Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, November 5; 19 1U Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, November 5; 19 iU 4. theatre Missing By MAILCIA ABRAMSON Kcizantzakis music Woodstock Nation at college Whatever the acknowledged genius of Kazantzakis' The Odyssey: A Modern Sequel, the University Players' adaptation fails to project the depth of the work. Admittedly this is a first and homegrown attempt to create a dramatic presentation from Kazantzakis' epic poem of more than 33,000 lines in 24 books. But the 1572 lines selected from the first four books do not suc- ceed in creating a unified or sust'ained thematic basis for the production. Several ideas are introduced and developed to some greatr or lesser point. But none are very clear. Odysseus comes home, re- jects his kingdom and takes to the seas again after a clash with Telemachus, who resents him and his ways. He sails to Sparta and rescues a very grate- fully bored Helen. While in Sparta he saves Meneaus - temporarily - from a peasant revolt. During this action Odysseus thinks about his relationship with his son, about the ties of family and kingdom, and most of all about freedom. His lyrics praise freedom and passion; he is devoted to living life to the fullest, it seems. He is the ulti- mate rebel. Yet this mood of triumphal affirmation is at times clouded by uncertainty, and he says, "I don't know what I want - I'll have to work things out." His character changes without any apparent reason. In Sparta, the killer of men reveals that now he loves all men for the first time. Why? As in the case of his apparently split personal- ity, there is no answer. The production is not intend- ed to be a play, but rather a spoken presentation of t he poem. As such, it often tends to move very slowly, with reci- tation following recitation. In their program the Play-' ers say they are aware of the danger that "audiences might drown in the prolixity" of the play's "ornamented utterance- however magnificent." And to an extent this happens, as the proliferation of heightened dra- matic recitations work aginst each other in the audience, and create a monotony. At times the lyrics and dra- matization begin to Interact, as in the scenEs in the second act between Helen, Menelaus and Odysseus. Here the poetry and, presentation work together, and the poem comes alive. The production is quite sim- ple and static; it is clearly a poem. The acting is generally competent, although it too tends to be simple and static on occa- sion. FOR UNIVERSITY PEOPLE WHO CARE WE NOW HAVE 4 SHOPS TO SERVE YOU * ARBORLAND " MAPLE VILLAGE " LIBERTY OFF STATE * EAST UNIVFOFF SO. UNIV. THE DASCOLA BARBERS You're Sur to ber Winner Rfl.m By ELLEN FRANK We all went on down to Pioneer High School last night to hear Richard Simon's famed talk on rock and roll. Simon, a University graduate in Amer- ican studies, now teaches at Western Michigan. The occasion of Simon's offer- ing was a meeting of the Uni- versity Extension course, "Bridge Over Troubled Waters," an ed- ucation course on youth in the 1970's. Pioneer High is very much like an enormous prison, a maze of long and very sterile halls with excessively bright lights. Every Wednesday night a group of adults, primarily middle a g e d parents of troubled youth (one wouldrassume) who have come to learn what it is' all about. There couldn't be any better way for them to learn than to learn than to hear and un- derstand the music. Rock and roll is also, as Simon so clearly says, the history of the youth culture. We find the plastic sources of our age as Simon takes us back to the teenage troubled 1950's. What else is there to do, after some years of acceptance, some years of remolding, and now some years of rebellion, but to fight off that mass consumer culture that dictated the one dimensional drippy love songs of the 1950's? Simon makes it clear that the 50's and most of the 60's as well! were years when youth was di- verted totally to the interests of love conquests, a time when ego humiliation or rejection from your steady was absolute- ly the worst that could happen. Then comes the breakthrough1 as folk flows into rock, Bob Dy- lan turns electric and youth be- comes serious, turns outward. In the midst of the 1960's we cross into a crucial age when purely individualistic concerns decrease in their importance and social and communal concerns overcome the earlier shallow- ness. We come to Simon's so-called1 "Extroverted Love Song," a lyric turning out to the world and away from the intense con- cern with love partnerships. rhe Michigan Daily, edited and man- aec, by students at the University of Micnigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- gan. 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- -itv year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $10 by mai Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5. by carrier, $5 by mail. We know this all true because we lived through it. It is good to see middle aged adults finally coming, with some patience, to hear what we have been groov- ing to on the old AM radio for so many years. Simon's analytic and ironical- ly academic methods of cate- gorical interpretation is difficult for the young to swallow. He talks about words we blocked out, sublimated as they say, and heard instead those dominant rhythms that were good to dance to. Rock and roll has a content that can be subjected to Simon's literal and sociological interpre- tations. His words on the coded messages of sex songs (like Heat Wave by Martha and the Van- dellas) ; violence, (the Stones' We All Need Some One We Can Bleed On); protest; (the Doors" Unknown Soldier) are unques- tionably true. Finally listening to the words can bring a great deal of under- standing to adults who might want to know the origins and the concerns of the youth cul- ture. But that understanding cannot be finite because music must be understood within its conte-xt.- It must be heard live, and the voyeur seeking insight must see what the music does to the peo- ple. Above all, he cannot pre- sume even if elucidating rock and roll lectures are being given, that the form is concluded and ready for study. I would suggest that adults wishing to understand the youth culture should attend the next available Ann Arbor live rock show. The Place to Meet INTERESTING People B AC H CLUB Some Puzzles About Music" CARL COHEN Assoc. Dir. of Res. College & Assoc. Prof. of Philosophy THURS., NOV. 5, 8 P.M. S. QUAD W. LOUNGE EVERYONE WELCOME (no musical knowledge required) refreshments & FUN afterwards CP 'N-CAN Is NOW I Th. at 8 Fri; at 7 & Sat, at 7 & 10 10 A4 I Try Daily Classifieds GUILD HOUSE 802 MONROE Friday, November 6 NOON LUNCHEON 35c (,VAT CH1 -s2 IS THE MOST MOVING9THE, MOST INTELLI- GENT; THE MOST HUMANE - OHTO HELL WITH IT!P IT'S THEBEST. AMERICAN FILM I'VE SEEN THIS YEAR!"-NY'TMSAB, "IT'S ONE HELL OF A FILM! A COLD, SAVAGE AND.CHILLING COMEDY! Firmly establishes Nichols'-place in the front rank of American directors." -Bruce Withiamson, PLAYBOY "Viewing Arkin is like watching Lew Alcindor sink baskets or Bobby Fischer play chess. A virtuoso- player entering his richest period! A triumphant, performance!" -TIME MAGAZINE "'CATCH-22' says many things that need to be said again and again! Alan Arkin's' perform- ance as Yossariansis great!" -Joseph Morgenstern, NEWSWEEK * b ii LESLIE BLUESTONE, Grad. JIM MacBRIDE, GM employee: "The GM Strike and Student Support" Friday, 6 P.M.-Chicken Dinner ($1.10), for reservqtions call 662-5189 / I 'p p --- -- --. .. .. .. .. -Willis J. Spaulding Randall Forte's Telemachus was all quivers; he developed no other identity, except for a brief bit of lechery. He seemed hardly capable of being a con- spirator. Edward Cicciarelli as Odysseus had only a couple of facial expressions, despite his magnificant voice. But the rest, especially Chester Smith's charming Menelaus, were quite good. The backdrop for much of the program was a weird scientific- looking projection -- perhaps a giant slide of one-celled crea- tures moving about. Sometimes it simply looked like The Blob. And the Players insisted dn us- ing ugly tinned music which was not necessary at all. The tone of the piece did not require it. At times there were flashes of a real wisdom. Kazant2akis is well aware of the tragedy of Penelope, *"devoured by looms;" Odysseus thinks her asleep as IiIF w. U rS*UU he steals away, but she is awake to what she has always known. The director's note suggests that the dominant conflict is between flesh and spirit. I did not see that in this production. This Odysseus' m a i n concern was with "grasping the light- ning flash," "snapping up all the bait aild not getting hook- ed." The deeper man barely appears. As an introduction to the work - which the Players say they hope the production will be, -this performance may be more than adequate. It is cer- tainly puzzling enough, and the humor and insight that come up occasionally promise there must be much more. Certainly any attempt to in- troduce people to the beauty of Kazantzakis' work-which is in- disputable-cannot be without a great deal of value. DO YOU 'Have Your Tickets Yet to Hear Two of the World's GREATEST Glee Clubs? If not, you'd better hurry and get yours now at the Hill Auditorium box office. * ENJOY YOURSELF A LITTLE. DON'T MISS 1 Nok m OW - . A > U/U THE MICHIGAN-ILLINOIS JOINT GLEE CLUB CONCERT Friday, November 6-8:00 P.M.* SEATS STILL AVAILABLE $2.00 $2.50 $3.00 That's Tomorrow 1M i1mcWWWm WouAri~fmYK u3 A MIKE NICHOSHFIM ALAN ARIIN SJk13EPHH LtER MMATItEBAISAM;IiRB VJAIN, N AEIIS JACK SWIG9; BUCK HENRY, 108 N(RT; MTHUNYPWINR1 PRIIAPR[NTISS; MARTIN SHEEN; JON VIICTI ORSON WELIES ASOREEMII SCREENPLAYYNgIIT PRUMBCIDBY JNNCAth Y&MARTIN RANSO NF DIRECTEIIBYMI ENICHOIS r ol iirn a mi iwuMs' OMM "AN AMR9m PICTN 6IAL 5-6290 ' Shows 1, 3, 5, 7, 9:10 I SHOULD THE U. OF MICM. CONDUCT WAR RESEARC I a de bate A. GEOFFREY NORMAN U-M V.P. for Research DR. GEORGE ZISSUS Research Physicist I nfra-red technology Willow Run Labs PROF. GERALD CHARBENEAU U-M Dental School Classified Research Committee PLUS A DOCTORAL STUDENT DOING CLASSIFIED RESEARCH BOB ROSS Brain Mistrust JIM BRUGH Brain Mistrust Program Information 662-6264 At State & Liberty Sts. STARTS TODAY! MIDWEST PREMIERE! OPEN 12:45 Feature 1 2hour later Showsat 1,3, 5, 7,9 P.M. SEAMUS O'CLEIREACAIN Econ. Department JOEL SILVERSTEIN Students for a Democratic Society I St dent I I Supplies at FOLLETT Te eng Glances -of a Pigeon Kicker~ 8 P.M. TONIGHT - Union Ballroom SPONSORED BY THE OFFICE OF STUDENT SERVICES I I EMU UNIVERSITY ACTIVITIES BOARD presents TRAFFIC AND I Meet Jonathan. The very day he graduated Princeton he became a New York taxi driver. (Then, he met Jennifer.) I For the Student Body: " Levi's " Denim - Bush Jeans $10 Teagarden & Van Winkle NOVEMBER 8-8:30 P.M. at BOWEN FIELDHOUSE-Yosilanti. Mich. A* " - " . . . -+a Y " s G I 0 I III I I