I x. The Michigan Daily-Saturday, October 28, 1978-Page5 'Lover' By RICH LORANGER The Last of the Red Hot Lovers, a comedy of the woes of middle-age, is being presented this week by the Black Last of the Red Hot Lovers By Neil Simon Black Sheep Repertory Theatre Barney ........................Phillip Bowman Elaine.....................Susan Freridge Bobbi .........................Barbara Thorne Jeanette....................Roberta Owens Celeste Bell, director; William Marschner, Robert Beaupre, Celeste Bell, set designer and construction; William Marschner, lighting; Barbara Thro Thorne, costues Sheep Repertory Theatre in Man- chester. This Neil Simon farce pokes duly at love, sex, drugs, morality, and the middle-age crisis. Mostly, though, it is a comedy of characters. The play is concerned with Barney an emotional tug-of war Daily Photo by ANDY FREEBERG Trombonist George Lewis performed at the Residential College Auditorium Friday night. RECORDS Live Bursting Out Jethro Tull '212 1201 By MARTY LEVINE Ian Anderson is happy. You might be able to tell this from his cheery in- troduction of the band and the rest of the songs - but Scottish/English ac- cents have a way of fooling American ears. You might even hear the subtle changes that have entered his music for the live performance. But you can't help but notice the change in his voice. That voice! That voice that has kicked so many people in the stomach and cried so much pain in songs over the years; that voice that even when singing of England's elfin woodlands and all manner of cute, furry creatures has managed to sound devilish, coarse, Poetry workshop Nov. 8-11 Students, teachers, senior citizens, kids - people who moonlight as aspiring poets - can find a place in the sun for their work at a new workshop, Nov. 8-11, sponsored by the Department of English. The four-day event, with emphasis on instruction by teacher-poets, is geared toward a different clientele from programs traditionally offered by the department, according to its poetry reading coordinator, Prof. Stephen Dunning. The workshop is supported, in part, by a grant from the Michigan Council for the Arts. Poet William Matthews, will be featured at the workshop. Matthews is chairman of the Literary Panel of the National Endowment for the Arts and director of writing at the University of Washington. He also has several volumes of poetry to his credit, in- cluding Running the New Road, Sleek for the Long Flight, and the forth- coming Rising and Falling. Anyone may apply to the workshop. Up to 60 persons will be enrolled. The registration fee for the event, which will be held in the Pendleton Room in the Michigan Union, is $6 a person, in- cluding a lunch on Nov. 11. Applications available at the Pendleton Room, should be completed by Nov. 3. For more information, call 764-5272. and downright obscene; that voice that sings of love by deep brown rivers and still seems to leer from some dark alley strewn with broken wine bottles - that voice is happy! IAN ANDERSON and the band has been known as Jethro Tull since 1968, and Bursting Out is their first live double album. Anderson has always been aware of the toll highly personal writing has taken, both in performance and critical assessment. Now, able to view his ten years from the perspective of country squire and successful musician, he seems to enjoy perfor- ming his music immensely - perhaps even more than does his audience. The relaxed Anderson is most evident in the acoustic numbers. There is a lively, puckish version of "Skating Away on the Thin Ice of a New DAy," and "Jack in the Green" is sprite where before it was uneven. Anderson delights in his music when the audience recognizes a tune - and even when it doesn't: "Here's the last of the acoustic songs for the time being. This one is actually inspired by the Scottish poet Mr. Robert Burns, who, had he been able to tune his guitar in open E tuning would have certainly written this song, dedicated to 'One Brown Mouse;' an ode to, thank you, hm? (scattered applause) Yes? Maybe? Good, well, that's good enough, that's good enough, don't strain your- selves." The magic has started - he hums the opening bars to himself, laughs, and is off into his musical world. Best of all, his delight is infec- tious. JETHRO TULL music is inseparable from Anderson's flute. In the past he has been able to twist the sweet in- strument into a snarling beast, but his five-minute flute solo/improvisation on Bursting Out is truly comic. Anderson teases us with bits of famous flute licks from "My God," "Bouree," and a baroque "God Rest Ye Merry Gen- tlemen." In between a few pretty runs he hums, talks, snorts, spits, gasps, and screams into the flute; he is not playing the flute, but playing with it, and with the crowd. You could call this one of the few flute pieces that is orchestrated for laughter. The flute playing throughout the rest of the album is generally as fine as any Anderson has recorded - when it is there. When the flute doesn't enter at some appropriate places one must realize, after seeing the band in con- cert, that Anderson is sometimes too busy pirouetting about and taunting the crowd to play. Still, during some of the more obvious lapses, one finds oneself whistling in the original flute part. It's slightly annoying at times, but under- standable. TULL'S FACELESS but fine musicians get a chance to show off in the album's two new works. "Conun- drum" and "Quatrain," instrumentals written by lead guitarist Martin Barre, are reminiscent of the best instrumen- tal breaks on Songs from the Wood, and, oddly, chamber music. In keeping with the mood of the album, Anderson has transformed the passionately angry and painful work "Thick as a Brick" into something sur- prisingly gentle and joyous. In fact the only song which has not been affected by this new attitude is "Too Old to Rock and Roll . . ."-it must still hit home a bit, for it is cut considerably, becoming a fast run-through with little feeling. Anderson approaches Tull's down and dirty finale trio with seeming irreverance. Can "Cross-Eyed Mary" survive when it now starts with "Pop * Goes the Weasel?" What is to become of "Locomotive Breath" if it segues in- to an English march while, the concert- goer finds, Anderson tosses huge orange balloons into the audience? And why does Anderson reprise the classic "Aqualung" at the end of the album with the lyric "Aqualung my friend, don't you start away uneasy; you poor old sot, you see it's only - could be anyone!"? THE ANSWER comes from the rest of the album. A contented Ian Anderson is bursting out from under the grip of anger that held him, and is ready to face his song-writing future with little trepidation. He also appears to be bur- sting out of his acoustic slumber (which produced some sweet dreams, but alas, only dreams) and is ready to steer Tull back toward hard rock. Of course, that title could simply refer to those giant balloons that a Tull concert features. Then again, knowing Ian Anderson, he probably called the album Bursting Out because the front cover features a picture of him splitting his pants. Yeah, that last one sounds right. Cashman, a nervous, lunking (in this production, somewhat obest) owner of a fish restaurant. Wonderfully played by Phillip Bowman, Barney is a creature of total habit who is reaching a crisis of age in his very own fashion. He married his high-school sweetheart, Thelma, at age 24 (after eight years of engagement), and has enjoyed a happy but incredibly quiet marriage ever sin- ce. He has maintained a very peaceful existence, so much so that, as he says, "Life goes out of its way to ignore" him. FINALLY, AFTER 23 unquestioning years of marriage, Barney decides to have his one great fling before death. The Last of the Red Hot Lovers deals with his three ludicrous attempts, each between three and five o'clock in his mother's spotless New York apar- tment. Barney's first confrontation is with Elaine, played by Susan Freridge. She was an attractive customer in his restaurant, and on impulse he scrawled the address on the back of a check. Elaine, however, is the much more im- pulsive of the two. She guzzles the Scotch that Barney has provided, coughs horrendously every time she needs a cigarette, and her mood changes with the minute. She is a cold, callous woman, always ready with a smart-ass rejoinder. Somehow, Elaine, who is of Polish descent and an Italian marriage, acquires a snapping Jewish accent in the course of her remarks. This gives her quips an irritating Streisand effect that does not quite fit in. Otherwise, Freridge displays her coldness well. ELAINE ENJOYS the purely physical act of love, and she has come for that very purpose and none other. Barney, though, does not know why he is there. He sweats and cavorts around nervously, and is afraid even to touch her. Eventually she practically beg him to rip her clothes off, but he does not even loosen his tie. Unfortunately, Barney is looking for a touching, decent affair, which he does not find with Elaine. She tries to walk out on him, and his composure snaps. He makes her listen as he raves about his unspeakably boring life, his ap- proaching death, and his sudden in- spiration to experience. Here Bowman is really superb, emoting the anxiety of this pent-up man, and the confusion that is clouding his vision. Elaine is polite, smiles, and gives him her sym- pathy, and rushes out wondering if there are cigarettes in the lobby. AS THE PLAY advances, it seems that Phillip Bowman becomes more and more comfortable with the at- mosphere, and is ever more capable of producing hilarity or pathos. Six mon- ths after Elaine, Barney sneaks again into his mother's apartment for another try. This time it is with Bobbi, a young kook that he had met the day before in the park. He has not to worry about making conversation, because she practically never stops talking. Bobbi, played by Barbara Thorne, is really a nut. She has just arrived penniless from California to be a great New York actr- tress. She seems to have had the worst experiences with men, and her stories of perversion never seem to end. She does not even notice what Barney is going through, but still they do not touch. It is really all he can do to keep up with her lively antics. Bobbi is by far the most buoyant character, and a credit to Miss Thorne. She is freaky and ridiculous, telling tales of molestations (or so attempted) by a deranged writer, airline passenger, taxi driver, and a Mexican in a motel room. She will not take a drink, but in a hilarious moment forces Barney to smoke marijuana with her. After three puffs, he drops to the floor, face contorting, heart palpitating, and his tongue goes numb. Still, the two are at last on the same "level," and they communicate at once, singing a comically horrible rendition of "What the World Needs Now.' ONE MONTH later, Barney makes his final attempt at love on the sly with Jeanette, meticulously played by Roberta Owens. Jeanette is no stranger, but rather a friend of Barney and his wife for 12 years. The roles from the first scene are reversed. Barney is ' relaxed and eager, while Jeanette clut- ches her pocketbook for dear life. He cannot quell her nerves, though, because she has been in a state of melancholia for eight months. Popping pills for her spirits, she is more than depressed, somewhat like a prophet of doom. Her crisis is hitting hard, and now Barney must hear her out. Most of the scene is spent by them trying to name just three loving, gentle, and decent human beings left in the world. Jeanette says there are none to be found. She is almost too sullen for Barney to overcome, but somehow he manages. THE TWO act back and forth, playing on strained emotions and a will to over- come confusion. Owens is very exact in her humorously languid role, just where exactness is needed. Barney and. Jeanette cling to each other in op-f position, and the room becomes a bat-' tlefield. They are face-to-face with eachl other's crises, and come to resolve) them both. Phillip Bowman is worth of note fork the comic acting that he summons up At certain points he needs only to raise his eyebrow in his own ridiculous, fashion to make the audience howl. Though the play begins at a slow pace, his facial expressions are a major force in picking up the farce. Lovers is a play of interactions:I There are never more than two people, on stage at once, so each must react to every word, every mannerism the other, emits. For this the actors are commen- ded, since the flow was not broken once:. A stumbled line could be projected as' nervousness or aggravation, and wasp even integrated into the comedy. THE ACTORS play a delicate tug=of9 war, with each character trying to pull the other toward himself. Directorc Celest D. Bell deserves credit on this point. Barney and his women saunter, hop, and even chase around this tiny apartment constantly, and yet rarely manage to meet in the middle. The Black Sheep players really maket) efforts in their notable performances.,- The theatre promises quality for every,, production, and is worth stepping out of' your way to attend. In summation of his life, Barney can only say, "It was nice." Barney, it was exceptionally; nice, and it was entertaining. ORIENTAL RUGS We pay top price for NEW & USED 313-769-8555 995-7597 MARX AT MICHIGAN? (A SERIES) University staff members discuss how Marx relates to their work. MONDAY, Oct. 30-8:00 p.m.- PROFESSOR ALAN WALD DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH at GUILD HOUSE, 802 Monroe Series sponsored by: Guild House Office of Ethics & Religion, P.A.C. Bottled & House Wines; Draught Beer, Bottled & House Wines; Draught Beer, Ale, Stout; Liquor; Light Food Items; The Blind Pig Cafe Live Blues 6 jazz Monday Night and Weekends 208 S. First St., Ann Arbor Between Washington & Liberty-994-4780 Free parking in lot across street after 5 p.m. I y U1Ich's takes me back ...every year when I come to town for Home- coming. What could be finer than strolling across the Diag again on a crisp October morning, and through the Engin Arch to Ulrich's? Give it a try yourself -- strut your stuff in a maize and blue cap and sweatshirt. Take home some memories with the U. of M. Football Scrapbook. Ulrich's has a terrific selection of Michigan memorabilia, and it's still the same friendly store you used to visit. I'll bet they'd take you back, too. * .' k rp . k ti 4, . t 1 14 ___.AF FREE YEARBOOK With The Purchase Of An $11 Pumpkin Now for a limited time the 1978 Michiganensian (U-M's award-winning yearbook) is offering free yearbooks with the purchase of an $11 oumokin. ..+. I to-