materialistic or capitalistic foundation. THEATRE - GOERS who pay good money to see the Uni- Versity Players and never come to the Laboratory Playbills, which are free, miss more than a bar- gain. For mere competence and even for first rate performances, the student directed series has the better average. If none of the productions this year quite came up to "The Vis- it" (a powerful play even in Mau- rice Valency's wretched transla- tion), neither did any flop as spectacularly as "The Frogs." Such failure takes lavish use of time, space and equipment. Lab bills are necessarily somewhat more austere and they are short. COUNTING the double-bill May eighteenth, too late to be in- cluded in this review, the season was seventeen plays long and re- markably varied: a Roman com- edy ,a medieval morality, an early Tudor play, one from eighteenth century England, two from Ger- many, one from Russia, four French, two American, two by Irishmen, and two originals. Since most of the one-acters readily available are contempor- ary American, it is surprising- pleasantly-to find a group of di- rectors who are, at least collec- tively, so widely read. THE PLAYS given in the round were usually more successful than those staged in Trueblood. Very probably the necessity of shaping to a new space plays" written, for the most part, with another kind of stage in mind, stimulates the imagination. Bruno Koch's production of two scenes from Brecht's "Private Life of the Master Race," one of the few interesting things performed upstairs, lost a great deal by be- ing played out of context. The real force of the disconnected realistic scenes of that play is in their contrast with the song blar- ing from a Panzer truck filled with soldiers, that frames the scenes and holds them together. Given separately the scenes have some force, but of a differ- ent kind, a force that would prob- ably have been emphasized by the intimacy of arena staging. WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS' "Purgatory" (also given in Trueblood) is barely successful drama, but it contains some ex- quisite verse. Unfortunately, the actors not only made the plot+ By BERNARD WALDROP 'The Tragedy of Tragedies or the Life and Death of Tom Thumb seem more stupid than it is by overacting; they failed to make any rhythmic sense of the verse. John Smead directed one play each semester. His production of Yevreinov's "Theatre of the Soul" was an entertaining quarter-hour. The play is set in a human heart, well represented by a dirty, ill- lighted place. MORE RECENTLY he gave "The Tragedy of Tragedies or the Life and Death of Tom Thumb the Great" by Henry Fielding. "Tom Thumb" is a tremendously funny, somewhat obscene, play and nost of the production was adequate in both respects. The opening was a bit slow and the scenery, though good enough in itself, was not used very well. Two high stools, for instance, made a potentially funny throne --but neither the king and queen nor anyone else ever sat on them. After a few minutes the comedy gained momentum and the last half was all one could hope for. Barbara Sittig was excellent as Queen Dollalolla; Judith Price made a fine Huncamunca; James Harris, as Noodle, was uneven but occasionally inspired; Richarc Kretchmar held an expression of idiocy with remarkable consisten- cy. Carl Shurr, familiar from the last two Gilbert and Sullivan pro- ductions, was a fabulously good Lord Grizzle. Casting a girl in the title role was a mistake, but one can forgive mistakes when the to- tal effect is as satisfying as this production, T HE LOW POINT of the season was hit when one director at- tempted "The Maids" by Jean Genet. Genet is quite possibly the best playwright of this century; "The Maids" is, at any rate, a great play. The production was spoiled by lack of restraint, tech- nical ineptitude, bad taste, bad acting, and-apparently-prudish- ness. The play is supposed to open with an illusion: we are supposed to think we see a lady (in her slip) slanging her maid, and only later discover this is a game be- tween the two maids. When the curtain was drawn in Trueblood, s t f 0 i 5 i 1 a 4 3 t there were two girls on stage, both dressed as maids. A great difference in tone is necessary to separate the game- scenes from the rest; neither maid managed. One of the maids is sup- posed to deliver a monologue to three imagined characters. As if fearing the actress would not be able to carry the scene alone (he could have cut the scene, have gotten another actress, have given some other play), the director made all the lights so weird, brought the three imagined char- acters on stage, and put them through silly motions till they end- ed up with foreheads to the floor, butts pointing audienceward. The play is supposed to end with a triumphant speech by So- lange-Solange (the best, inci- dentally, of the three actresses) was made to sob out this speech from behind the bed; it was al- most unintelligible. DAVID BURR directed a some- what shortened version of the least known of Buchner's three plays, "Leonce and Lena." The cuts were well chosen, whether by Mr. Burr or the translator. An attendant or t w o sometimes blocked the view of parts of the Arena audience, but the staging was generally skillful. Richard Burke, as the philosophic King, was outstanding even in a well- picked cast., The best plays of Maeterlinck are not too good and "The Death of Tintagiles" is one of his worst. Like the rest it tries to generate feeling by 1 o n g impassioned speeches of characters who do nothing but speak. The symbolism is crude and the plot uninterest- ing. In the last scene mother and dying son kiss through a chink, for all the world like Pyramus and Thisbe. Carol Langlois directed "Every- man" with an ingenuity and sense of timing uncommon in local thea- tre. A morality play is hard to give before audiences suspicious of plays with a moral. Miss Lang- lois did well to hold the archaic flavor of the play, even with a (necessarily) modernized text. Her "Everyman" was spatially beautiful and moved with appro- priate solemnity. Of all the roles in "Everyman," one would suppose that of the messenger who announces the play the hardest to make noticeably good or bad. It was, however, no- ticeably bad. The rest of the cast was quite good, especially Herbert 1 i 1 r c 1 Prc M, W Co( pla sar vie mo" is C ter fern gen amn shc ber feet to t He mis onl I] scez phe Coe is jusi con a r lusil the flig she( Buis rect that see if a pres une that and T play tion littl inal: gore emb the gore was acto "A Sea' pete Sarc Ame neve IV En PTr ton kin Lai Critical Perusal Lab Playbill--highstandards of production at low cost THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE SUNDAY, MAY 21, 1961