SECOND CITYA T POWER CENTER: Yeah, it beats The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, September 18, 1979-Page 5 TV hilt By ERIC ZORN One of the more ridiculous things about television is the way all programs are pre-digested for the general con- sumption and almost all offensive material thus deleted. Comedy, especially the saucy, irreverent brand of many younger performers, loses a lot of punch when it is toned down. Wonder no longer, then, why some of the sket- ches on Saturday Night Live are so lame. Remember, many of the performers on Saturday Night are graduates of the Second City improvisational comedy troupe, where everybody laughs when a man says "suck." John Belushi, Dan Ackroyd, Gilda Radner, and Bill Murray all came up with Second City, and officials with the group are con- fident that some of the performers who appeared last Saturday evening at the Power Center for The Best of Second City will be on network television spon. BASICALLY, there is an audience for Second City-style humor because of the limitations of television as a medium: The six-member cast spins through two hours of comedy and song that, for various reasons, would probably not appear on the home screen. Some of the material is off-color, yes, but a lot of it is too slow and subtle for the impatient masses. Further, a good deal of the comedy comes from an effective use of the stage and the audience-performer relationship that, try as they might with studio claques, TV producers cannot use. All of which goes to prove that there is still a spot in this culture of ours for the theater, in case that was on your mind. this conclusion is notable in the case of Second City since the com- parisons with television are unavoidable, and their audience must be satisfied that it was better to trudge to the theater and shell out admission than to have stayed home and watched Mork. The format is very televisionian, as the show is a review of top sketches from the 20-year history of Second City. A weak attempt is made to minimize this by directing the performance at a specific audience by filling in local names (B. J. Dickey, The Ark), but only people who really want to find this a pleasing affectation can possible do so. To others, it smacks of those letters we get from Reader's Digest reading, "You, My Pensman, may already be a winner." THE PERFORMERS hardly need such devices to warm up an audience, as they are, for the most part, top-flight actors and comedians. The four men in the case are noticeably better, though, than the two women, especially in the two- improvisational sketches attem- pted. The women, Sandra Bogan and Sandra Davenport, never seemed to develop stage presences beyond the characters that they played, and they never seemed at all in control of the image they presented to the audien- ce. The men, especially slightly-built Lance Kinsey, had a power all their own that transcended their roles and carried them through the performance. But was it funny? Yes, there were big laughs. The Best of Second City in- cludes some inspired bits such as "Why Football Failed at the University of Chicago" featuring John Kapelos as a history of arithmetic major trying to understand the rules of the game, and a sketch set inside the fallopian tubes with Lance )Kinsey as a plucky sperm cell who meets the egg and decide#'I'm sorry I came." The second half of the performance is markedly feeble compared to the first half, occasionally descending to leering, adolescent humor and slap- stick such as "The Sexual Crisis Clinic." True, Second City survives because they can excite an audience reared on the Velveeta cheese and white bread of television entertain- ment, but that doesn't mean that anything unconventional-such as a nymphomaniac lurching into a timid man-is automatically funny. THE CHICAGO-BASED traveling theater goes on the road in a van, carrying only -costumes, six perfor- mers, a pianist, technician, and assistant produced Joyce Sloane. On stage they need only five chairs for props, relying heavily on pantomime for the effect of material objects. Many of the acts from The Best of Second City are outgrowths of improvisational sketchesperformed at the request of audiences back in Chicago where the company maintains a resident troupe. Producer Sloane says the reason Second City cast members do so well on a show like Saturday Night Live is that the discipline of performing every night and learning the art of improvisation teaches them to control an audience and keep a point of reference in order to be funny. Second City's improvisation was less than overwhelming, the jokes only being funny because they were spon- taneous, and not because they were, well, really funny. Performers are found through workshops that the company offers in Chicago, and through an exhaustive audition process that includes going through the files of resumes that hopefuls send to the producers. Very good performers they find, too. Other noted Second City alumni include Rob Reiner, Valerie Harper, and Alan Arkin. So, in some ways, Second City far surpasses comedy on television, but, the dollar being what it is, the company also serves as the minor leagues for the networks. That, media-fans, is show biz. LOW 46r ~ The Ann Arbor Film Cooperative presents at Aud A, AngellHall Tuesday, September 18 IN THE REALM OF THE SENSES (Nagisa Oshima, 1976) 7 &A9-AUD A The sensation of the 1976 Cannes and New York Film Festivals was this stunning meditation on sexual obsession, based on a real love affair between a gangster and a prostitute in 1930's Japan. "A beautiful film . . . the most thoughtful work of and on eroticism yet created."-L.A. Times. Rated X Tomorrow night's screening is cancelled due to prior bookings i ~~*m Tw m tnkletoes -Photo by KAREN ZORN ust a dancing fool is Rose Sinclair, shown here hoofing and stomping to the old Mme sounds of The Bosom Buddies all-woman string band at the First Ann Ar- or Folk Festival on the lawn of the Ark Sunday afternoon. Sinclair and the Wild Iurkey String Band performed with a whole host of other musicians during the twelve-hour fest sponsored by the Ann Arbor Council for Traditional Music and lance. The gathering of area talent drew a crowd of approximately 300, and ;ponsors considered the event an overall success. Throughout the day, musicians who weren't on stage danced, played informally, and traded tunes k nd stgries. Said one participant, "Hey, this is just like a real festival." . FREE 12 Z.COKES With Purchase of Any 1 Item or More Pizza ' (WITH THIS AD) OPEN SUN-THURS 11am-1am; FRI &8SAT 1 lam-2am Now Delivering to the N. Campus Area I BELL'S GREEK PIZZA j 995-0232 700 Packard at State Street Te Un'ive'r'ty of Michign School! of Music Department off Dance Of fers Fall Courses in Beginning-Intermediate Modern Beginning Ballet Intermediate Modern Intermediate Ballet Advanced Modern Children's Baliet (ages 8-12) Young Dancers Contemporary Dance Workshop (ages 12-18) September 24-November 17,1979 Faculty: Gay Delanghe Christopher Flynn Willie Feuer Susan Matheke 763546 orDance Building for information call 763-5460 or 3ne iin write: Department of Dance The Universiy of Michigan Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 i Laura Antonelli's labors of lust By CHRISTOPHER POTTER Ann Arbor suddenly finds itself the ngwegt ecipient of the ubiquitou§, Laprp-Appgnelli craze - a belated, pre- packaged Hollywood attempt to cash .in: on European cult.passion. The object of, all this delayed trans-Atlantic ob- session is .a mid-thirtyish Italian ac- tress of pretty face and spectacular body lately who has become an inter- national sex symbol primarily through her willingness to uncover her charms" for- the camera whenever so directed. American distributors, eager to cash in, on the success of their brethren aeross the sea, have pragmatically eschewed their traditional abhorrence of foreign films, (even Bergman and Fellini have trouble making it to these shores nowadays) and purchased a whole slew of Antonelli epics - most of them genteely sweaty potboilers just a shade on the soft side of porn. ,This weekend finds to Antonelli showcases in town: Malicious (made in 1974) and Wifemistress (Circa 1977). Though promoted as a slab of meat raunch, Wifemistress energes as - of all things - a feminist morality play, while Malicious turns out to be one of the most diabolically funny tales to come down the pike in many a year. Wifemistress describes the frustrations of the long-suffering wife of a. wealthy Italian businessman at the turn of the century. Frigid, psychosomatically paralyzed from the waist down, she wastes sadly away in bed while. her debonair but callous spouse Federico (Marcello Mastroian- ni) pursues both financial and ex- tiamarital affairs unencumbered by domestic obligations. Yet fortuitous revenge lies just around the corner. Federico finds him- Aif implicated in a murder; though in- libcent, he determines to lay low until the real killer is caught. He fakes a riding disappearance, then hides out in abuilding across the street from his 6&vn house (he figures it would be the last place anyone would look). This vantage point turns into a kind of win- dow on his own world, as, watching through a crack in the shutters, he wat- ches an unravelling metamorphosis. i Assuming her husband dead, Antonia -( layed by Antonelli) turns into a late bloomer. She emerges forthrightly 'from her physical and psychic catatonia aid begins a calculated un- covering of Federico's financial and libidinous adventures. While her fugitive spouse looks on helplessly, she o ANNOUNCING not only takes over his business, but undertakes a step-by-step visitation of allhis old adulterous haunts. Soon she .isiliteral y relivigg qs feittaess bstory, commencing libertine affairs of her oWn, of"iih-tlnhe selfsami~e rooni dohis own former dalliances. For Federico, it's like watching his whole life's history run backwards, every secret mercilessly uncovered. Things eventually take an even more baroque turn. Antonia soon realizes Federico is not dead, is in fact watching her every move. This suits her fine - all the more a stage for her ongoing revenge. She takes to long, defiant stares up at Federico's hideout, silently daring him to come down and face her. Federico cannot; though long since cleared of the murder, he remains in his dark room, a shattered recluse unable to face her faithlessness and his own shame and guilt. For Antonia, vic- tory is at last complete: "Now I belong only to myself," she murmurs trium- phantly, at peace with her once op- pressive environment. Wifemistress' ingenious structural layout might have worked brilliantly if played in a sly black comedy mode, but director Marlo Vicario has instead op- ted to present his droll tale as a kind of sweaty morality play. The nimble women's movement theme is sublimated by the stagy, operatic histrionics of the assembled cast, which remains a humorless bunch of charac- ters. Vicario never catches the nuances between light and heavy; the film's climactic reunion between repentant husband and forgiving, wife - a poten- tially moving reconciliation - is drowned amidst tear-stained cheeks, quivering eyeballs and a musical score so'swarthily thunderous that one expec- ts an angelic choir to descend any moment singing praise to the sanctity of marriage. Mastroianni does about as much as can be expected with a part that's restricted almost exclusively to staring1 remorsefully out f his shuttered. thideaway. Wifemistress belongs to An- tonelli lock, stock and barrel; she's not" a great actress, ythef projection of in-' telligent vulnerability carries the film surprisingly well, as does her un- deniable physical charisma. Soft-core buffs' will likely be disappointed at Wifemistress's lack of explicitness (as well as angered by the film's duplicitous promo campaign); though certainly erotic in content, the picture's few bedroom scenes are staged so paralytically that you have to blink twice to determine whether the im- mobile participants are human beings or store mannequins. Moreover, there isn't an obliquely nude shot of the An- tonelli physique the entire film, a fact likely to shock Wifemistress's targeted stud patronage as much as will its astonishingly anti-macho theme. The surprise of Wifemistress is that it's quite tolerable entertainment., The astonishment of Antonelli's other current vehicle, Malicious, is that it's fiendishly magnificent. More on the lat- ter tomorrow. ND OF PART ONE i _.. Join the Arts Page, 1 ROBERT WEINE'S DOUBLE FEATURE 1919 THE CABINET OF DR. CALIGARI A classic horror film and the first work of the German Expressionists. The distotive angular sets intensify a "simple" story of a country fair and one of the sideshows-a somnambulist. (at 7:00 only) CHARLES LAUGHTON'S 1955 THE NIGHT OF THE HUNTER Robert Mitchum at his best as a fanatic murderous preacher hunting down his step-children through the'countryside. Screenplay by James Agee and iridescently magical photography by Stanley Cortez ("The Magnificent Amber- sons"). With Shelly Winters and Lillian Gish as the Goose Woman. (at 8:00 only) Both Shows-$2.50 OLD ARCH. CINEMA GUILD One Show-$1.50 AUD. Fh " I S5I1Iil t.7 Thtork ered her Iid" nae'by *I live th~m i' " exI~. u ENDS THURSDAY! ., THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN DEPARTMENT OF THEATRE & DRAMA in association with The Professional Theatre Program 1979-80 GUEST ARTIST SERIES USHER APPLICATION Name Address Telephone 1. You must choose your series in order of preference. 2. Return Usher Application to: Usher Guest Artist Series, c/o Profes- sional Theatre Program. Michigan League Bldg. Ann Arbor. Michigan 48109. 3. You will be notified by mali. MUST INCLUDE A STAMPED, SELF- ADDRESSED ENVELOPE. Please Number Choice 1, 2, 3, etc. SERIES A: (Wed. Eve.) Oct. 17, Nov. 28, Feb. 20, Apr. 16 SERIES B: (Thurs. Eve.) Oct. 18, Nov. 29, Feb. 21, Apr. 17 SERIES C: (Fri. Eve.) Oct. 19, Nov. 30, Feb. 22, Apr. 18 -- . ... . _ .r.. r._% &nn - 7 C.k f01 Anr 10 B ~ U' a. I