Page 6-Saturday, September 9, 1978-The Michigan Daily WeakJ By CHRISTOPHER POTTER Special to The Daily STRATFORD, Ont.--Any production of Julius Caesar must of necessity come to grips with choosing whether to em- phasize the play's crucial historial con- Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare directed by John Wood Stratford Festival Theatre Julius Caesar ......................Eric Donkin Marcus Brutus ..............Nicholas Pennell Caius.Cassius .,..............Alan Scarfe Marc Antony ...................Stephen Russell Casa ...........................Frank Maraden Calphurnia........ ......... Mary Savidge Octavius Ceasar...........Jack Wetherall tent, or to place prime attention on thea basically timeless political interplayI involved. Chronologically placed, the events of Shakespeare's work mark a Antony crossroads in the history of civilization: Caesar's assassination and the sub- seq6ent extermination of his slayers ef- fectively rang down the curtain on any form of representative government in the world for nearly two thousand years. While this might seem of paramount importance to a modern audience, it hardly seems likely Shakespeare's car- dinal concern lay there. And historical perspective certainly isn't what the current Stratford Festival production seems to be after. If director John Wood's rather hesitant production opts for anything, it opts in favor of stressing a simple exer- cise in bald-faced power politics, a deadly ongoing gamesmanship that remains by and large chillingly unaltered in form and practice some twenty centuries later. SHAKESP!ARE'S Caesar was buries 'Caesar' populated by passionate, complicated, often mercurial men driven by needs and desires that were often at odds with themselves. Were Caesar's murderers freedom-loving democrats or were they crass usurpers? Were his allies defenders of stability or worshippers of tyranny? To understand the temper of the times, one must try to get at these men's very unsimplistic motives, the shades-of-gray intentions that give the play such magnetic force. And this is where Wood's production runs afoul: Placed against a necessarily three-dimensional context, actor Stephen Russell's Marc Antony~ the ultimate victor in the deadly game, is the show's fatal weak link. Whether through misguided direction or his own lack of acumen, Russell is ex- cruciatingly one-dimensional in his in- terpretation of a profoundly complex protagonist. Shakespeare's Antony seemed driven by circuitous emotions, at one moment an avenging angel nobly righting the wrong done Caesar, at the next a consummate politician ruthlessly maneuvering his mentor's death into a momentous personal power play. Russell catches none of this duality as he utilizes his matinee-idol looks and huskily earnest voice to turn his Antony into a kind of breathless Marvel Superhero-a simple, straight arrow All-Roman Boy whose aspirations couldn't conceivably extend beyond the general good of his countrymen. THUS ANTONY'S funeral oration-Shakespeare's masterly quin- tessence of public manipulation-is reduced to a mere exhortation to let justice be done. Russell's flat, one-level delivery (spoken directly to the audien- ce rather than to the traditional stage crowd) catches not one whit of the subtle inflections, the verbal twists and turns through which Antony preys upon his listeners. The speech personifies the art -of political persuasion at its most sublime and most insidious, yet for all the sensitivity Russell lends to the moment, he might just as well be singing a rendition of "Stouthearted Men." The characters of Brutus and Cassius fare rather better, largely because Nicholas Pennell and Alan Scarfe are such superb actors that their already center-stage protagonists simply dominate the assemblage surrounding See WEAK, Page 12 &41 a CINEMA II r°'0$, presents Truffaut's-SMALL CHANGE A truly delightful film with a profoundly serious message. Truffaut reveals his true genius and limitless ability to work with children as he explores the passages from a toddler's brave curiosity to the excitement of adolescent love. "A must for all who were once children."-Andy Leavitt. French with subtitles. 7:00& 9:00 $1.50 Angell Null Awd A Sunday: THE BIRDS AND MARNIE Appearing in the Stratford Festival Theatre production of "Julius Caesar" ar Nicholas Pennell (Marcus Brutus), Frank Maraden (Cascci), Alan Scarfe (Caul Cassius), and Eric Donkin (Julius Caesar). Give AM radio a listen it's By R. J. SMITH Everybody nowadays is taking stabs at AM radio - Elvis Costello writes pointed songs about the American airwaves ("They don't give you any choice, because they think that it's. treason ... and the radio is in the hands of a lot of crazy fools/trying to anesthetize the way that you feel ..."), and even snide little movies like FM milk easy laughs from the topic of AM. And of course on the campus, any man-on-the-street Joe College can hardly muster a curled lip and a roll of the eyes anymore - the common word out is that it's simply too pathetic to waste time on. BUT THE fact is, AM is good stuff. Back in the early seventies, FM was flourishing creatively and as a business, in those golden days of "free- form" radio formats. But lust for the big bucks and the philosophy that "we can riot only give the kids what they want, but we can do it better" (a philosophy which nearly killed things on the AM side back in the early sixties. Remember Pat Boone?) strangled the sort of freedom that could provide listeners with Lou Reed-Miles Davis- John Cage-Otis Redding sets, and left us with the slag pile of top forty stations to which I thought FM was supposed to provide an alternative. (I know, I know, except on friendly campuses like ours, and in some fortunate big towns, not like ours.. .). Certainly the number of commercials are comparable on most stations - the main difference seems to be that FM dj's are duller (except for WRIF's Arthur Penhollow - reportedly the best-paid jock in Detroit - who's gimmicks are rubber-libbed pervoid babblings and heavy breathing, that makes one long for boredom). ~ The point is, there really is some good stuff to be found on the dark side of the dial - perhaps especially this summer. Granted, these are hard times, now that disco has eaten the world, but people should listen - for there is a certain vitality poking through the dark clouds once again. THROUGH the nature of its songs and programming, AM has always made connections with American pop culture that FM could never hope to make (indeed, it has even had to deny them). Brevity and immediacy, one essence of pop culture (which rings true in both fast-food joints and minimalist art, binding them) is the heartbeat of AM radio - lengthy abnormalities such as "Like a Rolling Stone" notwithstanding. Created by a nation of people who bleed boredom, AM is a logically essential forum - providing space for both Rolling Stones and Beach Boys, Phil Spectors and Bee Gees. NECESSARILY bound up with this necessity of quick identification and gratification is our lust to be always On The Move. The transiency and constant mobility that shape our lives is echoed in AM music - which really is created for the man driving down the highway, or thumping down hot busy streets (there are countless images and illustrations to conjur up: so many Phil Spector singles, which sound not like instruments - they were purposefully blurred - but like fine machines rolling down the road, or Tony Manero pounding the pavement to "Stayin' Alive"). Seemingly this summer had the trappings of a real washout for AM buffs, 'that kind that sends button- jammers perpetually searching the dial for "King Tut," Tiger baseball or an oldies station. Summer "heavies" like the E Chicago, Fleetwood Mac, Taylor, America and many failed to cough up any product. course, disco is still the cat's as summer proved more than we h right to expect, and there was high ratio this time around of goo to bad. Besides, on AM, if you do it, it only takes three minutes away. Ever try to get rid of the version of "Life's Been Good"? ANYWAY, HERE is an inform of some of the best and worst (p with Meatloaf on the list, that's of AM summertime fare. It's in mostly because I'm not wearing after scouring various top ten fifty lists, I think I've got a prett scope. The cream: " "Miss You" : The Rolling S As if the unforgettably peeg rhythm weren't enough to mak one good, there's some great vo Mick (the lines about the Puerto girls, especially), and those ha breathin'-down-your-neck backg vocals by the boys. That makes best of the summer. Its simpli unlike recent Stones efforts, and it was merely nice; but skin and impact grows on you. Superb w the streets music. " "Because the Night": Patti Patti Smith selling out? Hell no, like buying in - this artist, I heard on FM, manages to connec the mass audience of AM w sacrificing her fervor - thisr burns, everything about it: Io Spectorian aura, the acousti electric contrast, Patti's pass voice, Lenny Kaye's sense of d during the guitar solo. Perhaps if people heard it, it would be my fa song of the summer. " "You're The One That I WA John Travolta and Olivia Newton Perhaps it's a doff of the hatt fifties, but to these ears it's a grea more: a strong declaration of fri and fun for right now, in the sam that keeps Animal House from b mere period piece. Travolta ma to even do more than stay in pitc Olivia is spectacular, coming on her giggles and her playful coo the repetition of the last half, alon all those great Ooh-ooh-oohs, lea up to the listener. The most fun r all summer - hey, even Patti like 0 "Two Out of Three Ain't F electrifyin'! Jagles, Meatloaf. I feel divinely evil abou James liking this record - every word h And of sins comes across as a lie -4 but th s. Still, arrangement and his conviction in his ad any deception sell it until you half believe it. ad aey A fat hairy slob singing someone else's a very words about true love sounds pretty n' stuff weird, huh? And to think across n't like America people will be crying over this album song for years. I'll laugh pretty hard - but this one's damn good. al list '"My Radio Sounds Good To Me": nerhasGraham Central Station. Another oldies erhaps tribute of a sort, this one works because wurst) of the unabashed doo-wops and pseudo formal acapella vocals which are bouncy a tie -enough to be remembered, but not ever ponderous when the instruments come in. It sounds both like an AM ditty and zillion commercials, but it is merely selling good-spirit. A one-shot, in all its AM glory. The on-deck circle: "Count On Me", Jefferson Starship - "Used To Be My Girl", The O'Jays, - "Shame", Evelyn Champagne King - "Magnet And Steel", Walter Egan - "Bluer Than Blue", Michael Johnson. The Curds: " "It's a Heartache": Bonnie Tyler. Q. What's worse than Rod Stewart doing take-offs of himself (see his latest album)?. A. A woman who sounds like him doing parodies. Maybe David Johanson can pump some humor into these banal lyrics - see his latest shows - but anything but cry-in-yer- beer seems beyond her. I'd rather drink to top more. y good ' "Three Times a Lady": The Commodores. It takes the Commodores five minutes plus to sink into the gooey tones. sentimentality of this' one, but I istent guarantee you I'm listening to e this something else way before then. With als by their hit-all-the-bases philosophy, the Rican Commodores are bound to strike out unting every now and then. This is a grand round error. it the " "Boogie-Oogie-Oogie": A Taste of city is Honey. Talking about a similar record, at first one reviewer wrote something like, "I bones always though sucking was fun, but I valkin' can perceive the sentiment people are conveying when they say 'disco Smith. sucks'.". Ditto for me. more . "Hot Blooded": Foreigner. 0 hardly second thought, I'd maybe rathe t with boogie ooogie. There's no entire rotten 'ithout genre to prepare you for this travesty - record unless you count all those bad dreams vine s that keep coming back to haunt us, like c vs. Bad Company, Led Zeppelin, anl all ionate the rest of that cock rock set. Or else - drama God help us - "super Groups". more . "Too Much Too Little Too Late": vorite Johnny Mathis and Denise Williams/"Copacabana": Barry ant": Manilow. If either of these records was -John. even surprisingly bad, they would have to the ranked higher. But these songs are it deal nothing unusual for said people, who ivolity have perhaps racked up an enviable e way record of ill performances. eing a "Copacabana" gets the nod for sheer nages outrageous stupidity, but the idea oi h and Johnny Mathis on the charts is equally a with inane. s, and Almost as bad: g with "Love Will Find a Way", Pablo ves it Cruise - "Every Kind of People", ecord Robert Palmer - "Summer Nights", d it. Olivia Newton-John/John Travolta Bad": "You", Rita Coolidge. eGI ipse 1 AnnArborJazzFestival1978 In Celebration of the Music of DI IK F EI INGTON L Hill Auditorium September 21-24 THURS,21st8pm FRI,22nd-8pm '4ARY LOU WILLIAMS JOHNNY GRIFFIN STAN GETZ DEXTER GORDON MAX ROACH Ot./ARCHIE SHEI'P FREDDIE HUBBARD ..j Frank Cappa's 1938 YOU CAN'T TAKE IT WITH YOU § Kaufman and Hart's Rip-Roaring Comedy about a Classic (But not neces- § § sarily normal) American family, carefree folks led by Lionel Barrymore. § When EDWARD ARNOLD comes in contact with them, fireworks explode . . American free enterprise meets American free will. JIMMY STEWART and JEAN ARTHUR bring them together. - SUNDAY: HITCHCOCK'S NOTORIOUS § CINEMA GUILD TONIGHTat OLD ARCH. AUD.§ 7.0&90 $1.50 § SAT,23rd-8pm STANLEY 'TURRENTINE KENNY BURRELL SUNRA SUN,24th-1pm Iu V i ORCHESTR CHICO FREEMAN HUBERT LAWS SUN,24th-8pm MERCER. MOSE ALLISON ART BLAKEY ELLIKrGTON/ DUKE EWNGTON ORCHESTRA FESTIVAL SERIES TICKETS NOW ON SALE AT MICHIGAN UNION BOX OFFICE (M-F 11:30-5:30) $30, 25,20 r - ----r --- - - - ___- -- -.--- so - so I O Cottage INNO' 50 OFF any Pizza or Dinner Offer expires Sept. 30, 1978 /J Carry-Out and FREE Delivery' Open 11 AM-2 AM 7 Days a Week a 5;AA Pnrkcnrd nt ill-66-6005O