Second City: The Michigan Daily-Thursday, February 22, 1979-Page 7 First-rate irreverence By OWEN GLEIBERMAN When The National Lampoon Show passed through Ann Arbor three years ago - featuring a then-unknown named Meatloaf - it drew a decidedly eccen- tric audience at Power Center. The auditorium was barely one-third full, and a paucity of preppie-types was sprinkled amidst the geeks, the weir- dos, and a spate of curious onlookers. Times have changed. National Lam- poon is now making blockbuster movies, the geeks appear in smaller herds daily, and comedy is the word - anytime, anywhere. Second City, the Chicago-based im- prov troupe, has gotten its share of media coverage of late, largely through its having given basic training to Saturday Night Live regulars Bill Murray, Gilda Radner, John Belushi, and Dan Ackroyd. Still, with almost no regular national exposure (their television show, was only recently ad- ded to the line-up of Detroit's PBS station), and a frugal publicity cam- paign for their Tuesday night ap- pearance at Power, it was a sur- prisingly large and enthusiastic audience that greeted the group. AND COMPARED to that National Lampoon assemblage of only a few years ago, this was a crowd of a dif- ferent color: Gone were the comic derelicts pining for a fix of "sick humor." Looking around at the audien- ce, comprised of clean-cut students, faculty members, and assorted representatives of Ann Arbor's local jet-set (if it can be called that), one might have thought he had wandered into a performance of the National Kabuki Theatre, or something smacking of a bit more "tradition." Perhaps comedy, however, has become our new tradition. And for was comedy of no redeeming social value whatsoever, and much of it was hilarious. IN A NIGHT-CLUB singer routine recalling Bill Murray's spasmodic im- pressions, a performer sang a number about breaking up with his old girlfriend entitled "It Was Your Fault," delivering every caustic innuendo with the suave arrogance of Martin Mull. + One skit, a song-and-dance hymn-of- praise to those wonderful short-order cooks at Denny's who serve up our cherished tuna melts, was a beautiful tidbit of off-the-wall inanity. In a performance with no props and a tinkling piano for atmosphere, material often lives or dies on the strength of the performers' personalities. Of the six actors in this touring company, three - the nightclub singer, the Denny's chef (a burly, Paul Bunyanish fellow), and a woman whose sniveling nursery school teacher might have been Lisa Leubner's aunt - had a certain charm and charisma that sometimes trium- phed over the weaker material. Their three compatriots were all versatile and talented performers, but oc- casionally they missed the mark. One actor's performance as a hyper-active, nerdy teenager was so unfortunately unfunny that his frenetic energy began to make one wince. BUT THERE was also some inspired lunacy: An S-M country-and-western song called "Too Much Sex and Violen- ce On TV, and Not Enough at Home"; two brothers downing whiskey at a New York bar and screaming about how "a degree in English lit doesn't mean shit"; and a Chicago quarterback doing an emotional commercial for Harlequin Romance novels. By the end, when Seals and Crofts came out to sing "Diamond Girl," only to have their lip- synch tape change to "Help" and "Torn Between Two Lovers," the audience was ready forranything, and that's exactly what they got. Second City is apparently capable of reaching the tasteless heights of Michael O'Donoghue or Frank Zappa. The troupe's most appealing quality, however, is a refreshing irreverence that doesn't hold enough venom to ballast jokes about death camps or enemas, favorite subjects of the sickie set. In one sketch, a meeting of the Ann Arbor School Board on the topic of sex education in the schools, a Neanderthal trucker argued from the audience that he had a beautiful 16-year-old daughter, and that he didn't "want some young punk spreading her creamy white thighs and violating her flowering pubescence." In another context, a joke like that would be nothing if not crude; on a program featuring songs about short-order cooks, it was simply in- spired silliness. And in this age of Mork and Mindy, inspired silliness is a' valuable commodity. MANN THEATRES Starts Friday, February 23rd 1 0 - MAPLE VIRAGE SHOPPING (ENTER "THE DEERHUNTER" Starring ROBERT DENIRO PGJ UmtudArst Showtimes MON.-FRI. SAT. & SUN. 6:30, 9:00 :45 6:30 3:45 9:00 Ends Tursaday, February 22nd YOU'LL BELIEVE A MAN CAN FLY SUPERMAN MAROON BANDNO 9EEHAKA SHQWTIME MON.-FR 7:00, 9:45 Tickets on sale3 prior to shoe "MARL"ON'"RAD RELEASED BY WARNER EROG&0 [FPI S SAT.& SUN. I. 1:30 7:00 5 4:15 9:45 30 minutes wtlme ~vvtlme __ PETER COOK'& DUDLEY MOORE in 1967 } Daily Photo by ANDY FREEBERG A member of Second City clowns around during the troupe's Tuesday night performance in Power Center. BEDAZZLED Would you sell your soul to the devil for seven chances at Raquel Welch? Cook & Moore come from "beyond the fringe" to grace this stimulating comedy. Usual stylish direction by Stanley Donen, whose films include Charade and Singin' in the Rain. The original not ready for prime time player, Moore made a reappearance in the Chevy Chase vehicle, Foul Play-as a killer dwarf. FRI: THE PHILADELPHIA STORY SAT: Schrader's BLUE COLLAR those looking to become a part of it, Second City's high-energy performance was an aptly amusing initiation. Second City's sketches fall somewhere between Saturday Night Live at its most acidic and the inspired wackiness of The Carol Burnett Show. The six performers (there were no programs, and I didn't catch any of their names), were adept at timely social satire, offering inspired bits like Dr. Cheryl Kinsey, telling women how. to fake better orgasms ("Lay back and moan, 'Ohhh, I've got the music in me!' "). But the ensemble's forte'was their longer, rambling material. This CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT 8:30 only OLD ARCH. AUD. $1.50 Poet offers 'tribal' reading The Ann Arbor Film Cooperative presents at Nat. Sc. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 22 DUEL 8:30 & 10:00-NAT. SCI. This superb suspense film directed by Steven (JAWS, CLOSE ENCOUNTERS, SUGARLAND EXPRESS) Spielberg brings the nightmare of every driver-to the screen: being mysteriously pursued by a trucker in a huge rig, with no pos- sible'means of escape. Dennis Weaver plays a salesman on the California backroads who becomes caught in a highway game of death. This was Spiel- berg's first feature-length film, and the one which shot him to auteur super- stardom. Tomorrow: Annie Hall & Woody Allen Retrospective BY CAROL WIERZBICKI To the Seneca Indian, a good song or poem, whether it exists to ward off demons or simply as a proper fanfare for the animals, requires a cracking voice and a good stamping foot to keep the rhythm. Poet Jerome Rothenberg, rattling and chanting his way through his Tuesday night Benzinger poetry series reading, showed that he under- stands all of this and more. He led off with an upbeat, exciting chant, "The animals are coming," repeating this line over and over; sometimes he stressed different vowels, sometimes he would sling his voice upward one or two steps, then plhmmet it back down to complete the vowel sound. One of the reasons why Rothenberg understands tribal poetry so well is that he spent three months in 1968 living with the Seneca Indians. During this time, he listened to stories of the elders, and became acquainted with the folklore, geography, and mythology of the Senecas. With the help of inter- preters, he translated their songs, stories, and chants into English - not an easy task given our language, which is not "vowelish" or gutteral like tribal languages. Just the same, Rothenberg recreates the same feeling with his songs. When he begins his rattling and howling, the room seems to grow larger, and from somewhere, a wind stirs ... Another reason why Rothenberg is able to deal with his poetry on a primitive and emotional level, yet also on a level that is complex and brillian- tly psychological, is that he is acutely sensitive to his own ethnic roots. A Jew of Polish ancestry, Rothenberg ex- plores the world of his past in Poland/1931, a book based on Hasidic folklore. Filled with obsessions, super- stitions, and Ginsberg-like incan- tations, it is a strange, mystical book, where what is not said is as important as what is. One feels that he is not so much reading poetry as that a peasant is telling his or her story, punctuating the silences with emotional outbursts and eloquent waves of the hand. Part of this effect is due to Rothen- berg's style of recitation. I didn't truly understand the poems in Poland/1931 until he read a few out loud. The strong, rhythmic drive of the short-cropped phrases, the sparseness of the language, the obsessions with repeating words, all come forth with Rothen- berg's straightforward, earthy delivery. His voice seems to resonate upward from somewhere around his feet, and whether he's invoking the spirits of the Seneca or the ghosts of his past, it's always a forceful poetry of the body - rattle-shaking, foot-tapping wholeness. The physicality of the poems them- selves demands such a performance. But underneath the enumerations of peasant artifacts and earthy sexual imagery, there always lurks the spiritual and the demonic: my mind is stuffed with tablecloths & rings but mymind is dreaming of poland stuffed with holand brought in the imagination, to a black wedding a naked bridegroom hovering above his naked bride mad poland how terrible thy jews at weddings ... A kind of sacredness, strangeness, and "otherness", as Rothenberg says, comes from total self-immersion into the poem or song. Sometimes, as with the Indian chants, vowels of words have to be changed to achieve this feeling of mystery. A perfect blending of the humorous world of material concerns, and the psychological world which transcends space and time, occurs in "Cokboy," the last poem in Poland/1931, in which a Jew finds himself in a strange land with . . . Indians! Bewildered, the anti- hero describes the Indians as "deez pipple mit strange eyes" and calls him- self "Cokboy," not "cowboy." The poem contains the inevitable cycles of birth and death, Indian wars and progress, all mixed up in bizarre In- dian-Slavic-Jewish imagery: a hundred fifty different shadows Jews &genatiles who bring the law to Wilderness (he says) this man is me mgrandather & other men-of-letters mn with letters carring the nail lithituan ian ponyv-express riders the financially crazed Buffalo Bill still riding in the lead hours before avenging the death of Custer Here he counters ritualistic prayer with offbeat language. On the western frontier, where all cultures converge, we see Biblical stodginess butting up against modern cynicism, politics, and industrial progress. And yet, Jerome Rothenberg is able to reconcile the two cultures, if not in content, in style. The Jew in "Cokboy" remains relentlessly European, the In- dians retain their basically American resentment toward the exploitation that swallows up their land. But in the poem, Jew and Indian marry and with the marriage comes a tangible reason for their unity. So it is with Rothenberg's language. Shrouded in that somber Polish over- coat is an exuberance, a controlled joy at living, something that wants to shout and shake a rattle. From his deep ex- ploration of the ethnic dimensions of poetry, and his careful melding of sound and meaning, Rothenberg brings the spiritual and material together in a continual reassertion of man in contact with miracles. Jerome Rothenberg has authored several books, among them A Seneca Journal, Shaking the Pumpkin, and Technicians of the Sacred, a collection of tribal poetry from around the world. A former University graduate student, he now teaches in San Diego. TODA Y-4:Opm 2225A ANHall Faye Harrison Chairperson, Youth Parole and Review Board State of Michigan Speaking on "The Juvenile Offender and the State of Michigan System" Mediatrics presents: .0. WINGS (William Wellman, 1929) Two World War I Air Corps pilots are in love with the same woman, Clara Bow. Their rivalry turns into respect, then into friendship. Winner of the first Academy Award for Best Picture of the Year. Thurs., Feb. 22 Assembly Hall, Mich. Union 6:45, 9:30 w. SUMMER JOBS CAMP TAMARACK Brighton and Ortonville, Michigan Interviewing, February 27 Summer Placement Office CALL 763-4117 for appointment Join the Arts Page m - The Classified Alternative, BUSINESSMEN.. , ~You have the means to tap the IN4TEREST t S of a very selective and consumptive audience.S MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING s the method to effectively and affordably . reach YOUR MARKET. IT IS T H E K EY T0: Noon Luncheon Soup & Sandwiches 75C Fri., Feb. 23 Phyllis Ocker, Associate Director, Womens Athletics, U of M: "THE STATE OF WOMEN'S ATHLETICS AT THE U OFM" GUILD HOUSE, 802 Monroe BAHIA A robust, merry and musical panorama involving the lives, loves and folk religion of shantytown inhabitants is pre- sented in "Bahia," the diverting new work by Marcel Camus, who directed the' prize-winning "Black Orpheus" 20 years ago. Fri., Feb. 23 Nat. Sci. Aud. 7:00,9:00 DRIVE-IN (Rod Amateau, 1978) A fun movie that is likeable, fast-moving entertainment. It's a movie-within-a-movie, DISASTER 1976, showing at the Alama Theatre on the wildest Friday night of the year. While a mid-air collision, a tidal wave, a blazing skyscraper and a beserk shark compete for attention on the big-screen, there's even more fun and action in the audience. Sat., Feb. 24 Nat. Sci. Aud. 7:00, 8:30, 10:00 PARANOIA IS H EALTHY WHEN THE FBI1S ON CAMPUS Protect Your Rights "Student's Rights and the FBI" Barb Kessler, Molly Reno Attorneys, Student Legal Services "On Organizing Against Harassment" Kate Rubin Vice President, Michigan Student Assembly (* .-" 4- University students, faculty & alumni 35,000 Daily readers One of the most exclusive academic aidi Pnrc c in tIhnrrmintv . T.l,._CC/ t ,1.tl' r// L _.i/ i , % '////rG .' %f i4