arts & efntertainment Somnambulance at the Ark The Michigan Daily-Friday, March 30, 1979-Page 7 Charlie Chaplin's 1952 LIMELIGHT With BUSTER KEATON, CLAIRE BLOOM and NIGEL BRUCE in this his last masterpiece, Chaplin portrays an aging, alcoholic music hall comedian, whose outward life might appear to be a failure, but who passes on his abundant courage at a young protegee, whom he can love only paternally. Chaplin's pathos is at its height, laced with some of his most freshly inventive comedy.UN RANE_ ATAN SAT: LOVE AND DEATH SUN: STRANGERS ON A TRAIN By ERIC ZORN Along with a few megagrams of caf- fine, the Wednesday night Bob Zentz and Gordon Bok concert would have been just fine. The pair, who perform individually and together throughout the course of the concert, are both -jascinating folklorists and accom- plished, diverse instrumentalists, but their show is so low key that it barely registers on the scale. Snappy patter and good audience- rapport were missing, yes, but a folk performer doesn't have to go vaudeville to have a successful act: What both lacked, especially Bob, was zest. For RECORDS By ERIC ZORN ;o Kris Kristofferson, damn his bones, is a perfect example of what plastic suc- cesses will do to the artistic spirit. Once a struggling young musician-poet who wrote and sang rich, rugged songs of life and loving, the celebrated hunk has relaxed, and is now content to foist tipon a wide-eyed public a dippy shadow 'of his former self. ' The Kristofferson who teams with .wife Rita Coolidge on his latest effort, Natural Act, to sing "Number One," "fHoola Hoop," and other musical tragedies, is light years away from the yman who performed on his first three albums. There was a gutty sincerity in his early works, circa 1971, that is slim- 'ly absent, in Natural Act, and thus just Joes to prove that becoming an enter- tainment superstar fattens the wallet but rapes the soul. we are only left hoping that posing for holy pictures will leave the gentleman enough time in the future to scratch pen to paper. Now Kristofferson sings mellow, crooning- songs, and his inadequacy becomes somewhat distracting. He and Coolidge do sing fairly well together, but their harmonies are facile and unin- teresting; so predictable you could drop off to sleep at a moment's notice. EVEN WHEN he's good, he's bad. The poignant, sorrowful ballad, "Loving Her Was Easier (Than Anything I'll Ever Do Again)" which was so sensitively performed on Kr- tofferson's second album, The Silver Tongued Devil and I, is herein sullied by a cutesy Wurlitzer organ, and fur- ther enervated by the slightly revam- ped, androgynous lyrics. This version the somber tenor of the evening, you'd have thought someone missed a mor- tgage payment. FORTUNATEILY, BOTH men have ears for a fine song, and Zentz himself is an uncommonly good song-writer. Without notable exception, the traditional and "in-a-traditional-vein" song to which the sppreciative and rather large Ark crowd was treated were meaningful and cogent. The two of them sang of the land, home, memory, the sea, and the joys of good friends. "Our kind of music is a celebration. A celebration of life," said Bok, who is a noted Maine folklorist recently featured in a full page spread in Time magazine. "Popular, radio music is a celebration of I don't know what. Money." "We're still really part of an oral tradition," added the hefty Zentz, who plays more different instruments than he could possible carry with him. "Ar- tists who transcend this and start pushing to sell their stuff lose the con- tact with both themselves and their audience. Take a look at John Denver." BOK, whose deep, rich singing voice is smooth enough to satisfy any stan- dards of excellence, sat back on the piano and lit a cigarette. "I was told that folk stuff doesn't go on the radio because it deosn't have the pounding bass and the punch of the drums." He offered no indication that he was thinking of adding such extras to his act in the near future. It's true," agreed Zentz. "And the people in this country are sensitized by the media. Something is only good if you've heard of it. Most people know pretty much only the songs off the radio." Bok, who has a frendly New England accent to contrast with Zentz's light Virginia drawl, noticed that the media's decentralizing influence is chipping away at the cultural traditions of his own state. "It's hard to fine one bonafide accent, even in the smallest Maine town," he said. "We've lost a lot, but it's nice to see groups . . . reclaiming the traditions." Strumming a chord, Zentz added, "We're doing this to pass something along. To give something to the people who come to see us." Unfortunately, this enthusiasm for the music and culture did not seem to carry over to the stage all that well, and the solemn mood of most of the evening seemed far from a celebration. Oh, well, you know theose New Englan- ders: Never can get a rise out of 'em. MEDIATRICS presents CAT AND MOUSE (Claude Lelouch) A Gallic mystery in which the detective falls in love with the main suspect. A delightful game of who-dun-what. FRI. MARCH 30 NAT SCI AUD 7:00,8:45, 10:30 ' AND THE GOODBYE GIRL (Herbert Ross) Neil Simon's happiest and funniest comedy with Marsha Mason and Richard Dreyfuss. About laughing, love and warmth. Dreyfuss won the Academy Award for the best actor. SAT. MARCH 31 NAT SCI AUD 7:00, 9:00 ADMISSION $1.50 . INDIVIDUALIZED GEOMETRIC HAIR DESIGN CAMPUS: 520 E. WILLIAMS-761-3485 DOWNTOWN: 338 S. ASHLEY-761-2699 CINEMA GUILD Tonight @o 7:00 & 9:35 OLD ARCH. AUD. $1.50 I.)UI) U I.. .4 mE~ I Eu SPECIAL ATTRACTIONS PRESENTS AN ALL- PROFESSIONAL CAST IN FOUR ONE - ACTS WRITTEN & DIRECTED BY EDWARD ALBEE THE AMERICAN DREAM******* THE ZOO STORY 830 p.ni 5:00 P.M. LISTENING Ceti COUNTING THE WAYS m L Kris Tiristofferson and Rita Coolidge ANatural Act A&k1SP-4690 These days, apparently considering 'Himself too famous to write songs, Kristofferson has relied on songwriters who are not fit to pack his lunch either 44 terms of melodies or lyrics. A precious three songs on the new album 'ire Kristofferson's own, but those were 41 written at least eight years ago, and BOOSTING BLOOD NEW YORK (AP)-Athletes might improve their performance if they got "high" on their own blood rather than turning to vitamins, according to a recent report. Studies on blood boosting-the removal and subsequent reinfusion of the athlete's blood-can improve exer- cise time and performance by as much as 40 per cent, according to the report in The Physician and Sportsmedicine magazine. Under -the boosting program, a physician removes up to a quart of blood from the athlete. The blood is then frozen in a process that prevents red blood cells from dying. MARCH 31 - POWER CENTER SPECIAL OFFER ! ! BUY FIRST PERFORMANCE- - GET THE ! SECOND PERFORMANCE 1/2 PRICE!!! Tickets $4-8. Available al the PTP Ticket Office in The Michigan League Friday from 10-i and from 2-5 p.m. (764-0450); Saturday at the Power Center Box Office from 12 noon to 8:30 p.m. (763-3333), and at all Hudsons Stores. Universiy guest arust-m-residence Mel wnier an ui uversiy stuUent Jaie neu perform in Josepn walker's The River Niger. The play, which tells the story of a black Harlem family in the early 70's, will be staged at the Power Cen- ter April 11 hrough April 15. p t brings tears for different reasons than its predecessor, nine years ago. A star may have been born, but it's time to get semi-tough with this Rhodes scholar who is content to languish in the comfort of the synthetic artistry which will keep him on covers of fan magazines only so long as he looks like such an adorable brute. He's not getting older, he's getting worse, and as a responsible party for this boring and presumptuous album, Kristofferson will surely be the songwriter who fell from grace with the public. ANIMATION NIGHT Picture if you will a world in which fiction becomes fact, where boundless imagination is transformed into reality, and rules are invoked and revoked at whim. This is the world of animation. A unique forum for socio-political motifs, real and surreal art as well as humor all enmeshed into one unfor- gettable evening. Featured will be animations from all parts of the globe portraying the many styles and forms which make the world of animation so spectacular. An evening not to be missed. SATURDAY-ALL THE PRESIDENT'S MEN TON ITE at Angell Hall, Aud A 7:00 and 9:00 $1.50 THE FILM HAIR TI L .~ C4 MON, thru FRI. 7:15-9:40 SAT. & SUN. 1:15-4:00-7:15-9:40 r I f .n \ Oak Au, L -l ,r. .r. r . r..r : tij . ,.. t " " '"::: ....; ._. i, :; NS TI DOLBY STEREO TMfourTrack Stereo HA IR.. ATE HOW ONIGHT 2 AIDNITE