, Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY An T T® Ta i '' x a - - -______________________________ Thursday, December 2, 197 1 V Players, a garish flop 1. I i (;P &atis Calendar ti lj By MITCHELL ROSS "Antony and Cleopatra" is perhaps the most down-to-earth of Shakespea e's famous trage- dies. S~o great' figure, like Hamn- let or Lear, towers above its ac- lion, and the two lovers of the ,itle are neither young nor de- cant. ':laced.in positions of -o o er, 'they still succumb to the passions and drives of ordinary mnen and women: no Hamlet to ntificate upon the value of ifs overdeath,. no Lear to rage at cliff's edge because of the stink of evil which pervades the So I am amazed by the pres- ent production of this master- piece which the University Players set before us last night on the stage of the Power Cen- ter.: Ac.tors and' director alike refuse to look inside the human heart, but avail, themselves in- stead 'of a' chance to beat their own breastplates in garish cele- bration of their opportunity to play the Bard. Miserably pom- pous and devilishly dumb, this performance., marks the first J op 'of the Players' season. As Mark Antony, Edward Cic- ciarelli resembles one of those statuies left to. ,us by the Re- mans, faceless bodies, whose -true characters remain forever a mystery. Now middle-aged and no longer the bravado ora- tor of "Julius Caesar", Antony is trapped between a sense of duty to the empire, and a commit- ment to the women of his life. When informed of the death of his first wife, Fulvia, Antony vows to break off with Cleopa- tra and return home to resettle his affairs. Still, Cleopatra's at- traction is painfully acute, and his farewell scene to her should contain the first drop of poig- nance in the production. In- stead, all that Cicciarelli and director Richard Burgwin see in this is Antony's lust and Cleo- patra's coyness. It is a hint of things to come. Cleo, played by Priscilla Lind- say, is a plumpish brunette who plays out her fantasies and an- ger without heat or imagination. We are reminded not of a wom- an whom age cannot wither, but of one who is shut in by the crusty demands of domes- ticity, not a ravishing queen but a fading starlet whose best days are long past. Most intriguing, is William Cross; who sees Octavius Caesar as a prune-faced popinjay, whose greatest delight in life is to pucker up his lips in an- ticipation of a salty line. Rare- ly have I seen an actor spend so much time displaying facial contortions as representative of a major character. Never have I known an actor to so thorn oughly ruin a part due to sheer egotism. I would like. to take this opportunity to wonder aloud what Mr. Cross is doing on stage. The object of acting is not to work so hard at making an ass of oneself; rather, the purpose is to make real some- thing outside of oneself, yet at- tached to it by a kind of spirit- ual umbilical cord. Cross nei- ther thought about the pivotal character of Octavius Caesar, nor gave consideration to such thought. His acting intelligence might well have been borrowed= from a ,stray bird. Mostly, I, am ashamed of di- rector Burgwin for allowing such claptrap to appear upon the stage. His direction leads me to believe that everyone in the cast had his script memorized before they had it read. Yet, the director tries a few touches of his own. He adds, as back- ground music, a few strains from four twentieth-century composers, as incidential music. The effect is to make the drama more consciously melodramatic than tragic, and also, at mo- ments when the music is most exciting, to accentuate the tur- gidity of the acting. Another stroke is. to have soothsayer Richard Frank sit along the sidelines like some nosy little kid, and listen to all that goes on between the actors. What is, indeed, disturb- :nis .to discover that the soothsayer is asgarrulous as everybody else when he delivers his lines. I wonder what would happen if these same people who pecked with such moral cowardice at Antonyuand Cleo- patra were to tackle "Hamlet": no doubt everyone would talk like Polonius. Lest I seem overwhelmingly nasty I might mentiOn that Evan Jeffries as Enobarbus and David Kelly as Lepidus came across as live, interesting hu- man beings, and some of the famous Shakespearian walk-on characters are done with rea- sonable facility. But still my cry on this date must be, "Fraud!" They've taken the bard from our hearts and turned him to stone, only to leave us in the dark as all crumbles into dust. Thursday, Dec. 2 Film-- Alley Cinema, 330 Maynard Ingmar Bergman's "Persona" 7, 9:30 and 11:15 p.m.' Fifth Forum "Joe Hill" 7 and 9 p.m.* Michigan Theater "Play Misty for Me" 1,3,5,7 and 9 p.m.* State Theater "Bless the Beasts and Children" 1,3,5,7 and 9 p.m.* Campus Theater "Medicine Ball Caravan" 7 and 9 p.m.* Theatre- Power Center, University Players "Anthony and Cleopatra" 8 p.m.* *denotes events for which admission is charged Joe Hill, the movie: "A7BEAUTIFUL WORK, PART HISTORY, PART SOCIOLOGY AND IN LARGEST PART, A FILM BALLAD ABOUT A FOLK HERO! DIRECTOR BO WIDERBERG HAS TAKEN A PART OF HISTORY AND GIVEN IT THE GLOW OF LEGEND!" --Judith Crisi, New York Magazine "80 WIDERBERG'S 'JOE HILL' IS SPLENDID BEYOND REALITY!" -PaulOD.Zimmerman, Newsweek Joe Hill, the man: Joe Hill was a banjo-playing drifter who became an organ- izer of the radical "Wobblies' In 1915, he was indicted for murder and executed. Many felt he was framed. It has fallen to Bo Widerberg, director of "Elvira Madigan", to tell this uniquely American story. In "Joe Hill'; he chooses not to concentrate on the political being or musician but concentrates on Joe Hill the MAN. Paramount Pictures Presents A Sagittarius Production A BO WIDER BERG FILM "J/EL" who wrote songs and was shot. sain THOMMY BERGGREN Wntt-. D1retemnProduced by B0 WIDERBERG Thie song sung by JOAN BAEZ in Color A aramount iture " " Shown -P 7&9 I 0 a Daily Official Bulletin THURSDAY, DECEMBER 2 Computing Ctr. Short Course: "Intro- duction of U of M BASIC," Seminar Rm, Computing Ctr, 3-5 pm. Mental Health Res. Inst.: S. Mat- thysse, Mass Gen. Hosp., "Schizophre- nia: The Transmethlation and Dopa- mine Theories," 1057 MHRI, 3:45 pmn. Coll.of Architecture and Design: G. Birkerts, FAIA, "New Directions in the Design of Buildings," Aud. A, Angell Hall. 4 pm. Music School: Piano Dept. Student Recital, Sch. of Mus. Recital Hall, 12:30 pm. Ctr. for Coord. ofaAncient and Mod- ern Studies: Thomas S. Jerome Lec- tures- "From Croesus to Constantine: The Cities of Western Asia Minor and Their Arts in Greek & Roman Times," G. Hanfmann, Harvard Univ., "Hellen- ization Takes Command," Aud. B, An- gell Hall, 4:10 pm. CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT 3200 S.A.B. JOBS IN A.A. AREA: for more info., call 764-7460. Psychiatric Care Worker Staff Co- ordinator in an Ann Arbor hoasp., min. 2 yrs. college plus experience. Nuclear Medicine Technologist in an Ann Arbor hosp., BS in math or sci- ence, will train, no exper. nec. SUMMER PLACEMENT 212 S.A.B. ANNOUNCEMENT United Central Services, Toledo, Ohio. Openings for sophomores and juniors interested in social work in Toledo area. Applications should be filed in Dec., further details available. oFIFTH s'oruil FITH AVIMMU AT L9BERTV Enjoying life's finer things 71 By BARBEL WEBER In the-event any of your ama- teur.gourmets are planning something grandiose to show off your culinary talents, now avail- able to you in a radius of two .iiles .are two new stores whose epicurean delights could spruce up your Kraft macaronni din- 'iier, anytime!. The Wine Shop, located across from the Alley on May- nard and the International Mar- ket in' Kerry Town on N. Fifth hext' to the Farmer's Market are two definite gastronomical assets' to our community. The Wine Shop offers a variety of"'fine wines - rose, burgundys, and. bordeauxs - imported from ,all c.rners of Europe, and do- mestic wines from our infamous West: Coast., It seems that many students have ;finally grown out of the 'Boone's" Farm" stage and a r e The- Michigan Daily, edited and man- .aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- j'ay through Sunday morning Uciver- pity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $11 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday " athrough Saturday morning. Susrption rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mall. getting turned on to the finer things in life. According to own- er Robert Littleton, students have been his most frequent cus- tomers. To what can this pop- ularity among the student body be attributed? "Kids can really relate to wines because of travel," says Little- ton. "They've been to Burgundy, France, and other wine capitals in Europe and have learned to appreciate good wines. When they buy a bottle of burgundy wine in the states it brings back old memories." The past snob connoiseur lab- el that was attached to f i n e ARM presents Godard's Vladimir and Rosa "plenty of cinematic hi- jInks . . .flashes of the Marx Brothers and Ber- tolt Brecht. On the whole, wines had affected its sales and still exists. But now, competing strongly with the pop wines Ripple, Bali Hai, etc., fine wines are definitely on the, increase. Even the people who brought you "Budweiser-King of Beer" will soon be bringing you their version of the "golden grape." "Wine sales in the midwest are virtually untapped," says Little- ton. "I expect wine sales to triple in the next three years." See ENJOYING, Page 7 THURSDAY and FRIDAY OF FEAR Dir. FRITZ LANG, 1943 with RAY MILLAND, MARJORIE REYNOLDS, and DAN DURYEA LANGIAN FEAR strikes an ex-con who becomes marked for death in a tale of international in- trigue. SHORT: Fun after the wedding ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUC 7:00 and 9:05 75c EASTERN MICHIGANUNIVERSITY PLAYERS SERIES presents YOU CAN'T TAKE IT WITH YOU 6 DIAL 5-6290 "One of the most excit- ing films you'll see this year. -Det. News CLINT EAST rWOO"D QUIRK TUES. thr 8:00 p.m. I 1 AUDITORIUM u Sun., Dec. 7-12 $2.00 For reservations dial QUIRK BOX OFFICE 487-1221 between 12:45 and 4:30 p.m. ., LL SEATS RESERVED CINEMA Ii FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 7and9 THE END OF THE RA (1969) SCREEN ADAPTATION OF JOHN BARTH'S 1958 NOVEL OF LIFE IN ACADEMIA directed by ARAM AVAKIAN with Stacy Keach, Harris Yulin, Dorothy Tristan and James Earl Jones. Roger Greenspun of the N.Y. Times calls it, "a fairly close, sometimes clumsy adaptation." 75c Auditorium A, Angell Hall r : [I A b f; I Oakland Congress Concert-Lecture Series Presents: THE ROCK OPERA 'SUPERSTAR' SATURDAY 4 Dec. 1971-8:00 p.m. O.U. Sports & Recreation Bldg. I "PLAY MISTY FOR ME" TODAY AT 1-3-5-7-9 UI this is Godard the best recent I've seen." the ann arbor film cooperative presents STEVE McQUEEN and FAYE DUNAWAY in Norman Jewistons THE THOMAS CROWN AFFAIR Urban millionaire gets his kicks by robbing banks. Brilliant color photography with use of multi-screen. Academy Award: Best Song. THURSDAY-DECEMBER 2nd-ONLY! i { '. h 4::: ;: 3 h : G+Ia; it .' ', t si '1 -Stanley Kauffman THE NEW REPUBLIC FRI -SAT.-SUN. Dec. 3-5-7:30 & 9:30 Nat. Sci. Aud. I I A Advanced Ticket Sale 29 Nov.-3 Dec. Available Student Organization Office only 4 Dec. Tickets at Door $3.50 O.U. Student $4.00 General auditorium a angell hall 7 & 9:30 I still only P.m. 75c PAUL NEWMAN in 'COOL HAND LUKE' STOCKWELL HALL COMING TUESDAY--Dec. 7th- Catherine De Neuve in Luis Bunuel's BELLE DE JOUR $3.00 O.U. Student $4.00 General U U COME TO THE lASS 9 p.m. TONIGHT Admission 75c -_._ EETI G BOX OFFICE-POWER CENTER Shakespeare's "' Antony and Cleopatra Power Center, December 1-4, 8 P.M. Box Office opens at 12:30 P.M. Tickets from $1.50-$3.00 UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PLAYERS TO FIND OUT ABOUT -TAKING A COURSE ABOUT EDUCATIONAL AND SOCIAL CHANGE SETTING UP A NEW COURSE "PARTICIPATING IN AN ESTABLISHED COURSE THRU SELF-DETERMINED -INDEPENDENT STUDY -GROUP STUDY -COMMUNITY ACTION 4 _ __ EASTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY PRESENTS CANNED HEAT T URS. E 7:30, AUD. D DD9'9DAM .2 ANGELL HALL .V sunday, december 5 I I