The Michigan Daily-Sunday, October 8, 1978-Page 5 AMERICAN* R M RO NCE by mike taylor PATTI SMITH'S upcoming visit to Ann Arbor for a couple of poetry readings at Second Chance brings back some memories. Last February. It was a mighty cold night in Ann Arbor, and though hundreds of fans had assembled outside Second Chance by 7 p.m., the management wouldn't let us in until 8:30, the time written on everybody's tickets. We kept warm by taking turns visiting Schoolkids' Records across the street, but when 8:30 finally rolled around and the doors weren't opening, *we got mad. We started screaming "You're gonna die" and "Fascists," but to no avail. So we stood there, shivering, until they finally shared their war- mth with us half-an-hour later. We were furious, but a steady blast of taped punk rock soothed our souls. The tape seemed to go on forever, but frequent trips to the bar for DEVO's (green creme de menthe, whisky, run, and vodka) kept me happy. Jumping up and down in our seats, which we had piled into the dance floor, we got ready for the evening's rock 'n' roll promise: Sonic's Rendezvous Band and the Patti Smith Group. But as Bruce Springsteen has said more than once, "The promise was broken." A DARK FIGURE loomed on stage, but it wasn't Sonic's Rendezvous Band coming on stage, it was Patti! She was mumbling something about her band, and then she said she wouldn't be able to play that night. The eastern branch of the Great Blizzard of '78 had stranded her band in New York City, leaving Patti without back-up, and us without rock n' roll. And we hadn't waited outside in zero degree weather for this. Patti made a valiant effort to read some of her poetry as Fred "Sonic" Smith accompanied her on electric piano, but we weren't listening anymore. .Two nights later, Patti's boys were in town and rock 'n' roll was in the air again. She gave an incan- descent show, offering classics like "Ask the Angels," "Kimberly," and "Gloria," along with oldies like "We're Gonna Have a Real Good Time Together," "Time Is On My Side," and "Be My Baby," and treating us to then-unissued gems like "Because the Night" and "Rock ' n' Roll Nigger." I had asked Todd Smith, Patti's i brother and road manager about an interview with Patti several times during the course of the evening, and he had told me to go downstairs after the show. The Daily had, unfor- tunately, printed a justly negative review of the first night's improm- ptu poetry session that day, and Pat- ti had responded, I had heard, by saying she didn't want to see anyone from the Daily. However, something must have changed her mind, for af- Patti Smith ter just a short wait downstairs, I was ushered into her "chambers" in a back room. SHE SAT ON an old grey couch wearing the same tweed coat she had worn on stage, cuddling up with Fred "Sonic" Smith. Both scowled at me. "You gotthree questions, and then get out," hissed Patti's sister, who, though a tiny woman, towered above the pair on the couch as if she was guarding them. Meekly, I asked Patti if she has any favorite spots for writing poetry. Everyone laughed. "Hey Patti, should I throw this jerk out or what?" Fred asked. But Patti ignored him and said she visits Delaware twice a year to write poetry. "It's one of our original thirteen colonies," she explained. NEXT QUESTION: "Would you like to make an album with Brian Eno?" "No, but I'd like to do one with Brian Jones," she answered. Trying to elicit a response that made sense, I asked, "How easy is it to convert your poetry to rock 'n' roll?" "I like to write all my songs in Spanish," she noted, adding, "Spanish is the loving tongue-it's our most Christian language." I blurted, "Do you intend to say anything serious with me?," angry at the way I was being treated. "Sorry," she said sweetly, "your three question limit is up." CHINESE FAIR Arts exhibit, Chinese paintings, etc. Chinese music recitals Stamps Taste of Chinese Food No Admission Charge OCT. 8, 12-5:30 PM, MICHIGAN unION usic By JOSHUA PECK Inelegant: lacking in refinement and grace in movement, appearance, or manners. And that, in brief, is the per- sistent adornment of the road produc- tion of The Sound of Music, closing tonight at the Power Center. In example, there is Maria's (Sally Ann Howes) first appearance in the show. We find her lounging comfortably on a remarkably uncomfortable- looking hunk of scenery. As Howes begins to warble the title song, adudience members at the sides of the NThe Sound o1 Music Power Center Maria Rainer...............Sally Ann Howes The Mother Abbess............TerrySaunders Captain George von Trapp........Earl Wrightson Lies... .................... Christine Cookson Elsa Schraeder...................... Lois Hunt Forrest Carter, director; Jim Coleman,musicsat director; Richard Rodgers, music; Oscar Hammer- stein II, lyrics; Howard Lindsay and Russel Crouse, book. house are treated to the sight of a stagehand behind the set piece, trun- dling the thing downstage. Inelegance. You see, he was supposed to be hidden. ON THE OTHER hand, the perfor- mance, on the whole, makes for a reasonably entertaining evening. One would have to struggle to render Rodgers and Hammerstein's sterling score unpleasant, although musical director Jim Coleman and his cacophonous crew certainly make a stab at it. Their playing is absolutely rife with clinkers. The story, for those seven readers who hlave not seen the film version, concerns Maria, a novice in an Austrian abbey a short time before the Nazi oc- cupation. The convent's mother abbess, believing Maria's exuberantly girlish ways to be unsuited to nunnery life, or- ders her out of the onvent for a period of a few months to see if the outside world isn't better for her. She becomes governess to the seven children of a highly-decorated former captain in the Austrian navy, Captain Georg von Trapp. The captain (Earl Wrightson) is a widower, and has been running his household like a battleship ever since his wife's death. All is discipline in the house, and there is no love or music in the children's lifes. That is for Maria to bestow. MARIA BEGINS to breath love back into Captain Georg's life, and their love burgeons, though beset by two distrac- ting factors: a wealthy. rival with designs onGeorg, and the threat of Nazi interference with their building a life together. Both, eventually, are over- come. Sally Ann Howes is not the pillar of talent the publicity proclaims her to be, but still she carries off her demanding task with class. She conveys skillfully the strength that enables Maria to weather any adversity, even the fascist 006" 1 oop without harmony presence, and always with an abundan- ce of love. Vocally, Howes lacks the sweetness associated with the role, but then, the woman once sang for Eisenhower at the White House. It's remarkable that she can even play the part, but play it she does, and comes close to convincing us that she is as young as the character she portrays. PLAYING OPPOSITE Howes is a severe disappointment. Earl Wright- son's credit list is impressive, but his performance here, put simply, is not. His "emotions" are contrived, even stylized, and just not the sort of material which deserves to be called professional. His voice is pleasant for the most part, but the richness that a song like "Edelweiss" calls for can only be dreamt about in this production. Technically, this Sound of Music is miserable. Perhaps it is the fault of the Power Center speakers, but every time the nuns sing in chorus, their high notes are accompanied by a death rattle, courtesy of the amplification system. THE FREQUENT set changes are covered by a gray curtain, in front of which silent stage business, oftimes unrelated to character or plot develop- ment, goes on. Surely there must be a more graceful way than this to conceal moving sets. Finally, there is the problem of the huge crucifix, supposedly solidly grounded, which swings gaily to and fro throughout the first scene in the abbey. Encased in wood and glass, it would have made a lovely clock. Christine Cookson plays Liesl, van Trapp's eldest daughter, with verve and charm. "You Are Sixteen," her puppy love duet with boyfriend Rolf (J. Martin Byrne), is enchanting without being saccharine, and makes for an evocative look into the newly romantic relationship. A nice touch is added by Cookson boldly planting a firm kiss on Byrne's lips at the number's end, although it is he who has been con- descendingly singing of his intentions to protect her from the world. He respon- ds to her advances by skittering off the stage in shock. AUTHORS Lindsay and Crouse and director Forrest Carter can share the blame for the graceless infusion of politics into the story. If the three of them meant to reveal the growing Nazi influence menacingly, they failed. The first mention of the National Socialists occurs when, at a party von Trapp is throwing, two guests begin to quarrel disruptively over politics on a very childish plane. Addressing the Nazis in such a broad, unsubtle fashion makes them seem nothing more than a bother. The von Trapp ensemble, which sings quite nicely for most of the show, is at its disharmonious worst in its last two numbers. This might be forgivable if not for the fact that the songs sup- posedly win the von Trapps first prize in a competition. The children, good elsewhere in the show, should have been whipped into shape here, if anywhere. _ Inelegance . . . and neglect. These partners in crime drag the effort down, but still are Vnable to smother it com- pletely. An enjoyable evening of theater is promised, and one could even see a perfect show, although it would take closing one's eyes for five of every 15 minutes. Well, maybe that's why they're on the road. GAY COFFEE HOUSE -meet other gay people -get acquainted with campus & community resources (including gay student and community-based groups "Gay Advocates Office" (Human Sexuality Office) "Gay Hotline" * -X- -hear about the Gay Teach-In (Oct. 20-22) (workshops, films, concerts) SUNDAY, OCT. 8 HALFWAY INN * 2 PM-4:30 PM (East Quad) INFO-763-4186 (entrance on ChurchSt.* G between Hill & Willard) * (Gay Advocates)* The University of Michigan Profhssonal Theatre Program Today at 2:00 and 8:00 p.m.! SALLY ANN HOWES EARL WRIGHTSON & LOIS HUNT . in SWJNID i"~ M ~Sc T~rlvRICHARD RODGERS jj~jf 1 i R~cs, OSCAR HAMMERSTEIN 11 wHOWARD LINDSAY AND RUSSET CROUSE SU GG S G D W V ,,; ,,1! r' " y~r ~af RA-' AMI YSINGF R VMARA tA rA OC. -8in the POWER CENTER10. ,- Ticets available at the Power Center Box Office Sunday Hours: 12-5 and 6-8 p.m. For futher information call 763-3333 JOIN THE DAILY ARTS PAGE STAFF THE U OF M'S OFFICE OF MAJOR EVENTS PRESENTS Mulen Crovwell & Oct. 4-29 Reception: Oct.6, 7-9 Tn- Fri. 10- 6 Sat, Sun. 12- 5 764-3234 FIRST FLOOR MICHIGAN UNION i #AV 112 ' Christmas in October? 2 / OFF M VE Christmas in Octoberi STEPHEN STILL L IVI NGSTON SATURDAY NOV.4 AT 8:00 P.M. HILL AUDITORIUM,ANN ARBOR Reserved Seats are $7.50,6.50,5.50. Tickets go on saleTues.Oct.10 at 10a.m. at the Michigan Union Box Office.Tickets also at Huckleberry Party Store inYpsilanti,Wherehouse Records inYpsilanti and E. Lansing. Sorry, no personal checks. Smoking and beverages strictly prohibited in Hill Auditorium.To order by mail send self addressed stamped envelope and moneyorderto: STILLS Michigan Union Box Office 530 South State Street Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Ns 4 EVERYTHING in our South University shop STOCK REDUCTION SALE Brand new releases Current titles Hardcover and paperback books i I