THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 14.1962 THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRTnAY PTi~MflFfl~ 1&~ 1!~ M&S hJAL1 AAiiTLlllilY 1't, 1.7VCV ro INTERNATIONAL DRAMA: Players Offer Varied Season Musket To Give Musical Based on Johnson Farce TO STAR EVA LE GALLIENNE:. APA Announces Fall Drama Schedule $1 By MARJORIE BRAHMS The University Players' 1962-'63 Playbill will go international with the presentation of an Italian farce and a heavy drama, a Span- ishdrama and a French fantasy. Starting the season, the Players will present Carlo Goldoni's clas- sic farce "The Servant of Two Masters" Oct. 30 and Nov. 1-3. Next on the bill, the opera de- partment of the music school will present a laboratory opera Dec. 6-8 as a bonus production, free to season subscribers. Luigi Pirandello's b r o o d I n g drama "Six Characters in Search of an Author" will be presented Jan. 9-12, to be followed by a full- length opera performed by the opera department March 5-9. For the Spanish touch, the Play- ers will present Federico Garcia Lorca's drama of modern Spain, "The House of Bernarda Alba," March 27-30. "The Madwoman of Chaillot," Jean Giraudoux's whimsical fan- tasy will be presented April 24-27. Completing the season, the Players will premiere "A Matter of Style," by Jack O'Brien, Grad., May 16-18. O'Brien won a Major H o p w o o d (creative writing) Award for this comedy last spring. "The Servant of Two Masters" was written in the mid-eighteenth century by Goldoni as a reaction against the tradition of the Com- edia dell'Arte in which actors im- provised both actions and dialogue for the plays. "Six Characters in Search of an Author" reflects the disillusion- ment and unsureness throughout the world following World War I. The characters are bewildered and searching, unable to find the an- swers they seek. Pirandello dwells on the illusions on which life is built and the philosophy that since truth varies with the individual, there can be no truth and, hence, no communication between people. Lorca, who died in the Spanish Civil War, was one of the first art- ists to strip the Spanish nobility of its facade of dignity. With O'Brien's comedy, the Players return to the lighter side. "A Matter of Style" is a witty comedy about life in the limelight and is O'Brien's third produced play. 'U' PLAYERS OFFERING-Prof. Claribel Baird (left) of the de- partment of speech played the title role in the 1953 production of Jean Giraudoux' "The Madwoman of Chaillot." Prof. Baird will re- create this role this season in the University Players' production of the play April 24-27. The Playbill will open Oct. 30 with Carlo Goldoni's "The Servant of Two Masters" at Trueblood Aud. Other productions include "The House of Bernarda Alba" by Lorca, Pir- andello's "Six Characters in Search of an Author," and "A Matter of Style" by Jack O'Brien. 'WILL RISE AGAIN' : Pollinger Voices Plans For Humor Magazine By MARTHA MAC NEAL "Gargoyle will rise aagin," Richard Pollinger, '65L, insists. In an attempt to breathe life into the momentarily defunct campus humor magazine, Gar- goyle, Pollinger, would-be. editor, Robert Israel, Grad., would-be art editor, and Norma Wicker, Spec., would-be business manager, are searching the campus for talented recruits willing to work regularly. A mass meeting will be held for all interested students sometime next week, Pollinger said. Mean- while, applicants for Gargoyle will be welcomed at the Student Pub- lications Bldg. Pollinger hopes to publish four eight by eleven inch issues this "Bartholomew Fair," a musical fantasy based on Ben Johnson's final comic masterpiece, is in the finishing writing stage for this year's production of Musket. The work, originally written in 1614, has been restructured and adapted for the modern musical stage by Jack O'Brien, Grad., who wrote both book and lyrics, and Robert James, who wrote the mu- sic and orchestrated the score. Use of Johnson's material as modern musical comedy is bound to arouse great interest and spec- ulation among those familiar with Johnson's work since he is the acknowledged master of many ele- ments of the concept of modern American musical comedy, O'Brien explained. Character Sketches Basically, the musical is a series of character sketches, undeniably some of Jonson's best, O'Brien commented. It portrays a group of aristocrats who spend a day at Bartholomew Fair, a rather car- nival-like cloth market outside of London. They are led by Bartholomew Cokes, an impulsive, happily ma- ture person whose fiance has just arrived in town. He is determined to show her the fair because he himself is in love with it. Accom- panying them on their holiday are his fiancee's guardian, Mistress Overdo, Reverend Busy, and Wini- wife and Quarlous, two elegant and wealthy friends. Hypocrite Cleans Morals Present at the Fair are Justice Overdo, a hypocritical judge bent on cleaning up the morals at the Fair, Ursula, female version of Falstaff, seller of roast pig and bottle-ale and various characters of dubious repute. Everyone becomes a target for everyone else in this happy mix-up as the crooks of the Fair prey upon the unsuspecting aristocrats, Bartholomew's friends lure away his fiancee, and Bartholomew car- ries on a love affair with the Fair. "The staging for the new musi- cal is as challenging and exciting as the material itself since James and I have introduced original ele- ments in both stage design and orchestration which we believe will bring about a more itghtly- knit construction of music, move- ment and drama," O'Brien said. The musical will have its pre- miere in Ann Arbor Nov. 28-30 and Dec. 1. NPP Begins Poetry Contest The National Poetry Press of Los Angeles, Calif., has announced its annual competition for stu- dents, teachers and librarians for inclusion in the College Students' Poetry Anthology and the College Teachers' National Poetry An- thology. Closing date for submission of manuscripts by students is Nov. 5 and for teachers and librarians is Jan. 1. Each poem must be typed or printed on a separate sheet of paper and sent to 3210 Selby Ave., Los Angeles, Calif. Pro gram Notes O'Brien will be directing the musical, with James conducting the orchestra. Harry Taxin, '64E, is General Chairman of Musket. Last year, Musket presented an- other play written by O'Brien and James, "Land Ho!". Unlike this year's presentation, the 1961 play was an original mu- sical comedy, which concerned Columbus' voyage to and discovery of America. However, the discov- ery of women, stowed away in the ship, complicated matters. "Land Ho!" met with very good success, and helped to establish O'Brien in the University creative community. DIALFa NOW! DIAL Features at 1:25-3:25- NO 2-6264 5:25-7:25 & 9:30 THE GREATEST THRILL CLASSIC OF ALL TIMEI year, and one issue lampooning a national magazine. Gargoyle will be "funnier, and more sophisticat- ed, with features of both local humor and universal glee," he says. Some satires of University life are being prepared already, and tentative arrangements have been made for enough advertising to finance two issues. A "sizable number" of prospective satirists have expressed interest, according to Pollinger, Juniors are especially needed, to take over senior posi- tions at the end of this year and thus prevent Gargoyle from dying once more. "Faculty members here and at other schools like Harvard and Stanford Universities, have ex- pressed great delight at the pros- pect of a resurrected "Gargoyle," Pollinger says. "Circulation used to -be 5,000 per issue, and we hope to sell a lot more here and at other campuses." The Board in Control must ap- prove a dummy issue of the new "Gargoyle" before the magazine may be published. Two years ago, two separate at- tempts were made by two differ- ent groups to re-establish "Gar- goyle." The Board in Control of Student Pulbications rejected the dummy copies as unsatisfactory. Last spring a second attempt was made by the group, led by Pol- linger, but the board received the petition too late. This current at- tempt may be the last, as humor magazines seem to be dying out at college campuses across the coun- try. More than 300 cars manufac- tured between 1899 and 1925 will be displayed at the Old Car Fes- tival in Greenfield Village tomor- row and Sunday. Among the contests at the fes- tival will be cranking, slow driving and a modern drag race. Flower Drum Song... Rogers and Hammerstein's "The Flower Drum Song" will be the final attraction at the Northland Playhouse. The musical, running through Sunday, stars Ramon Na- varro and Juanita Hall. Money and Banking... Prof. Thomas Gies of the busi- ness administration school will discuss his research findings on "The Role of Money" in a program on station WWJ-TV at 12 p.m. Sunday. Prof. Gies will probe the question of restrictions on American banks and their effect on national growth. Cardiac Cather.. . The Cardiac Catheter, a device that makes it possible to record pressures, oxygen saturations and take blood samples within the hu- man heart, will be explained on the program "The Heart Wand" at 9:00 a.m. Sunday over station WXYZ-TV. The step by step pro- cedure in the catheterization of the heart of an 11-year-old girl to determine the nature of a heart defect will be shown. Loyalty and Freedom.. Faculty members will express their views on problems affecting the rights and liberties of free men in America on a program at 9:30 a.m. Sunday over Station WXYZ-TV, entitled "Freedom, Loyalty and Subversion." Horses to Hardtops... Early motoring days will be de- picted in song, story, film and photographs on "From Horses to Hardtops," a view of the early his- tory of Michigan's automotive in- dustry. The program will be presented at 7:15 a.m. tomorrow on station WJBK-TV. (Continued from Page 1) Shakespeare Festival at Stratford, Conn., will recreate his role of Sir Peter Teazle. "We, Comrades Three," written mostly in verse, is "a re-creation of Whitman's experiences in the Civil War and the moral corrup- tion of the Reconstruction period," according to author Baldridge. Baldridge, who will be in residence on campus to participate in the preparation and rehearsal of the production under a special grant from the University, will co-direct the play with Ellis Rabb, APA's artistic director. "We, Comrades Three" was se- lected from nearly 300 entries in the newly instituted playwright project. Baldridge, a director at the Mc- Carter Theatre at Princeton Uni- versity, recently began to write for the theatre. Graduated from the University of Iowa in fine arts, he had a fellowship in comparative literature at Harvard University and later taught at Bennington College drama department. Shows Versatility' Baldridge was producer-director for the Brattle Theatre Company at Cambridge, Mass., and has also directed operas for the Lyric Op- era of Chicago, La Scala in Italy, Aix-en-provence in France and the Florence May Music Festival. He has contributed poetry and short stories to Harpers and the Kenyon and Hudson Reviews and was editorial assistant for Flair Magazine. In her own adaptation of "Ghosts," Miss Le Gallienne will portray Mrs. Alving and will also direct the production of the Ibsen drama. She was founder of the first successful repertory company in the United States, the Civic Repertory Theatre in New York. "For her to join the APA repre- sents an historic dramatic linking To Consider Deeded Woods Controversy The University Board of Re- gents will discuss the problem of Eberwhite Woods at its meeting next Friday. The woods had been deeded by the University to the Ann Arbor Board of Education. Last August members of the Board agreed to transfer the woods to the city as payment for a $19 thousand sew- er assessment bill. However, Roscoe 0. Bonisteel, Jr., the schools' legal counsel told trustees that the only party they could deed the woods to would be back to the University. It is up to the Board of Regents to decide what to do with the woods, he said. Magazine TIME LIFE NEWSWEEK Sports Illustrated Arch. Forum Fortune Saturday Review Atlantic Monthly New Yorker U S News & , World Report Scientific Amer. New Republic Nation Playboy Reader's Digest 4.00 yr. 7.50 2 yr. 2.98 yr. 5.95 2 yr. 3.50 yr. 7.00 2 yr. 4.00 yr. 7.50 2 yr. 3.50 yr. 7.50 yr. 4.00 yr. 7.50 2 yr. 3.50 8 mos. 3.00 8 mos. 3.67 39 wks. 6.00 yr. 5.00 yr. 6.00 yr. 5.00 yr. 2.97 yr. 6.00 yr. 12.00 3 yr. 2.98 yr. 5.95 2 yr. 3.50 yr. 7.00 2 yr. 4.00 yr. 7.50 2 yr. 3.50 yr. 7.50 yr. 7.00 yr. 12.00 2 yr. 8.50 yr. 7.00 yr. 3.67 39 wks. 6.00 yr. FACULTY STUDENT and CLERGY SPECIAL CAMPUS RATES in the evolution of the American repertory theatre," Prof. Robert C. Schnitzer, executive director of the PTP, pointed out. Three Leading Wothen In addition to Miss Le Gallienne and Miss Harris, the APA com- pany will feature three other dis- tinguished Broadway leading wo- men. Anne Meacham, a star of last season's Broadway production of "A Passage to India," is the re- cipient of critical awards for her portrayal of the title role in David Ross' off-Broadway version of "Hedda Gabler," as well as for her appearance as the original Cathy in Tennessee $Williams' "Suddenly Last Summer." Enid Markey was the original Jane in the first Tarzan film and was also William S. Hart's leading lady. She made her New York stage debut in the classic comedy "Up in Mabel's Room," and appeared on Btoadway in "Mrs. Sycamore," "The Women," "Mrs. Patterson," "Only in America," and with Hel- en Hayes in "Happy Birthday" and "Mrs. McThing." Miss Markey and Miss Le Gallienne appeared together in "Southwest Corner" in the Ann Arbor Drama Season. REGULAR 7.50 yr. 12.00 2 yr. 5.95 yr. 10.95 2 yr. 7.00 yr. 11.00 2 yr. 6.75 yr. 11.00 2 yr. 6.50 yr. 10.00 yr. 7.00 yr. 12.00 2 yr. 8.50 yr. 7.00 yr. 3.67 39 wks. 6.00 yr. 8.00 yr. 8.50 yr. 6.00 yr. 4.00 yr. 5.00 8.00 6.00 2.97 yr. yr. yr. yr. Other special rates available to everyone: Sat. Eve. Post 29 issues 1.99 50 issues 3.49 100 issues 7.00 Holiday 15 issues 3.75 30 issues 7.50 Ladies Home Journal yr. 3.00 2 yrs. 5.50 Reporter 10 mos. 3.27 Mail your order NOW so that your subscription will begin in the fall semester. Or, if you are in Ann Arbor, phone your order to our office, 662-3061 for these or other magazines. -- - -------- - --.._----------. STUDENT PERIODICAL AGENCY I I Box1161 I } Ann Arbor, Michigan Please send me a subscription to at the Special Rate of $ I I Name IAddress 1 I State School and Year ' p Enclosed Find $ Q -Bill me f E--othe above encircled orders _------ .m- -.- _.. I,. I IrwnuHERBERT LOM HEATHER SEARS Ma sTwl"THORLEY WALTERS MICHAEL GOUGH A HAMMERFIWM PRODUCDON,.A UNIVERSAL-INTERNATIONAL RELEASE i A,~r4f some / ~Iike ~I~4 hhip! ) j APiper .* j' "4 # 'U?~i _Y} .; irM i FMW k.Ahi Y etionm~odern cLft TODAY and SATURDAY Shows continuous from 1 :00 "'A luxurious belly laugh."-we er, N. Y .Ti.s "Carmichael, Terry-Thomas and Sim are finely tuned to this kind of fo de-rol." Beckley, Herald Tribune fh "One of the funniest in a procession of funny movies from England." -Alpert, Saturday Revie#l "Vastly amusing comedy." -.Zunser, Cue TERRY ALASTAIR IAN JANE TT THOMAS SIM CARMICHAEL SCOT hed&9c'undrels Or how to win without actually cheating. A Continental Distributing Inc. Release STARTING SUNDAY * T'THE FUNNIEIST SIDE- SITTINGEST THING WEVE SEEN IN YEARS!" -McCALLS -TIME MAGAZINE ' -HARPER'S BAZAAR McCAL'S -REDBOOK -NEWSWEEK . -PARENTS' " TRIUMPHS >. 7 OF FUN!" - Harper's Bazaar ..SOME OF T HE X- GREATEST FUN HOLLYWOOD HAS EVER PRODUCEDI" Redbook- "COLOSSAL!"o r dn _Com1edyI I ch§o' of '/1uic xtj:. . !l , 1"I r .1 I I I 11 /1/1/1 r / 1 I