ge 6-Friday, November 2, 1979-The Michigan Daily venue btr St. 70-970 MONTY PYTHON'S 1LIFE OF BRIAN FINAL 14 DAYS! Fri, Mon 6:30, 8:20; 10:10 Mon Tues, Thur, Fri Adults $1.50 til 7:00 (or capacity) Sat, Sun, Wed 12:50, 2:40 4:30, 6:30, 8:20,10:10 Sat, Sun, Wed, Adults $1.50 til 1:30 (or capacity) ' $2.50 til 5:30 (or capacity) COMING IN14 DAYS Guess Who's Back? "ANIMAL. HOUSE' (R) THE $1.50 ,BARGAIN! By GILLIAN BOLLING The stage of the Trueblood Theatre shakes alive with the bright colors and vibrant rhythms of The Lion and the Jewel. The play uses music, dance, mime and African ceremony to tell the ,story of a young village maiden being courted both by the chief of the bush tribe and by a Westernized school teacher. Director Janice Reid does very well in her handling of tribal scenes with naturally vivacious performances coming from the many actors who play natives. In some of the later parts, though, the pace slows down and loses some of the involvement produced by the massive energy of the natives. Most notably, the' scene featuring interac- tion between the maiden, Sidi, and the village chief, Bale Baroka, is quite draggy and causes the tempo to be in- The Lion and The Jewel By Wole Soyinka Trueblood Theater, Nov. 1-2, 8p.m. Sidi ..........................Kayjona Jackson Lakunle...................Rhonnie Washington Bale Baroka......................Junye Brown Janice Reid, director; Larry Ham, choreographer terrupted. Fortunately, the lively pace is soon restored, leaving the play to continue until its upbeat ending. THE PLAYWRIGHT, Nigerian-born Wole Soyinka, uses highly colorful language to convey word pictures. The actors do a fine job with the melodies of the words using various cadences to create a harmonious interaction with the jungle drums, Rhonnie Washington is delightfully stuffy in the lead role as the school teacher, Lakunle. He possesses the fine timing and vocal dexterity necessary to DANCE JAZZ Nov. 3-Dec. 15 BEG. 2-3:00 INT. 3-4:00 ADVANCED &AFRICAN also offered CALL 668-7731 evenings DANCE SPACE 621 E. William $28 for 7 wk. session a roaring success bring a great deal of grace and humor to his role. He also does vey well with several mime sequences, as he is ex- tremely expressive with his hands and lithe physique. The object of Lakunle's desire, Sidi, is played by Kayjona Jackson with not quite enough spark to incite believably the lust of two men. Although she possesses a certain charm and has a. winningly bright smile, she is often stiff in her mannerisms, especially when posed against the agile Washington. She does well, however, in deflecting Washington's Westernized passes, humorously denouncing kisses as "mouthing and licking" and thus deflating the amorous teacher. JUNYE BROWN gives a spry dignity to his role as the aging tribal chief wan- ting the lovely Sidi for his latest wife. Marietta Baylis, as Sadiku, the chief's oldest and most faithful wife plays her role too broadly, with her mugging to the audience receiving a lot of laughs but ultimately becoming tiresome. Pat Garner and Jon W. Hallquist do well as the surveyor and his foreman, creating complete and very funny characters without lines but rather through physical and facial gestures. Much of the credit for the excitement and rejoicing in the native scenes goes to choreographer Larry Ham and his assistant Duke Atano Osima. The dan- ces are designed especially for The Lion and the Jewel and Osima, who is from Nigeria, serves as cultural ad- visor along with Larry Hunter as a musician. In the first act there is a native play enacted and later a memory sequence featuring the arrival of the white man, in which the dancers effectively transcend the stage and spill into the aisles. The dances become joyful celebrations of life and color as the dancers whirl in their bright native costumes and convey an uninhibited sense of abandonment (with an especially fine performance from Willia Wright, as a slithering snake and later a masked man). Also of note is the extremely engaging performance by nymphlike young dancer Jabari Nkosi James, as the baby of the tribe. The set is simply designed with bam- boo platforms and stairs facilitating good use by the director of the different stage levels. The green bush motifs and the lush lighting help give a feel of the bush. Lighting was also used effectively in creating a colorfully warm trance- like sense during the tribal dances. At a few points in the play, the ..T i r Kayjona Jackson plays the beautiful village maiden Sidi to Rhonnie Washington's "Westernized" schoolteacher Lakunke in Wole Soyinka's "The Lion and the Jewel," tonight through Saturday at 8 p.m. in Trueblood Theater. physicality becomes belabored and distracting, such as when the natives are gathered on the staircase, each on a different step down to the bottom, with choreographed movements showing the passing of an offering up to the white man one by one to the beat of the drum. This movement is ingenious and visually exciting, however, it is repeated so many times that it becomes monotonous. At another point, the chief and his attendant wrestle for so long and so vigorously that their lines are rather lost in the process of the fleshy.' battle. All in all, director Reid effectively brings a vivid celebration onto thef stage with The Lion and the Jewel. The, show is an entertaining selection for the first of this year's University Showcase. Series and the University's entry in the annual American College Theatre Festival competition. The show sparkles with many vital performances and matches the jungle drums in creating a pulse of life. r* Unique opportunity to v several graduate schc tion on admissions, cot with M.B.A. degree. Sponsored by the Pre-Prof Interested Students and Faculty Invited f-R1US 12E DAY Thulrsd, No. 8, 1979--1-2 am, 1-4 pm Algerian forces show off ALGIERS, Algeria (AP) - Algeria paraded its military plaining bitterly about U.S. moves to supply arms to its might yesterday amid a rumble of war talk in North Africa, neighbor and foe, Morocco. showing off Soviet-supplied MiG-25 warplanes, T-72 tanks, LIBYA IS the only other Arab country known to possess the. and SAM-9 missiles never before displayed here. MiG-25, the Soviet Union's most advanced warplane. Algeria The hour-long military parade tended to confirm Algeria's has a squadron of nine, seven of which screamed low over weapons supremacy in North Africa, even as it was com- Algiers harbor to wild applause from a throng of thousands. Shapiro on leave; Sussman on job (Continued from Page 1) center - for a number of years. One of the reasons Shapiro cited for postponing taking the presidency until Jan. 1 was to assess the University's strengths and weaknesses, and to think about his priorities for the institution in the next decade. Interim President Allan Smith will continue to serve until Shapiro takes over. SUSSMAN SAID he can see acting as vice-president for academic affairs through winter term, depending on when a new administrator is selected and how long the transition takes. The 60-year-old administrator said that despite the short time he will be serving, he does not see himself acting as simply a caretaker. "The risk always is in these appoin- tments that it will be as just a caretaker," Sussman said. "There's no such thing as standing still. Decisions have to be made, and there are things you have to do." HE SAID HE would address himself to certain matters already on the agen- da for the next several months such as the preparation of the budget and defending the University's request for money in Lansing. The deadline for nominations for the job of vice-president for academic af- fairs is Nov. 15. The Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs (SACUA) and two MSA-appointed' students will sift through those nominations before narrowing the list' down to about five candidates. Smith and Shapiro will use that list to nake a decision on the final candidates. The committee is still collectinga names, according to Mathematics Prof. and SACUA member Morton Brown. He also said the group has not yet set a timetable. There have been about 130- 170 nominations thus far, Brown said he had been told. "WE'RE HOPING TO GET (a new vice-president) reasonably quickly," said Brown. "We don't want this to drag on." In administrative action on other campuses, Eastern Michigan Univer- sity President John Porter announced yesterday that former acting president Anthony Evans will become provost.1 and vice-president for academic affairs at that university Monday. Under the initiative of Porter, the university bypassed a nationwide sear- ch to appoint one of its current ad- w ministrators to the post. PREPARE FOR. 1AT BAT -* FAT1-.G i A ' 1A VAT-*AT M I, I ] I NAT'L DETALBOARDS NURSING BOARDS 4 Flexible Programs & Hours i ,9