The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, January 23, 1979-Page 7 Fair Child' well bred r '1 SPRING BREAK March 3-10. 1979 By JOSHUA PECK Taken on its own terms, This Fair Child of Mine makes for a fine evening of . .. stagework. The word "theater" doesn't quite fit here, because plays are works, ordinarily, that unfold plots and characters in a deliberate, gradual fashion. Fair Child takes selected highlights of Shakespeare's plays, specifically ones dealing with parents and their children, and strings them together into one entertainment. But given the restrictions placed on it by its very format, the show doth please quite greatly, and playgoers This Fair Child of Mine_ 7rtiehlood Thacuer January 19, 20 Actors: Nicholas Pennell Marti Maraden Tom Wood In association with the Stratford Shakespearian Festival Foundation Production staged by Nicholas Pennell. Ike'hmr- L.aphne Dare. I Lihin Director, Alec Cooper. umpant L'c ,)e manaerI . Martin Bragg. unknowledgeable about the Bard's masterworks will find it a satisfactory introduction to many of his most in- triguing personages, plots, and patter. Nicholas Pennell, Marti Maraden, and Tom Wood, all members of Canada's prestigious Stratford Festival company, comprise the cast. While none of the three have any excep- tionally bad scenes, on the whole, their various characters tend toward uniformity owing to the nearly 20 roles each must play. The reason lies chiefly in the script, as even an actor of, for in- stance, Pennell's stature could not be reasonably expected to play a scene as one character, leave stage for a scant half-minute, and re-emerge then in an entirely different emotional guise. A more ordinary setting would lend the actor time to do most of his pre-curtain character work offstage and at his leisure, not in a hurried thirty seconds between scenes. What results, in the majority of the show's 22 dramatic sequences (plus two sonnets), is a set of characters that are far less distinct from each other than any of the cast is actually capable of assuming. Of cour- se, "mediocre" for actors of this high a calibre is appreciably better than the standard university fare. PENNELL, WHO staged the show as well as taking the lion's share of the good male roles, knows his strengths well. Not surprisingly, his best scenes Lou Killen For seafarers only " " A whale of a show By STEVE HOOK Lou Killen, a bearded English balladeer and storyteller, appeared at the Ark this past weekend, and for those thirsting for detailed descrip- tions of Scandinavian royalty, eighty-ton sailing ships, and the traditional customs of Great Britain, it was an enchanting opportunity to satisfy the curiosity. For those not necessarily curious about such things, his performances were a tiring challenge to keep up with. The audience seemed to attest to this as the Saturday night perfor- mance drew on. Scanning the crowd, a concrete split seemed evident bet- ween those enraptured by the lengthy, involved stories serving as background for the ballads, and those long, long gone in slumber. LOU KILLEN insists on laying out the complex backgrounds of the traditional folk ballads which he performs. From fully describing the rigging of a schooner to giving ex- tended overviews of political hierar- chies, he seemed determined that his ballads would be thoroughly un- derstood. The descriptions vastly outlasted the songs they were meant to describe. To many in the audience these descriptions were all too in- volved, while the actual music came too rarely. As Killen lumbered into his third set, the onlookers illustrated this by dozing obviously, or disappearing altogether. To Killen, though, all the background is a necessary prerequisite to a proper exhibition of traditional folk music. It is certainly not simple stuff, and to present the music without the background makes for an incm- plete performance. THE EMPHASIS Killen places on the lyrics of his music is made clear by his simple singing technique. He stands and delivers song after song, accompanied only by his concetina, an accordian-like instrument; and the tapping of his foot. ' This is all he needs to present his music, because it is the heritage behind the songs that is important. "I've got a strong feeling for my heritage," the 45-year-old balladeer explained. "If I can only get people to realize their own heritage ..." ACCORDING to Killen, people in the United States don't seem to "realize" their heritage, although he feels that it is there. "It's not all goody goody," he stated, "but it's definitely there." Having written none of the material he performs, Killen has a repertoire of over 300 songs, all of which are "either traditional or modern written in a traditional vein." Much of his program has been written by his close friend Cyril Tawney, an English folksong writer who Killen claims is the best in England. FOR ALL the shortcomings with his showmanship, Lou Killen often succeeded in delighting the audien- ce, inviting them to join in on many rousing choruses. These choruses, which perked up the snoozers and provided release for the alert, were the high points for the audiences, with colorful lyrics like: Beat the drums over And play the fife merrily. Sound the dead marches And carry him along. Take him to the graveyard, Fire four volleys over him. He was a young sailor Cut down in his prime. Although Killen's performance lacked the dynamic appeal one might expect, his purpose was to ex- pand the horizons of his audience, to make them more aware of the beauty of traditional English folk music, and of the heritage it in- volves. In this he did not fail. interpretation would only have bred confusion. . Marti Maraden manages the Bard's many women handily, though she breaks away from the prevalent uniformity somewhat less often than her male counterpart. Her Miranda, last seen the same season as Pennell's Hamlet on the Stratford stage, shines with all the delicate innocence and wonder imaginable. "O, what a brave new world this is, that has such people in it" is among the lines in Fair Child most delightfully delivered. Lovely, too, is her distraught Juliet, anguished over her inability to defeat her clan's adversity to her love affair. ONLY IN their choice of vehicle can the players be held accountable for the production's worst failing; the shor- tcuts and inaccuracies it must oc- casionally employ to make all the material manageable by its small cast. When, in one scene, Queen Gertrude finds herself talking with two different Hamlets, so that Pennell can slip off to ready himself for his next segment, one wishes the characters would simply sit still, at least for a little while. Worse still is another Hamlet excer- pt, when Polonius and Gertrude walk on arm-in-arm and proceed to deliver speeches of advice to one young man (Wood), sitting mute on the stage. If members of the audience had a hard time recognizing the sequence, perhaps it is because it never occurs. In the original, Polonius presents his advice to Laertes, Gertrude hers to Hamlet. Polonius' little rampage is pompous and redundant, Gertrude's is thoughtful and caring. To present the speeches consecutively, as if they are two sides of the same coin, is to mar the text un- forgiveably, and if This Fair Child of Mine had meant to pay tribute to the Bard's way with words and characters, it ought to have refrained from twisting them. vho starred in many of the different Program's production of "This Fair nd at the Trueblood Theater. TOM WOOD is given lowest billing on the program, but puts himself ar- tistically in the same general neigh- borhood as his compatriots. His best moment, and the show's best within the comic realm, is as the clownish adolescent from The Two Gentlemen of Verona, when he petulantly derides his "dog," a wooden pull-toy, for failing to wax emotional over his impending departure.v As Richard III, though, while Wood is not without character, he fails to in- dicate amply just how malevolent the last Plantaganet really is. His flippant conversation with his mother should be a little bit less callous, and perhaps a f Sergei Eisenstein's 1944 IVAN THE TERRIBLE (part 1) The first part of a projected trilogy that was never finished but was never- theless Eisenstein's magnum opus. He conceived of Ivan as Grand Opera in the Wagnerian tradition: an epic of Russia's medieval past-A heroically athletic aestheticism. Score by Sergei Prokofiev. (Part II willsbe shown Mon- day, Feb. 26). Wed: James Cain double feature: DOUBLE INDEMNITY (8t 7) & MILDRED PIERCE (at 9:05) Thurs: WOMAN IN THE DUNES touch more calculating. The afore-mentioned Pericles excer- pt stands as the play's finale, a wise decision on the part of Pennell. The scene is one of the finest examples in literature of the classic Greek notion of nostos, or reconciliation, and -is ap- propriately treated by this rendition. Pericles is a battered old man unable, or perhaps just unwilling, to speak. His silence is born of years of lonely desolation. He is visited by a young girl whom, we discover, is his daughter, believed dead. As the truth creepingly dawns on the man (Pennell), we are treated to the sight of his ennui ever so slowly becoming unbridled joy. Pen- nell's vocal control is what makes this portrayal a great one, as when, glan- cing at the girl, he produces a sort of verbal double-take, heartwarmingly belying his ostensible disbelief. It is this sort of scene, and yes, there are a few, that lifts This Fair Child of Mine above its basic difficulties often enough to make it worthwhile and rewarding. REGENCYTRAVEL The friendly Tour Store on the Corner 66f5-6i122 601 E. WILLIAM (CORNER MAYNARO) Ib ANN ARDOR, MICN. ,,., 48104 , F'T I. CINEMA GUILD Sunflight Holidays Cozumel ....... from $419 Grand Cayman.. from $449 Guadeloupe .... from $519 Ixtapa........ from $419 Jamaica ........ from $389 Mazatlan ........ from $349 Orlando from $229 San Juan ......... from $429 Prices based on double occupancy TONIGHT AT 7:..S :. OLD ARCH AUD 'The Ann Arbor Film Coopertive presents at Aud A Tuesday, January 23 DERSU UZALA 7- (Arika Kurosawa, 1977) 7 & 9:30--Aud A Japan's master director (THE SEVEN SAMUARI, THRONE OF BLOOD) has been stunning the world's film festivals with his latest work. Dersu Uzala is an old Siberian (not unlike Daniel Boone to Americans) who helps a group of outsiders survive the Siberian wild. Tomorrow: SUMMER IN THE CITY and WOODSTOCK mum Vegas fiesta Night at c Wednesday Evening,!Januasy24th t 1st PRIZE - 3 Days & 2 Nights lodging for 2 in las- Vegas. Casino Chips, Meals, Beverages-Plus Many Extras 2nd PRIZE - Las Vegas Weekend for 2 (same as above) 3rd PRIZE - Dinner for 2 at Don Cisco's Alcoholic Beverages not included Contest Entry Fee $6.00 per Couple No Cover Charge at the Door Spectators Welcome Proper Disco Attire Required 611 Church St., near S. University Nicholas Penell and Marti Maraden, w sequences in the Professional Theater1 Child of Mine," which played last weeke are those he has played in full produc- tions here and at Stratford in recent years. They are from the title roles of Pericles and Hamlet in which he enacts the aging Tyrian rediscovering his daughter, and the young Dane warning his mother away from her murderous_ groom, respectively: Curiously, in the latter of these scenes, Pennell steers clear of the more heavily Freudian interpretation given the role at Stratford two seasons back, in which, if memory serves, he kissed his mother adieu with a savory, longing kiss. Perhaps Pennell felt that, sheared of the preceding stirring of Hamlet's Oedipal leanings, the psychoanalytic; l Ann Arbor, Michigan 995-59551 WEDNESDAY IS MONDAY IS ADuLTS FRi., SAT.,SUN. "BARGAIN DAY" "GUEST NIGNT" EVE. HOLIDAYS $3.50 $1.50 until 5:30 TWO ADULTS ADMITTED " ALL MTINEE .5. FOR PRICE OF ONE CHILDTO14 51.50 1 WAYSIDE THEATRE WALT DISNEY'S 3020 Washtenaw " PINOCCHIO" Phone 434-1782 ARtTS STAFF S ARTS EDITORS ERIC ZORN R.J. SMITH THEATER EDITOR: JOSHUA PECK STAFF WRITERS: Bill Barbour, Jim Eckert, Pat Fabrizio, Pat Gray, Diane Haithman, Katie Herzfeld, Steve Hook, Mark Johansson, Rich Loranger, Peter Manis, Dobilas Matulionis, Anna Nissen, Roger Pensman, Christopher Potter, Lily Prigioniero, Alan Rubenfeld, Will Rubiono, Anne Sharp, Renee Shilkusky, Mike Taylor, Keith Tosolt, Karolyn Wallace, Carol Wierzbicki, Dan Weiss, Tim Yagle, Bruce Young I I the Collaborative winter art & craft i, F' w U