arts & entertainment MUSKET '79: The Michigan Daily--Saturday, April 7, 1979--Page I .v. On The Town: A bit off By JOSHUA PECK From its opening in 1944 to its second The New York Times. It has been described as innovative, droll, witty, and last revival in 1963, On The Town and clever. So far as I have been able to has had nary a nasty word said about it determine, no critic has ever called the in that maker and breaker of theater, Bernstein-Comden-Green collaboration H.MS. PinafOre a rousing Success BY NINA SHISHKOFF Never has the Gilbert and Sullivan Society given a better performance H.M.S. Pinafore than the opening night of their latest W.S. Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan production, HMS Pinafore. Never? tydia Mendelssohn Well, hardly ever. It is also rare that- Aprils-8 and 12-14 Lydia Mendelssohn Theater boasts such an enthusiastic, thunderously ap- Ralph Rackstraw ............ David Parks plauding audience, but this time the Josephine ................Kathy Simpson plaudng adiene, bu thi tim the Captain Corcoran............. Mark Kramer usually competent G & S society had Buttercup................Julie Tanguay something extra to add to their unifor- Sir Joseph Porter ........... Beverly Pooley mly good singing and striking set Director, Cher Sussman design: The Good Ship Pinafore, an operetta with which it is practically impossible to go wrong, because if it's good, it's excellent. Subtitled "The Lass That Loved A Sailor," it is about exactly that. The lass is Josephine, the captain's daughter, and the lowly sailor is Ralph, and despite their different-stations in life, the plucky pair have fallen in love. Complications develop when Josephine's father attempts to push the union between his daughter and Sir Joseph Porter, the acerbic ruler of the Queen's Navy. Newcomers to the society, Kathy Simpson and David Parks, play the lead roles of the lovers. Simpson is pleasant, though her voice is not as full as the difficult singing part demands, but Parks is a truly remarkable vocalist: The potentially soupy "A Maiden Fair To See" positively.sparkled in his rendition. Veteran Ann Arbor stage performer Beverly Pooley was a sublime Sir Joseph. Every line he pronounced dripped with the appropriate thick condescension. Director Cher Sussman steers the Pinafore briskly: No scene drags and none of Gilbert's questionable puns are allowed to sink the moment. Though the choreography is often a bit sloppy, the cast members moved about expertly, gracefully effecting the challenging scene transitions. Not only is the orchestra livelier than usual, but the supporting cast, including Mark Kramer and H. Lee Vahlsing as the good Captain Corcoran and Evil Dick Deadeye, and the charming Julie Tanguay as Buttercup, adds depth and richness to the production. It is a longstanding tradition to encore the rousing "Never Mind the Why and Wherefore" at the eginning of the second act, and the cast is prepared. For each succeeding encore - and there were five on Thursday night - they devised in- creasingly wacky routines, ending with Sir Joseph exploding part of the set. Traditional encores or not, the audience enthusiasm was genuine. All of them would certainly say that, for those unfamiliar with the joys of Gilbert and Sullivan, this is the production to see. Roxy Music returns to wow Masonic fans a creaky, prehistoric behemoth before. But seen through a pair of 1979 eyes with even slightly sophisticated vision, it is nothing more than that. Bernstein's songs are the show's greatest attribute, which is saying very little. The best numbers, "New York, New York" and "Lonely Town," rank with the worst of the composer's later hit, West Side Story. ONCE UPON a time, Betty Comden's and Adolph Green's contribution to the show was racy and bright. No longer. One is reduced to laughing at lines that, in any finer context, would not even bring a smile: A fat old dowager of a voice teacher titters, "Sex and art don't mix . . . If they did, I'd have gone straight to the top." WE TURN THEN, to the current Musket production, which bears an ex- pectable mix of pleasures and problems. At times, it takes on its un- meritorious material nobly. At others, it rolls unhappily with the punches the book delivers, and frantically scram- bles in an attempt to make it all seem amusing. Brian Cook, Scott Kaiser, and Joe Urla are Gabey, Ozzie, and Chip, the three sailors with 24 hours to rollick away in the "Big Apple." Cook ekes out a performance that is the best of the lot, conveying with elan his compulsive desire to meet his dream girl (Susan Titus). Cook, too, possesses just about the best untrained voice I've ever heard; without smooth transitions bet- ween registers or any vibrato to speak of, Cook wafts out a warm and torchy "Lonely Town," and an energetic "Lucky to be Me," complete with pleasantly hammy touches. SCOTT KAISER has funny bits in chasing his victim, Ellen Sandweiss, around, but as Chip, Joe Urla is just Joe Urla. Two out of three ain't bad, though. The ladies all have their strong poin- ts. Ellen Sandweiss gets funnier every time she shows her face on stage, and here she delightfully mismanages both her affairs to great comic advantage. Karen Keckler, saddled with the bonus task of pulling Urla along, fares won- derfully well as the man-crazy cabbie, though the moronic weight of "I Can Cook Too" does its best to make her look bad. SUE TITUS has not one, but two ad- versaries within the production: script and choreography. In "Miss Turnstiles' Song," Titus must prance and pirouette for some five minutes about absolutely nothing. Are we really to believe that the joy of being crowned the subway queen can keep her hoofing for that long? The number could conceivably have been funny had it laughed at itself, but; like too far much of the show, there is nothing even remotely tongue-in- cheek. PART OF THE fun of "big city shows" (Guys and Dolls, West Side Story, Annie) is seeing the artistic Onthe Town Music: Leonard Bernstein Book & Lyrics: Betty Comden and Adolph Green Prwer Center April 5-7 Chip ......... ............... Joe Urla Ozzie........... ...........Scott Kaiser Gabey.......... ............Brian Cook Hildy............ .. Karen Keckler Claire........... .. Ellen Sandweiss ivy ....Susan Titus Madame Dilly................Pat Rector Pitkin W. Bridgework ..............David Clark Lucy Schmeeler ............... Mary Spengler James Martin, director; Jan Schleiger, rhoreoxrapher: Leif Bjanland, instrumenta ldirector; Richard Frielund. set designer; R. Craig Wolf, lighting. treatment of New York's hustle, bustle, and busy-ness. In this particular, Schlieger's work was not bad. It is Richard Frielund's abominably vacuous sets that play the culprit. A prime example is the Nedick's set, the front of a hot dog stand that sits not in the Mojave Desert, as Friedlund seems to think, but in the busiest intersection in the world. A barren stage, then, is not quite right. . On The Town is an unsubtly fraemen- ted show. Never does a strong scene's momentum have a chance to carry off a succeeding, weaker scene. Partially at fault for the disjointed feeling is a sort of a subplot inflicted on the mainraction by the authors. A gradually growing Scott Kaiser, Brian Cook, and Joe Urla are the three sailors who cut utp the town during shore leave in New York City in Musket's production of "On The Town." The show plays this afternoon at two and again this evening at eight. contingent of incensed New York natives chases the three sailors madly about for a series of mischievous deeds the lads have perpetrated. Certainly some business was necessary to cover set changed, but why lifeless foolishness like this? Ruthie Egler does her Granny Clampett best to spice up her part as the leader of the mob, but she could no more succeed than turn wine into water, or more exactly, bring the dead to life. That director James Martin thinks little of the musical comedy genre is'too often evident. The disjointed sensation was in part the fault of his inattention to continuity in individual-characters and the production's spirit as a whole. His Inspector General in February was fine, though, as has been his dramatic work. All he needs to do, clearly, is avoid styles for which he has a respect. And Musket, for its part, should stay away from groaning brontosauri like. On The Town. All Medi Company* present multi-media-musical theatre YOU NEVER KNOW WHAT THEY'LL DO NEXT starring the NON RETURNABLES Residential College Auditorium E.G. April1.3 &A14 8:00pm ,.$50 TICKETS-Michigan Union Box Office Sponsored by MI Student Assembly LSA-S.X3.R.C., U.A.C.# Union of Students for Israel present the award-winning film "Operation Thunderbolt" The real story of Entebbe UGLI Multipurpose Room 7:30 Sunday FREE ADMISSION f ,Ae By MIKE TAYLOR From the mechanical primitivism of "Re-make/Re-model," which Devo later picked up, to the bleeding organ and anti-plastic sentiments of "In Every Dream Home A Heartache," which Elvis Costello has successfully adopted, to the detached, cool ambien- ce of their stage show, which Talking Heads and scores of other new bands have imitated, Roxy Music has always been ahead of the game. Though they broke up on the eve of the New Wave, their music has sur- vived in the statements of the generation they helped raise and in a fractured form on solo albums by lead singer Bryan Ferry and guitarist Phil Manzanera. And now, after all but a. few of the once radical New Wave ban- ds have disintegrated or entered the- mainstream, Roxy Music is back, and stronger than ever. THEIR NEW ALBUM, Manifesto, is a bit subdued, and some will be bothered by the subtle disco influences, but it nevertheless contains the classy melodies, striking lyrics, and deft in- strumental passages we've come to ex- pect from Roxy Music albums. More importantly, their Thursday night con- cert at Masonic Temple in Detroit was nothing short of a triumph. "I am for life around the corner that takes you by surprise.. ." sings Ferry at the beginning of "Manifesto." The house lights went off without warning shortly before 9 p.m., and a curtain was pulled away briskly to reveal a star- tling set. Huge, pyramid-like pillars, R.C. Players presents: BETWEEN WOMEN:. FACES OF tinted a yellow-green by the lights, reached from all sides of the stage to a point high above the spot where Ferry would stand most of the night. Drum- mer Paul Thompson, keyboardist David Skinner, and bassist Gary Tibbs were already onstage, pounding out the rhythm that opens "Manifesto." Guitarist Phil Manzanera and saxophonist Andy Mackay strolled on from the sides to play the melody parts, and after several minutes of this, Ferry stepped into view to sing. Of all the new songs; "Manifesto" makes the strongest statement: I am for the man who drires the hammer To rock you 'ill the grare His-pwer drill hocks _.: lionil iilex away 1 Iam forthe revolutin'srcoining I dow'fknow where she's been . With his hair trimmed short and slicked-back, Ferry looked like a con- servative businessman, and danced like one, even though his suit was made of bright red leather. His microphone cord was of course the same hue as his suit. With the futuristic Greek temple behind him, and the five other band members staying neatly in their positions, all the dreams about Fe rry See ROXY, Page 8 ANN ARBOR CIVIC THEATRE AUDITIONS FOLLIES' Production Dates May 31, June 1, 2 3 Power Performing Arts Theater Performances of 8 p. m. and 3 p.m. on June 3rd only ROLES AVAILABLE: 12 men 16 women Mixed Chorus 6 Show Girls (&.ft. or taller) TRYOUT SCHEDULE- April 4, 6:7:30-10:30 p.m. April 7: 9:30 a.m. until finished April 7: 7:30 p.m. Coil backs All in the Studio Room, Michigan Women's League. For info, call 662-9405. The cast requires all ages, we must have women and men from ages 20 to 50. Follies is a lovingly sentimental look at a nostalgic era of theatre "between the wars." The music is glorious both in old fashion and contemporary styles. The show has a feeling of reminiscence that all can shore, plus great dramatic impact. All styles of singing and dancing will be used (and is needed) in this show. The dancing will include top, high kicking chorus lines, ballroom, Spanish, etc. The singing is belt, legit, cutesy. love songs, torch songs, and talky. (A DacooQeeton Fri., April 6 and Sat., April 7 Trueblood Aud. Frieze Bldg. 8 pm I