The Michigan Daily-Saturday, October 20, 1979-Page 5 'IDIOT'S DELIGHT'': PTP serves up one smart play By ANNE SHARP The fact that Robert Sherwood's play Idiot's Delight once won a Pulitzer prize back in 1936 gives us pause. We've been reared to respect the Pulitzer and Nobel and Motion Picture Academy seals of approval as the hallmarks of great all-time achievements in science, literature and the arts. Unfortunately, we tend to overlook the fact that they are merely temporal awards, given out quickly and often rashly in the first flush of the prize-winner's popularity and success. They may provide a momentary pat on the back for happy achievers who once served the interests of certain people at a certain time, but they are exceedingly flimsy indicators of eternal greatness. Which isn't to say that Idiot's Delight is a bad play. It is a cute, amusing period pierce, like Arsenic and Old Lace or Tosca, and I'm sure that's why the PTP chose to put it on this year. Its a. f 'Ers7erhead'.A flm fior mom and dada, By R. J. SMITH force myself to contradict myself in order not to imitate myself," said the great Dada mastermind, Marcel Duchamp. And like, if contradictions means much of anything in modern art, than David Lynch's.Eraserhead (1977) is some sort of readymade classic. It makes a great amount of sense when you refer it to itself; by any other standards it reads like a stretchy dream that bobbles all over the place. "We are seeking a new order to restore the balance between heaven and hell," said the Dada sculpture Joan Arp. I don't think Eraserhead achieves anything that lofty, but it does make powerful connections between dream and reality, narrative and seemingly chance story progression. It's shot in black and white, and this sort of spider's web, snowy-dust aura dangles over everything. And the lead actor, whoever he is, gives one of the funniest/scariest, per- formances on film. 'It is the nature of the dream to spew forth fantasies too troubling, too uncertain, for everyday existence. In the dream we confront that which we subdue all our waking hours; when we sleep it in turn subdues all the rest of our psyche. Eraserhead is the most powerful sort of dream." I said that. great significance to the folks at Pulit- zer back in the late thirties was its eerie relevance to the times. In it, Sherwood creates an Italian Alpine border town where he ignites the first broils of a still-hypothetical second World War. There is a cheap, genteel resort lodge where a small group of mismated characters mingle democratically, a la Grand Hotel, bandying about a lot of flapdoodle about the immorality of war, none of it very original, puissant, or radical. Delight is a weak attempt at political commentary smothered by its own need-to be "entertaining''; it is as if Lerner and Lowe had decided to follow up My Fair Lady with a musical version of another Bernard Shaw play, Major Barbara, sacrificing most of the Idiot's Delight Power (Ceer October 17, 18, 19,20, and 21 Harry Van................Philip LeStrange Irene........................ Mary Spengier Captain Locicero..............Alan Comfort Mr. Cherry................ ichard Pickren Mrs. Cherry..............Elizabeth Jahnke [Directeid hr James Martin ;csulinel hby Nancy Jo Smith; lighin h Gary Musanta; scenerv hy Dick Block rhetorical dialogue about morality and war-mongering for a nightclub scene and a few extra lovey-dovey songs. HAPPILY AND WISELY, the current PTP production for the most part plays down the sentimental hystronics about pacifism, instead reveling in Delight's golden-age of-Hollywood drollery. The plays single setting is a nice campy illustrationof this; a cheesy, imposing Art Deco cocktail lounge, all frosted .galss and big white planes of all and streamlined zips of chrome. From the big window overlooking the lounge, the characters jell us, one can see bits of Switzerland and Austria, and, implicitly, the spec- tre of Fascist War looming ever closer on the horizon. The inhabitants of this lounge include a young Communist activist (Tony Burdick, in a sweater vest and uneven French accent) ; a German scientist who debates the relative merits of mowng to Allied country and* developing a cure for cancer versus conducting sinister experiemtns for the Nazis; and the Cherries, a blithe, sen- sible young English couple straight out os any Arthur Rank film of the era. INTO THEIR European calm bursts Harry Van, a shady show-biz en- trepreneur with a brassy Warner Brothers wise-guy twang and an an- noying gaggle of dumb-blonde hoofers. Why, incidentally, do people still insist onseeing this sort of condescending caricature as funny? We got rid of Stepin Fetchit, why not Suzanne Som- mers? Van is a mild variety of the snake-oil seller, the sort of person who describes two lovers meeting in a sen- timental song "like two ships that pass in the night, or a couple of trucks who sideswipe each other." LeStrange played Van broadly, but endearingly See PTP, Page 7 DAILY EARLY BIRD MATINEES-Adults $1.50 DISCOUNT IS FOR SHOWS STARTING BEFORE 1:30 MON. thru SAT. 10 A.M. til 1:30 P.M. SUN. & HOLS. Noon til 1:30 P.M. EVENING ADMISSIONS AFTER 5:00, $3.50 ADULTS Monday-Saturday 1:30-5:00, Admission $2.50 Adult and Students Sundays and Holidays 1:30 to Close, $3.50 Adults, $2.50 Students Sundav-Thursday Evenings Student & Senior Citizen Discounts Children 12 and under, Admissions $1.50 -1mNR NO. 1 THR NO.4 The closer you get . . . the better we look. 0, he MWidligau f~IuiIl FredericoFellini's 1974 AMARCORD Amarcord is full of tales: some romantic, some slapstick, some elegaical, some bawdy, and some as mysterious as the unexpected sight of a peacock flying through a light snowfall. Winner of the 1974 Academy Award for Best Foregin Film. Fellini's most beautiful and accessible film so far. In lush color, 35mm and Italin with subtitles. Sun.: Pabst's PANDORA'S BOX Mon.: Kurosawa's RED BREAD (Free) CINEMA GU LD TONIGHT AT OLD ARCH.AUD. CINE A G ILD 7:0 & 9:30 $1 .50 R 764-0558 Now Playing at Butterfe d fheatres FRIDAY MID-NITE MONDAY NIGHT IS WEDNESDAY IS SHOWSJ ,,GUENT NIGHT" 'BARGAIN DAY" A T STATE 1-2-3-4 Two Adults Admitted $1.50 UNTIL 5:30 STUDENTS with For $3.00 LD. $1.50 State 12l-3- 231 S. Stat. 662-6264 AL PACING ONCE IN A WHILE SOMEONE FIGHTS BA CK.' (UPPER LEVEL) Mon, Tue, Thur, Fri 7:15-9-55 -- -- Sat, Sun, Wed' 12:15-2:35-4:50- 7:15-9:55 It's five miles wide.. Aon""Tue, Sat Sun, 10-9:5012: 4571C In DOLBY STEREO Campus 1214 S. Univi ity 668-6416 DONALD SUTHERLAND Mon, Tue, Thu 7&9 l 1a.. A lk« " Soi 7 $ 915 S 'aa FPG Sun, wed Camp us 1214 S. Unive ity 668-6416 NIGHT OWE. FLICK All Seats $3.00 Fri-Sat at 11:30 pm (X)