Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, March 25, 1971 * Pcige Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY ,. , , Playing in N.Y. with Prince and Vonnegut By MARCIA ABRAMSON ed of an Company, the musical that is story in winning all the prizes this year, Bobby, a truly deserves them: it is as per- married feet a-piece of plastic America as learns ti has been concocted for Broadway above. H inal16ng time. by runs t It has a Star (Elaine Stritch) cmes t It has Real (almost) Sex. It has Being Swinging Couples. It has swing- things ihg New York City. It has a smoke d Deep Human Massage: it's not affairs, so great to be married but it's a and thei lot :worse not to.be married? make it These great attractions appar- right in ently. have enabled such wise hoo-hah critics as Walter Kerr to over- stage Ma look the- mediocre sense of hu- Most mor, the complete lack of char- were qu aster development, and the un- coholic intelligibility of most of the ly- jokes, w rics. After all,rhow .could pros standar like Stephen Sondheim and liberal j Harold Prince go wrong? do you All this makes me wonder if jokes an Company is not part of a plot a terrib by New York theatre people to bert!" lure the tourists with a sli c k, There packaged formula for the "big ed girl,r show" to tell the folks back and bur home about. Hence the awards, like the and the reviews. on televi Everything that Company. Stritcl could do right seems to go was out wrong. Elaine Stritch gets to song is sing one song and has nothing woman else to do but collect awards. one -m Her talent, the best the show has to do t to offer, is virtually wasted. lunch. . The music is bright and cat- brunch. chy, but in general the lyrics play vi spoil it. *MUost songs were ex- fortunat tr'melyn complicated and sung do with so fast they were impossible to very pr hear. ''he exceptions were the tha wou best Imonftents of the show: Strit- The s ch's "Ladies Who Lunch," a bit- bright1 ter satire .which was too good latest for. &ompany:.and had nothing young el to do .,with, the show; Susan eral set Browning' : "Barcelona," which elevators earned her a Tony nomination; sensee and ' Pamela Myers' "Another apartme Hundred People," the requisite exist. love-hate routine about the Big The t City panry, th Not much acting was requir- ly grar Last year's longest running whirl o off-Broadway hit To Be Young, hoping, Gifted & Black will be present- thrust o ed la Ann Arbor under the joint tenderly auspices- of the Professional - one Theatre Program and the Uni-, ..: "A r versity Activities Center (UAC) To Be as a highlight- of the Creative is a s e Arts Festival March 28 at Hill Hansber Auditorium, of A Ra Acclaimed by the New York Lorrain Times. .as- "An extraordinary younges achievement! . . . Wonderfully woman moving!" and."A joyous laugh- matist ter-filled event" by. CBS-TV, York Di "Young, Gifted & Black" comes "Best P to the Michigai campus follow- MissI 1n* its successful: New York run. The Sig Other critics hailed, it as "A Window y of the cast. The non- volves the adventures of bachelor who visits five couples and supposedly he concise moral stated low, I don't know. Bob- around for a while, then o his great revelation, Alive." 's friends do all the neat the tourists expect: dope, learn karate, have cohabit, get divorced n cohabit; Bobby gets to with a stewardess (wow) a bad (under blankets, ) right there on the artha!? of the "bright" lines ite dull. There were al- jokes, mother-in-law women's lib jokes - a d routine. ,There were okes - how many blacks know? - and Jewish ad sex jokes ... "You're ly attractive man, Ro- was even a nearly nak- MIartha, dancing around mping and grinding just old "Laugh-In" shows ision. Why? Why not? 's "Ladies Who Lunch" of another show. The a satire of the useless - Stritch is playing who have nothing better han sit at an endless planning an endless "Here's to the girls who fe," Stritch rasps. Un- tely, this has nothing to Compnay, which is a o-marriage show. (Mar- ldn't like it otherwise.) ets were all appropriate plastic furniture, t h e for the sophisticated ite of the Big City. Sev- levels connected w i t h s were used to give a of gorgeous luxurious nt buildings that don't heatre that holds Com- ae Alvin, is approximate- ndiose, with expensive drinks in the basement and ex- pensive prices. It's just what you expect for Company, which will probably run for years to f u 11 houses. * * * * Happy Birthday Wanda June is in a much smaller theatre, but it's probably going to close pret- ty soon, after a respectable run of eight months or so. And that's too bad, because Wanda June, Kurt Vonnegut's first play, is worth seeing. Von- negut is an immensely likeable novelist, and an immensely like- able playwright. He is comfort- able, and, more than comfort- able, fun to be with for an eve- ning, Vonnegut's usual metaphors and themes re-appear in Wanda June. Instead of Dresden, the crime is Nagasaki, represented by Looseleaf Harper, the m a n who pushed the button and has been wandering around in con- fusion ever since. Instead of Tralfamadore, the metaphor is Heaven - where all people, good and bad, go after they die to participate in the Great Shuffle- board Game in the Sky. What is now in Wanda June is the story of supermacho Harold Ryan (just call him Ernest Hemingway), who gets lost in the jungle for seven years and comes back to find himself ob- solete. "Peace," as represented by a two-fingered cowardly doc- tor, i in; the carhop picked up in a hamburger joint has been to college. Penelope (get it?) now prefers the doctor, and re- fuses to be anyone's possession. As the play develops, Vonne- gut lets on that supermacho, Harold never really existed. All along, he has been not Ulysses, but Leopold Bloom. As his al- coholic former wife, Mildred, now playing shuffleboard, puts it. in the punch line of the play: "You know what his problem is? I'll tell you. Premature ejac- ulation." One of the best things in Wanda June is watching the free play of Vonnegut's imagina- tion with a new form. The play opens with jungle calls (includ- ing Woody Woodpecker) and the pronouncement by Penelope that "this is tragedy, and when the play is done my face will be as white as the snows of Kiliman- jaro." Penelope narrates the acts, ex- cept when Vonnegut switches the scene to heaven, set off ap- propriately by beams of light from overhead. There we meet seven-year old Wanda June, knocked off by a drunk ice cream man on her birthday. She -doesn't mind. She gets in the play because her birthday cake turns up at Penelope's - a gift from a suitor in commemoration of Harold's birthday. We also meet a happy Nazi officer who Harold knocked off. The officer wants everyone to know that the reason he did't rank high in the statistics f o r Nazi achievement was because he was stuck in a primitive out- post. "We did it the hard way." He and Wanda June are play- ing together - innocence a n d evil, what does it mean? "No- body's mad, we're all too busy playing shuffleboard." The star of Heaven has to be wheezy, drunk Mildred, driv- en to drink and death by Har- old's big problem. She tried to be a good dwife, pretending screaming and kicking, but it just got to her. Mildred nar- rates life in Heaven: there was a cyclone, and everybody watch- ed. Nobody, she adds, deadpan and drunk, got killed. Harold returns to his adoring son and understandably reluc- tant wife. He sets about getting rid of the suitors, the doctor and a vacuum cleaner salesman who begins to worship him im- mediately as the embodiment of manliness. His main conflict is with the 'Swin e' Most of their music is written by one of their own members, Tom Rapp. The lyrics cover the range from 'a rose, or perhaps the shadow of a rqse,' and rock- et men, to jewelers and angels. Their sound moves from t h e gentleness of the pastoral to the harshness of war. . They have just released a new album on Reprise. It follows on three successful releases, - Pearls before Swine, and Bala- klava, on ESP Records, and The Use of Ashes, on Reprise. Because of their unique char- acter and fine music, Canter- bury House is presenting them for four nights, beginning Fri- day, March 26th. Doors open at 8:00 p.m., admission is $2.00. doctor. In a guerrilla raid, Har- old smashes his violin. But the retaliation is terrible: the doc- tor smashes Harold's ego by forcing him to admit that he is as comic as everyone else. Ulys- ses reading Ulysses and realiz- ing the truth. The smashing of the violin also destroys Harold by aliena- ting Looseleaf from him. Tow- ards the end of the play, Loose- leaf comes to life and reveals the human being beneath the confusion. Looseleaf had o n c e played violin. The act of vio- lence against it awakens old feelings and makes him con- clude that Ryan's machismo way of living-which led Loose- leaf to Nagasaki-is crazy. Looseleaf deserts Ryan's camp, and no one is left but the mun- dane, super-bourgeois vacuum salesman who, is afraid to leave his XKE special model in h is car because it might be stolen. What happens is that Ryan adapts and recognizes his com- mon humanity. He is much too likeable for Vonnegut to leave him a macho man. "I love you - have a cigar," he says to the doctor, who responds, "My vio- lin is avenged." Ryan has not really changed, but he is built for survival; with his ethic shat- tered, he makes his peace with the new order, recognizing too that the old has not really end- ed. It doesn't work to tell Pene- lope "I man, you woman, get breakfast" any more. But the doctor walks through the park at midnight because six people have been murdered there and he wants to prove to himself that he does have Ryan's belov- ed balls. Levels have changed. The doctor triumphs over Ryan with words, by reducing him to the ordinary, but Ryan can also see-that the doctor is much like him. People can hardly be perfect, but I think Vonnegut may mean this as an improvement. When his own life is threatened, t h e doctor refuses to-kill Ryan ac- cording to Ryan's code of man- ly honor, and then begs on his knees for Ryan to spare his own life. Life has become more im- portant, even if people go right on playing games with their egos and images. The son - a very likeable, honest kid - opts for the doctor's side after an initial period of hero-worship, and that too can be considered' hopeful. Underlying this possibility are more questions. Does it matter if these individuals reject kill- ing: what do they have to do with Nagasaki or the concen- tration camps? Ultimately, as Looseleaf decides, they are all pawns in a game. But where does the game stop? Not in Heaven. There is no god to enter in; all that matters is the in- dividual at the moment of de- cision. No one will punish him for killing. Only the conscious- ness of his own humanity can stop him. If it can. I don't pretend to know all the answers about Vonnegut's play; one of the dif- ficulties with seeing an unpub- lished play is that I can't hold it all, to see if what I caught is borne out by the wholq which of course I can't remember.,All I can do is recommend that we all go see the movie, which Von- negut will be watching closely in production, to find out more, and read the play when it comes out. Wanda June is certainly worthy of our friend Vonnegut, and of our attention, because it is alive, funny, human, qnd questioning. University of Michigan. Arts Chorale MOZART REQUIEM Fri., Mar. 26--8:00 Hill Auditorium Maynard Klein, Conductor FREE WHAT IF YOU DON'T COME TO THE BACH CLUB MEETING TOtIGHT? THINK OF: " The fantastic people you might have met " The delicious f o o d you didn't get to enjoy. " The g r e a t program you missed! EVERYONE INVITED! Thursdays, 8 P. South Quad, West Lounge 00 - I Ui UNIVERSITY DnArVOSTAITZ T ! U Imnr. Unnn i tir * 1 featuring original works of graphic art-etchings, lithographs,-by leading 20th century artists: and CREATIVE ARTS FESTIVAL YEAR'S -LOINGESUING ARVELOUS!" "A MILESTONE!"- --.laes Badwin--TIME MAGAZINE N. Y. POST i I 20% Student Discount! brings PTP rl 7 A II rI IrlwA SEATS ON SALE! PTP Ticket Office Mendelssohn Lobby f probing, celebrating, laughing, despairing, a of spirit, brilliantly and alive" . . . "Miraculous marvels at the range!" milestone!" Young, Gifted & Black 1 f-portrait of Lorraine ry, the brilliant author aisin in the Sun. At 29, e Hansberry was the t American, t h e fifth and the only black dra- ever to win the New rama Critics Award for lay of the Year." Hansberry's second play, gn in Sidney Brustein's , was running on Broad- en she died. Her post- play, Les Blancs, star- es Earl Jones and Cam- tchell on Broadway this ar priced seats for the matinee performance March 28, are on sale PTP Ticket Office in the ssohn Theatre lobby. Uni- students ' will receive special discounts; h i g h school group rates are also available. For information, call (313) 764- 0450. In addition, Pearls before Swine, a musical conglomera- tion whose work on ESP and Warner Bros. Reprise Records can variously be described as medieval rock, head folk, or la- ment from space music, will be at Canterbury House, 330 May- nard St., Friday through Mon- day, the 26th-29th of March. The four members of the group play all the usual instruments - guitar, organ, piano, bass, banjo, and some unusual ones -the swinehorn, clavinette and dobro. Picasso Miro, Dali Calder c f w *t I V Chagall Friedlaender Searle Vasarely Rouault and others MERIDIAN GALLERY'S 2nd Annual Art Auction SUNDAY, MARCH 28th The Main Ballroom WEBER'S INN 3050 JACKSON ROAD Auction time: 3:00 p.m. Exhibition of art: 1:00-3:00 p.m. All new works! Admission FREE I POPULAR PRICES! L AflMAC H P. RR YL A DTR SUNDAY, MARCH 28- 3 P.M.--HILL AUDITORIUM. 14 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. St., Ann Arbor, Michigan- 48104. Published daily Tues- day throug-h Sunday morning Univer- sity.. yea,. Subscription rates: $10 by carre. $10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through 'Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5 by carrier, $5 by mail. way wh humous red Jam eron Mi season. Popult single Sunday, at the P Mendell versity BYE BYE BRAVERMAN ' ANN. ARBOR BLACK THEATRE presents blackewe A Tribute to the Black Woman in Poetry, Music, and Dance 25-27 Mar.-8 P.M. Tickets, $2 now at 28 Mar.-2 P.M. Stanger's, Discount Records SLAUSON JR. HIGH SCHOOL 1019 W. WASHINGTON, ANN ARBOR 4 r t R .U N O "Hi, Mom!" STARTS TOMORROW Claude Chabrol Double Feature Ends Tonight "It is the sense of shared idiocy that makes Brian de Palmas 'Hi, Mom!' so much more satisfying than the more pretentious 'Getting Straight,' 'The Landlord' and 'Stanley Sweetheart.' 'Hi, Mom!' is not only funnier than these films, IT IS THE FINEST LEGITIMATELY FUNNY FILM I'VE SEEN IN A VERY LONG TIME. The movie works because it is consistent, because it is witty, because it is played beautifully and because it resolutely re- fuses to use most of the cliches of current filmmaking, except when it wants to call attention to cliches." -Vincent Canby, N.Y. Times i 'YOU MUST SEE "Ths mM s D CLAUDE CHABIIOL'S'BRILLIANT,' 0 'CHILLING' 'NEW THRILLER' O 'ONE OF THE YEAR'S~ 10 BEST flLMSI( ______ *1 B- starring: GEORGE SEGAL GODFREY CAMBRIDGE PHYLLIS NEWMAN Two Showings-7 & 9 p.m. Friday, March 26 Auditorium 100-Law School 5Qc -CHEAP FLICKS-- DAILY CLASSIFlIEDS BRING RESULTS-USE THEM FOR THE 3rd WEEK THE SUNDANCE KID and C:W. MOSS (of Bonnie & Clyde fame)-under other cover names-meet the forces of society on the racetrack of life. T.M.K. OPEN 12:45 "Always The Finest in Screen Entertainment" Corner State & Liberty Streets Program Information 662-6264 Shows at 1:15-3-5-7-9 p.m. "A ROARING VISUAL DELIGHT" -L.A. TIMES "UPROARIOUS! Might just be this year's 0 Judith Crist, NBC TV, p C-..Q News, 0 Time. ON. Y. Timex, NBC-TV. Village Vokce, Cue Magnzwe, Catm k w Xcv Released by ALLIED ARISIS 'PUTNEY SWOPE'!" tao f J -William Wolf, Cue Magazine I. :.. .. .....:. :m ed y. I}' MES HREy -U+e -Preone ne :...i:fiiriiJ Ir "ONE OF THE FUNNIEST, HIPPEST, MOST AUDACIOUS AMERICAN COMEDIES OFTHE YEAR!" -Joseph Getmis, Newsday FROM THE GROOVY GUYS WHO BROUGHT YOU "GREETINGS" "A REAL THRILLER" -UPI "A MUST" -PLAYBOY AT oNPL FLM I~ "'La Femme infidele' is an exquisitely detailed, impeccably acted, stunningly directed suspense story about adultery and passion ... it's just about a perfect movie!" -The New.Yorker "ONE OF THE YEAR'S 10 BEST!" -N.Y. Times, -Red Reed, Holiday, -Judith Crist, NBC Today A Psycho-Sexual Study in Murder! Emanuel LWolf presents AN AWED ARTISTS FILM Claude Chabrol s BY DELUX! lMWI Hi, Mom! ROBERT DE NIRO co-starring JENNIFER SALT, GERRIT GRAHAM with RUTH ALDA.ALLEN GARFIELD Screenplay by BRIAN DE PALMA, Based on an original story by CHARLES HIRSCH and BRIAN DE PALMA Pouced by CHARLES HIRSCH -Drected by BRIAN DE PALMA 'A WEST END FILMS PRODUCTION COLOR - A SIGMA III ]l RELEASE STARTS FRIDAY-7:15, 9:00, 10:45 IS' I ra(O aI;TH Porum 1 I I h " II\ ". .. .. .. ..... .i.-- - - - - - " .S. ':er . I I I j I I -- a I-,- -V -- I I I.