I Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, March 20, 1 X71 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, March 20, 1971 4 Marx's Russia: Never like this 'Siamese Connections': A By GAIL LENHOFF VROON The Twelve Chairs offers a glimpse of the rustier side of the Iron Curtain. With elegant vulgarity it unfolds the uproar- ious antiworld of society's most engaging parasites. One suspects that Marx had something oth- er in mind than this particular brand of dialectical materialism. It all begins when the dying Klavdia Ivanovna Petyxa (Rus- sian for 'rooster') confesses that she has sewn her diamond nest- egg into one of twelve chairs, left behind during the revolu- tion. The twelve chairs by now are scattered from Leningrad to Irkutsk, Siberia. From that point on, we are propelled backwards through the workers'. paradise into pre- revolutionary Russia. The pace is dizzying as we accompany the aging aristocrat Ippolit Voro- byaninov, a Slavic Don Quixote, jousting against the windmills of drunken peasants,., housing committees and petty clerks. Vorobyaninov is played by Ron Moody, a versatile and highly skilled actor. Moody's control is phenomenal. He in- vests the slapstick tone of the film w it h Stanislavskian dig- nity. His timing and gestures are beautiful to watch. In his most comic moments, he man- ages to retain a bitter-sweet sense of a lost era. H is erstwhile partner-in- crime is t h e notorious Ostap Bender, a man dedicated to the cheerful picking of society's col- lective pocket. In this case, you are advised to consult Ilf and Petrov's novel. For James Lang- elle's acting jags behind the rest of the cast and sadly mangles the character of Ostap Bender. Father Feodor, racing against Vorobyaninov and Bender f o r the chairs, is portrayed by Dom de Luis. Masked as a hefty Rus- sian peasant woman, pouncing on Siberian engineers and dis- emboweling chairs with a pas- sion, his performance ranges f r o m hilarious to vulgar. He camps a bit too much, roaring, squealing and grimacing Fa- ther Feodor into a grotesque. At his worst, he provides a cold blast of Stanley Kramer slap- stick. He was clearly encouraged to let himself go by the director Mel Brooks. A competent char- acter actor, Brooks restrains neither his cast nor himself. He reveals comic talents as Tikhon, former servant of Vorobyaninov. In a beautifully timed scene, Tikhon begs his master to hit him, for old times sake. Voro- byaninov casually delivers a crippling blow a n drTikhon sinks happily to the floor, Brooks has successfully man- aged a cross between Eisenstein and Mack Sennet. The first 20 minutes of the film are partic- ularly fine. The composition is masterful as isethe color. Gold Persian ' rugs and ikons o v e r Klavdia Ivanovna's death bed evoke the absent gold brocade chairs. Color groupings of red velvet curtains, peasant shawls and oriental patterns fade into the soft green of fields and pine forests - then erupt ,into the rainbow of crowds. The camera follows the ac- tors isolating them to minia- tures against blurred back- grounds. Vorobyaninov, particu- larly, is photographed so as to catch h i s dignified, mournful features and facial gestures. Clever signs placed strategic- ally on trucks and passers-by add to the comic irony. My fav- orite is the poster announcing the performance of :Hamlet and the October Revolution. By Wm. Shakespeare and Ivan Popov. The Twelve Chairs stands in refreshing contrast to the dreary majority of contemporary films, well worth the price of admis- sion. WIZARD OPEN ING FRIDAY 19th A Room Full of PINBALL AT MARK'S Coffeehouse 605 E. WILLIAM 10:00 a.m. till Midnight study By JOSEPH BRADY More than one stand can be taken with regards to the mer- its and aims of Dennis Rear- don's haunting play, Siamese Connections. For all its minor flaws, it is a moving play, brought to life by a capable crew and cast in this "world premiere." In the play, the choice plums go to the male actors, since it is their characters which stand out, fully fleshed in all their subtle conflicts and confusions, their highly personal faults and virtues. Since Reardon relies chore on character deliniation through what is said about each character than what is said by him, the male characters must of necessity be better rounded out, because it is they who are most talked about throughout the play. I doubt -if the author had any male chauvinistic mo- tivations in that respect; he very likely understood his male char- acters best, and wisely chose to emphasize what ,he knew. However, because his people are all types-archetypes when at their finest-it is regrettable that some of them fall short and become flat, two-dimen- sional stereotypes instead. Among the lesser-drawn char- acters, Granny Kroner stands out best. She is, in Albee-like fashion, a tragi-comic figure- head of the crumbling family, in clu falling in and out of her senses, gumming her peaches and po- tatoes one moment with infan- tile testiness and uttering preg- nant thoughts like, "Every day the sky comes closer to the ground," the next. She is played with delightful believability by Fay Sappington. Helen Stenborg does her best with the role of Kate Kroner, but without much background delineation, her position as the trapped mother of the house- Joe Brady's review in Friday morning's paper was of Siamese Connections, by Dennis Rear- don, and not Ransom Jeffrey's The Refusal. The Daily regrets the error. hold becomes singularly unsing- ular, and her hopelessness to cope with life's disappointments arouses little sympathy. The same can be said for Bonnie Gallup's Gretchen-the stereo- typed farmer's daughter from across the fields, unloved as a child, now searching for what- ever she can get, from one Kroner brother to the next. She was alternately sexy, Southern, coarse, and anxious for affec- tion - like any unloved South- ern farmer's daughter, from God's Little Acre to Tobacco Road. iracteriza tion In the case of the youngest son-James Kroner, very cap- ably played by John Savage with echoes of early James Dean -the pivotal character of the neurotic son, also unloved and in need of affection but far more complex in his hiding and display of it, the figure is at once terrifying and immanent- ly tragic. And believable and recognizeable in our society - a r c h e t y p a 1, not superficial. When he strikes out either with violence or demonic smile to conceal his turbulent undercur- rent of feelings, we understand, empathize and pity, without judgment.I Frank K r o n e r, Junior, pro- vided a beautiful contrast to his younger brother - easy-go- ing, not-too-bright, blond and husky, easily-liked. And the pos- sible instigator of the rivalry be- tween them. Ronny Cox with winning smie and casual light- ness ably plays the role. Ward Costello's part as Frank, Senior, interpreted the male roles as the Willy Loman-type of person who wanders explo- sively but ineffectually through his wcrld of collapsing dreams and pretensions. And Chester Smith looked and played the hired man with some appeal. It might be mentioned that there is, perhaps intentionally, an interesting comparison in the names of Willy Loman and Frank Kroner-Loman, signifi- cantly reflecting the salesman's position in life, and Kroner, ironically crowning the impov- erished family that would never wear a crown. The same could be said for John Duffy's music, which was delightful to hear, and which would be nice in concert form after s o m e modifications, but which was not needed, because the play was capable of stand- ing on its own merits quite well without it. I NOMINATED FOR ACADEMY i AWARDSN BEST PICTURE BST DTRIRECTOR BEST ACTRESS GP BEST ACTOR BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY BEST ORIGINAL MUSICAL SCORE Saturday, March 20 HOWARD HAWKS, FESTIVAL EL DORADO El Dorado promises to add a crucial element to the festival. It marks Hawks' answer to those who sug- gest he is losing his mastery of film. Robert Mitchum is an alcoholic. John Wayne is paralysed by a bullet that strikes his spine. The film erupts in a burst of color, gun shots, bells'and player pianos. -Michigan Daily 7 & 9:05 P.M. 75c ARCHITECTURE 602-8871 AUDITORIUM Sun., March 21-Only Angels Have Wings ^, ' ' PAR ,,e,& ,,' PIIURS PSEld Ali Mac~raw- Ryan O'Neal A HOWARD G MINSWY-ARTHUR HILLER Production John Marley & Ray Milland 'i 603 E. Liberty DIAL 5-6290 Doors Open 12:45 Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 Free ListS"s"e"de vwfvwf A (aTI T4!Idc1 I'l pre r~s Icne "Hadrian VII," the fascinating New York and London stage success about a man who dreams that he is Pope, plays Monday and Tuesday, March 22 and 23, at 8:30 p.m. in Hill Auditorium as part of the Professional Theatre Program Play-of-the-Month Series. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 7640552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5 by carrier, $5 by mail. Ude AD Aw@p DOORS OPEN 12:45 SHOWS AT 1-3-5-7-9 P.M. NEXT: "GOING -Wanda Hale. New York Daily News DOWN THE ROAD" GRAND SPECTACULAR! Direct fk e USSR! The Thrilling SIBERAN 1% t mdhr fno .. Iif A I' E/ItV-, A HU