I' 4 4 rf liclr A blood Audience clowns around, with Di*mitri By DIANE HAITHMAN University Showcase left an audience emotionally drained and chilled by its production of Garcia-Lorca's Blood Wedding, a stark tragedy of passion, loss, and death. From the first scene, the play foreshadows doom as motifs of knives, ruin, and the spilled blood of generations darken a plot that races like a heat-crazed stallion to a black Blood Wedding By Federico Garcia Lorca University Showcase Theatre Trueblood Auditorium Leonardo ..................... Loren Dale Bass The bride..................... Ellen Sandweiss Leonardo's wife..............Kate Conners Servant woman .................Shelly Ballmer The bridegroom ..............Mass Casey The moon .'................. Richard S. Pickren Mother ...... ................Candice M. Cains Beggar woman.............Karen Keckler and inevitable conclusion. The set helps to create a somber mood: Bare except for transient in- cidental props, the stage is backed by a huge drape of tattered burlap with a gash in it. The characters remain nameless, except one - Leonardo, a married man in love with a woman who will wed a man she does not love. In Leonardo, restlessly portrayed by Loren Dale Bass, runs the passion that will destroy all in the end. Bass' -per- formance conveys the innocence of the crime of a man possessed. THE OBJECT of his passion is the Bride, played by Ellen Sandweiss. While Sandweiss' performance is predominatly effective, she lacks the necessary sensual quality so nicely captured by Bass. The pair ought to draw the audience into feeling the pathos and irrevocability of the true but devastating love: Unfortunately, San- dweiss comes off shrewish rather than -cur haughty; childish rather than wild and independent. Although her performan- ce warms up by the end of the drama, the audience's sympathy tends to wan- der toward Leonardo's timid wife, played by the gentle, doe-eyed Kate Connors. The resulting lack of am- bivalence in audience allegiance un- dermines a basic theme of the work: that the blood shed by passion's knife must be shed. The opening act of Garcia-Lorca's work sparkles with occasional sprightliness and comedy, cheered on by Shelly Ballmer as the Servant Woman. Although obliged tossing more often than either her voice or audience tolerance could reasonably allow, Ballmer's role becomes a key one due in large part to her lively enthusiasm. And the Bridegroom (Matt Casey), the naive, handsome darling of the play, lends another touch of sympathetic humor to the first act. PERHAPS THE most striking per- formance of the evening is that of Can- dice M. Cains, as the Mother. A strong woman, stung by the grief of losing her own blood through the death of relatives, Cain captures both the strength and the sadness: The audien- ce clenches its fists along with hers as the character with the greatest right to tears bravely refuses to cry. Although the first and second acts shift from strong performances to vapid crowd scenes cluttered with inef- fective extras (the third act's bumbling prophetic woodcutters represent the performance's most embarrassing low), it is the haunting third act that makes the production both unbearable and worthwhile. Against frigid lighting and the needling whine of tuneless violins, the scene grows suddenly and weirdly symbolic. Richard S. Pickren plays the Moon in eerie whiteface with a black cape lined with blinding white dling ti silk. He should well subdue the cape swishing and cut a few pseudo-balletic turns as the costume alone makes his performance worthwhile. LIKE SOME kind of ragged and dangerous weed, a heap of torn rags suddenly becomes Death in the form of a beggar woman, as Karen Keckler startles the audience by suddenly coming to life with a wild, jerky strangeness. The audience suddenly becomes uneasy and remains so until the end of the hell-bound action. Keckler's characterization is almost too effective. An occasional misplaced By KATIE HERZFELD Dimitri, a clown-mime who perfor- med at the Power Center Wednesday night, is a one-man circus. Although he calls himself a mime, the title hardly suffices. He is also a musician, an acrobat, a juggler, a yodeler, and, above all, a performer who expresses large emotions within short, polished routines. 'The solo performance Wednesday began with one in a series of minor gaf- fes; Dimitri (Which is his full name) played a mandolin and repeatedly lost his pick in the instrument. He seemed nervous and embarassed, as did the audience, but they adjusted to his oc- casional mistakes, which continued throughout the performance, and grew comfortable with the show. WHEN HE found a stick in a big trunk, he first used it to count the people in the audience, and then as a back-scratcher. No one was sure if these were the stick's proper uses, and all were impatient until Dimitri spon- taneously settled the stick on his nose. Everyone seemed to expect such theatrics from a clown. But when he tried to balance the stick on a woman's diose, people began to adjust to the spontaneity. Dimitri can bounce a ball onto the strings of a mandolin and make music. He can play a harmonica when it is completely inside his mouth. He can play two concertinas at once or the ecorder from his nostrils. The clown is a'master of the French horn( while he is in a back-bend position and the in- strument balances from his mouth). He plays trumpet, plastic rope, ukelele, guitar, clariet, and saxophone. 4h 'AND ALTHOUGH it took quite a while to get them all'situated in his mouth, Dimitri played two baby saxes and two clarinets at once, to the amazement of both the audience and himself. Dimitri's performance is not suc- cessful because of the variety of his talents, but rather because he allows the audience to identify with him. The audience shares his performance, and loves him because of it. Dimitri used a woman's purse from the second row; he had a man give him a boost to help him flip over his trunk - he let the audience sympathize with his mistakes. Once, he was juggling two balls from his mouth and didn't catch one of them. Gilbert honored Elmer Gilbert, professor of aerop- space engineering, was presented the O.H. Schuck Award by the American Automatic Control Council at the 1978 Joint Automatic Control Conference held recently in Philadelphia, the University announced. The award - based on a combination of technical contribution, technical ex- position, and oral presentation - is given each year to the author presen- ting the best paper at the conference the year before.# ,Glbert received the award for two papers, "Functional Expansions for the Response of Nonlinear Differential Systems" and "Bilinear and 2-Power Input-Output Maps," which concern Mathematical techniques for the analysis and design of nonlinear dynamical systems. TONIGHT at £ p.m. WEDDING BY FEDERICO GARCIA-LORCA University Showcase Productions I(VM F IrivUf1I1-4 1 He let it be known that such mistakes are okay, the audience was relieved, and they gave him a warm hand. Truly, it is the man's emotion which makes him such a magical delight. During his production, the clown mime evinced emotions so that everyone could identify with the feelings of being watched - by oneself and one's audien- ce. Dimitri gave his audience a delightfuli evening of unusual entertainment, as+ well as a chance to look closely at itself+ as a collection of performers in their own right.+ PRESENTING IN PER!,ON-Direct from the Lake of the Ozarks (KRCG- TV, Jefferson city, Mo. and KMOS-TV, Sedalia, Mo.) LEE MACE'S OZARK OPRY The Nation's Finest 2 Hours of Family Entertainment! MUSIC COMEDY * VARIETY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 12-2 PM MICHIGAN THEATER Phone 663-3818 for ticket information I U RECORD PRICES UP $1 IF YOU BUY THESE RECORDS; Steve MARTIN BOSTON Wild & Crazy Don't Look Guy Back CHICAGO Hot Streets Ted Billy NUGENT HEART SANTANA JOEL Weekend Dog & Inner 52nd Street Warrior Butterfly Secrets YOU CAN EXPECT TO PAY $1 MORE FOR ALL RECORDS SOON CBS and WARNER /ELECTRA /ATLANTIC, the two largest record companies, recently released these albums at a new high list price of $8.98. The previous high was $7.98, and this increase on select releases is a test of the market. 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