Page 6-Sunday. October 28, 1979-The Michigan Daily The Michigan Daily-Sunday, Oc Theater The making of a musical A T FIRST GLANCE, it looks like any of the other thousand-odd rehearsals that transpire over the school year. The director, a native Oklahoman with a lingering Sooner twang, is calling for a little restraint on the part of one of her comic players. Other performers mill about, gossiping quietly. The rehearsal pianist flips ahead a few pages in the score to read over a particularly difficult passage. But one look at the script lying on the piano reveals a curious anomaly. The cover describes the play as the "Fall Rehersal" version. The average cover of, say, a Rodgers and Hammerstein text likely wouldn't contain a suggestion that the words were in any way tentative; nor would it be permit- ted to leave the printer's office with the word "rehearsal" missing an 'a.' But then, this script was hastily typed only weeks before by an amateur clerical. .The place: The Musket office within UAC. The authors: University un- dergraduates Andy Kurtzman (words), William Holab (music) and Scott Eyerly (both). The play: In the Dark, the first original musical Musket has unleashed in nearly a decade, scheduled to open at the Power Center on Nov. 16. Since the authors began work on their script,; well over two years ago, it has Joshua Peck reviews theater for the Daily A rits Page. After a two-year grind, three student authors unveil Musket's first original show in a decade. By Joshua Peck seen several plots, dozens of revisions, and a handful of songs that audiences will never hear. At first, the playwrights were worried that all their tinkering with the show was somehow out-of-the-ordinary. Just in time to save their sanity, Eyerly happened adross the book Sondheim and Company, which tells of the often frantic work habits of composer Stephen Sondheim and his colleagues. "We didn't know it was like that." recalls Eyerly. Their minds at ease, the threesome was able to get back to the dirty business of rearranging the fruits of their work. Eyerly and Kurtzman were sophomores when then-Musket producer Jim Stern came to thenrwith a proposal that they author a show for possible production by the student company. Holab, also a sophomore, joined them soon after, completing. what had started to look like a musical Chicago Mafia: Stern and all three authors had been acquaintances at New Trier West High School in suburban Northfield, Ill. (Leslie Winick, now the show's associate producer, is yet another New Trier graduate.) . Shortly after they began considering ideas for the show, they hit upon the central motif of ghosts, who would be invisible to the other characters but, of course, not to the audience. The ghosts are one of their few early notions that remained more or less intact throughout the show's endless revisions - although, even here, considerable adjustments were made: At one point, the.show pictured 15 ghosts on stage, each of whom was to remain austerely silent throughout. The number has now been trimmed to a tidy five, each quite vocal and delightfully perverse. Among them are a gleefully incestuous set of twins, their adulterous parents, and an uncle who takes pleasure in black- mailing them all. The original conception boasted even more macabre treats. Through talks with various parties in and outside the theatre department, the authors heard comments to the effect that serious and even grisly subject matterhad been un- justly ignored in musical theater. A few people even suggested death and suicide as possible topics for treatment in a musical. The draft that came out of those early suggestions was killed by the Musket staffers who looked it over. Although none of the authors appear very bitter about that initial rejection, they must have been miffed when, not long after they'd returned to the proverbial drawing board, Stephen Sondheim's Sweeney Todd, brought a splash of throat-slitting gore to the Broadway stage. Holab, Kurtzman and Eyerly all saw and loved Sweeney Todd, but ever since Musket declined 'to produce their earlier effort, they have strived toward bringing less of a sinister dimension to the work. The result is doubly suc- cessful: Not only are the ghostly presences presented with a lighter touch, but a couple of mortals - whose clumsy and rocky romance is central to the story - rival for the audience's at- tention. OR ONLY THE second time in history, Musket has adequate space in which to prepare a See THE ATR, Page 7 household word as the re- cently scrutinized Wonder- bread, and these days he spartCs at least as much controversy. Since the country's foremost single consumer advocate has begun to direct his outrage away from the dangers of the Corvair and toward such diverse issues as college entrance examinations, the noise level of sirens, and, lately and most emphatically, cooperatives, the opportunity for judgments and gossip has grown. So it's not surprising that for the past year or so headlines have. queried, "Is Ralph Nader Obsolete?" while the Capitol Hill politicos have debated over cocktails whether the man who once posed for a Newsweek cover in a suit of armor is now washed up. Nader has both devotees and adver- saries eager to broadcast their respec- tive views on whether he is still the citizens' citizen. In a recent- Rolling Stone interview, political columnists Alexander Cockburn and James Ridgeway wrote, "Nader is still the nation's most articulate and effective campaigner against the excesses of big business and government." At the same time, many Washington reporters and politicians are saying just the op- posite. "Ralph Nader?.," said one Washington resident. "Oh, all the papers are saying he's burnt out." Last year, when Nader requested an ap- pearance on NBC's Tomorrow show, host Tom Snyder refused, saying he was "yesterday's news." The attacks came especially fast and furious early last year, when the House o Representatives rejected one of Nader's pet projects, a bill to set up a consumer protection agency. The nation's leading consumer champion can no longer do his job in Washington, people said. Is Ralph Nader slipping, or are the times changing around him?. Whatever the case, the question now is Elisa Isaacson is associate editor of the Sunday Magazine. whether he can point his energies in a practical direction, and prove that, no, Nader is not obsolete. When Nader stood on stage at the Michigan Theatre here last week to ad- dress a crowd of about 1,800, he looked much like the same man whose face fir- st became known to public in the mid- sixties after the publication of his first book, Unsafe At Any Speed, which itself rendered the Corvair obsolete. Yes, his hair is graying (he's 45) and he looked tired that night (he had yet another speech to give in Washington at mid- night), but he wore the habitual three- piece suit and tie, still carried his lanky frame with ease, and looked out at the audience with those same soulful eyes. And his words had a familiar ring to them. Nader was expounding upon the same themes-and using many of the same catch phraes-of corporate monopoly and the need for citizen par- ticipation he addressed in such books as Corporate Power in America and Taming the Giant Corporation. But whereas before Nader intended his theories to be enacted on the stage of Capitol Hill, he came to Ann Arbor last week to recruit the members of his audience as participants on the home front. Following his failure to push a consumer protection agency bill through Congress last year, Nader has been turning away more and more from the increasingly immunized powers in Washington and pinning his hopes for the 1980s on a grass roots campaign. The consumer protection bill's failure was a major catalyst in Nader's disgust with the Washington bureaucracy. The bill, simply enough, would have created Ralph Nader looks By Elisa Isaacson nickels fror Though the jokes on the quite effectiv The consur in the Hous more discoui 'Nader has been turning the increasingly immunizes Washington and pinning hisj 1.980s on a grass roots camaj an Office of Consumer Representation to act as the American consumer's at- torney before federal agencies. Though it would have no power to veto the decisions of those agencies, it would be a legitimate, government-endorsed champion of the people. The idea was not new or radical to Washington, as the late Minnesota Sen. Hubert Humphrey had formulated a similar proposal in 1959. The bill changed Congressional hands throughout the next decade, until Nader adopted it as his consumer agen- cy bill in 1969. After years of rejections, including a Senate filibuster and the threat of presidential veto, Nader thought he saw a savior in Jimmy Car- ter. In 1976, Nader visited Carter in Plains. Ga., and secured a promise that once in the White House the candidate would challenge corporate interests for the benefit of the consumers. However, when the bill came up for a vote in 1978, Carter made a half-hearted attempt at phoning a few Congress members to convince them to approve it. mood in the austerity, ai business seer Nader felt C succumbed t the citizens' u infeffectual. P strategies. Si a presidenti push through concentrate]i based const tom-the c Nader's dri masses took for the ne cooperative displace the voles develop tive," a new spire the p monopolistic says "contrc economic movement is and the consi o)movement H ~E'S EXTREMELY reluc- Whe h tant to use the modest House, Nade powers of his office to sumers' right fight," Nader said of Carter jamin Rosent at the time. He attributes Carter's lack of grass weak stand to corporate pressures. reason. Obs Nader had indeed pinned many hopes Nader's failu on the president, but it was not for lack as the consu of effort on his own part. In fact, many become pas observers on the M'ill charged that the Washington c consumer champion's belligerence portunism- brought the downfall of his own bill. nuclear pow Apparently, Nader's frustration with shining arms the bill's repeated rejections had with too stu manifested itself in outright attacks on some opinion opposing members of Congress. In an consumer bil effort to reach the Congress members a new low in I through their consitituencies, Nader the consume taped localized radio messages. Calling become obsol the anti-agency legislators everything with the tir from "mushy liberals" to "disgusting reporters he double-crossers," Nader urged the continued to citizens to send Congress a message. Washington, Here was an opportunity for the his tactics we people-the consumers who would allies were de benefit from the bill-to participate in Apparently the decision-making. One of Nader's fort to go wi citizen input plans was the "nickel decade. Witlh campaign." He urged each person to and disgruntl send his or her Congressperson enough as the allege money to cover the person's own annual can be convi share of the consumer bill's $15 million the overwhe price tag. For the next few weeks, the porations to i: mailbags in the three House office