Page Two THEMICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, September.3, 1970 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, September.3, 1970 theatre- Going to School'-and liking it! Aging doesn't mellow Stratford's 'Triends' By LAURIE HARRIS Arts Editor A thrust stage requires action. Michael Langham, director of Richard B r i n s 1 e y Sheridan's School f o r Scandal, at Strat- ford, Ontario has mastered this technique. People are continual- ly disappearing and reappear- ing from all the various corners of the Festival Theatre's stage developingssomething new for eighteenth century 'comedy action. School is about two, brothers, Charles and Joseph Surface, who live on the in absentia wealth of their uncle, Sir Oliver. Joseph appears to be the true man of sentiment while Charles is the classic rake, each vying for the same girl's affection. In the end, of course, the one with true feelings is the rake and the man of sentiment is expos-, ed to be the hypocrite. Most of the action takes place in Lady Sneerwell's little par- lor of gossiping males and fe- males each trying to out do the next on his dirt for the day. "I got it from one who got it from one who got it ,from one ..." and thereby condemn the fash- ionable people of London. Sir Peter Teazle, a rather elderly bachelor has j u s t married a young woman from the coun- try who is rapidly entering the Sneerwell crowd, much to the distaste of her husband. Sheridan has played onoma- topoeia with characters treat- ing Benjamin Backbite, Crab- tree, Lady Sneerwell, Mrs. Can- dour and the Surfaces w h o, naturally are not what they ap- pear to be on the surface. The summation of characters a n d plot createsatypical eighteen- th century comedy, but it takes Michael Larigham along with Leslie SHurry's designs to turn this once drawing room comedy into a bawdy, almost-musical comedy of the twentieth cen- tury. And they have d o n e it with grace - .a feat not easily achieved. Each costume is a material extension of what comprises the character with the actors tak- ing on their robes and parts as though they were one. Snake, a turncoat, wears a greenish, pais- ley-snakey looking coat, just a little too large - like a skin about to be shed. Eric Donkin told me putting on a costume designed by Leslie Hurry is like being' dictated exactly how the role should be played. As Ben- jamin Backbite, Donkin flirts onto th stage in a green satin striped suit matched w i t h shocking pink stockings. All the while he effeminately quip$ horrible odes o his own pen fluttering his eyelashes and plumed hat. Lady Teazle, a country girl, is a new woman of fashion and Helen Carey plays her with all the awkwardness her bo-peep- ish costumes dictate. A new dimension in acting is brought to the stage as Robin Gammell (Joseph Surface) acts and reacts with his legs. (Never have I seen such expressive knees before in my life!) His legs slidefand glide around the stage as his plans for his uncle's fortune run smoothly, and they become more and more shakey when his exposure as a hypo- crite nears. Gammell's voice, al- so, is in constant flux. When he is putting on the surgary santi- ments of the man he wishes to appear his voice is equally as false, pitched just a little too high, reaching an apogee in fal- setto when his undoing is com- plete. The direction, however, is still the outstanding factor. Opening the second act, the scene in Charles' house, w a s once rather sedate with a bit. of drinking - maybe, followed by the entrance of Sir Oliver disguised as a money lender. Langham's scene is gilded with Stanley Silverman's jazzed up music, carousing by all of Char- les' group and with the en- trance-of the wenches' who pro- ceed to do a semi-strip as one knows wenches are supposed to do, but not in the eighteenth century. Arnold Wesker's play T h e Friends is about a group of designers in their early thirties or late twenties. Herein lies the major fault of director Kurt Reis' production at Stratford this summer. Kate Reid, Wil- liam Needles and the rest of the 'youthful' group look their actual ages which is hardly that of thirty. The play itself is about five trend setters who have ended up living and working together, but their own interaction has precluded the continuance .of their work as designers and their business is rapidly going bankrupt. Esther (Kate Reid), the spiritual leader of the group is dying of leukemia eventually expiring by the end of the first act. This physical crisis brings the friends to a real crisis of humanity - one they must face. unlike the financial worries of the business. Simone brings the group to realize they must do what they want with the now dead body of Esther. In a leap from be- lief in the suffering of death the friends begin to worship life, propping Esther up as though she had never really died. Now they are able to survive. Though the play is not very good as a whole it brings up some interesting comments and theories on the revolution and the working class. Each of the friends has risen from a pover- ty background, excluding Si- mone, and has now become rich. Their modern trends feed the capitalistic society that they were essentially trying to sub- vert. They live in a home com- munally - almost incestuously - and the home becomes what Macey, their manager, terms 'a disease'. The audience is confronted with a not too sub- tle, often dull sensitivity train- ing session. The big name player for the production, Kate Reid, lies on a bed moaning and dying through the first act and lies on the same bed, dead, through the second. The part is not very demanding for such an ac- complished actress and one wonders at the waste of her tal- ent. Salem Ludwig, as Macey, puts out the best performance of the group playing a Jewish man- ager wizened by his age and ability. The part itself, is a less superficial attempt than t h e others for Macey is a philoso- pher commenting on the mean- ing of words. It is he who says 'you're all wierd' and this is the problem with the play. The characters are so wierd they are not believ- able. For instance Roland (Richard Curnock) tries to simulate Esther's pain by slashing his body with a razor. The effect is devastating, not artistic. The sets, designed by Peter Wingate, are perhaps the best explanation of The Friends. The room is an old one, which seems to be the. preference of modern designers, and it is fill- ed with not just the friends but with their possessions and their creations so that it becomes a truer representation of the characters than the characters themselves. Near Hospilal, Campus and Dorms Luxury bi-level furnished apart- ment in quiet, soundproof build- ing, dishwasher, carpeting. 1412 GEDDES near Observatory 230 and $250 per month 4% interest on damage deposit RESIDENT MANAGER DAYS 761-5599 EVENINGS 761-2827 --Douglas Spillane; Stratford, Ontario Meet the Teazles: Stephen Murray and Helen Carey To bring Sir Oliver to t h e stage from his seventeen years in India, Langham and Hurry have cooped him up in a ser- vant carried standchair. A black form emerges (Mervyn Blake) and is slowly and dramatically unwrapped to reveal the most congenial and w e 11 liked Sir Oliver. The primary feat of direction comes towards the end of 'the play in Joseph Surface's apart- ment. Lady Teazle, his pretend- ed lover, is in the room when POTENTIAL REVIEWERS Are you interested in writing reviews for The Daily? We are always in need of new review- ers in any field. This includes records, especially pop and rock, theatre, music, dance, art and literature. Please contact Laurie Harris, Arts Editor, at The Daily, 764-0552, FX VILLaGE 375 No.MAPLE RD.-"769-4300 Tues.-Fri. 7:25 & 9:45 Sat.-Mon. 1:00, 5:10, 7:25, 9:45 her husband arrives. She hides behind a screen, her husband. enters, almost discovers her and then he is hidden from Charles Surface in a chest. The scene proceeds to be a riot of ups and downs with a constant almost exposure of each of the par- ties . . at least f o r a little while until /all is ultimately re- vealed. h46 MA The Ark Coffeehouse Welcomes You Back to Ann -Arbor With another 4 semester of fine traditional music' 1421 KIll STREET aa _.- .. a. "FELLINI,-EXUBERANT GENIUS THAT HE IS, TRANSFIGURES EV RYTHING IN WHAT ONCE WAS CALLED THE KNOWN WORLD. LIKE A TRAVELOGUE THROUGH AN UNKNOWN GALAXY !" -N.Y. Times -Douglas Spillane; Stratford, Ontario Charles Surface (Barry MacGregor) meets his uncle (Mervyn Blake) i Ev~e~juZ#g5*044 4/S tfeAi~ ~44 H~ ~t44i44e~L~e Z4 ~144eJ Rome. Before Christ. After Fe llni. ~li THURSii FRI., SAT. Michael Cooney "Two young men proved to be both natural show stoppers and serois performance of rare skill Bob Dylan and Michael Cooney. -San Francisco Examiner "Cooney drew a standing ov'a- tion until he reappeared." -Tucson Daily Citizen proceeded to amaze n other words one doesn't talk about M.C., one listens to him." -Mich. Daily $1.25 1421 Hill STRET SAT. 1 P.M. (AFTERNOON) FREE Woody Gutherie Workshop by Gutherie biographer DICK REUSS SUN. 8:30 Bob Franke composer of songs good enough to have captured the interest of Joan Baez Ann Arbor culture-hero now on national tour. 1 A. / "If you see with innocent eyes, everything is divine" -FELLINI An ALBERTO GRIMALDI Production "FELLINI SATYRJlCOIN starring MARTIN POTTER'. HIRAM KELLER - MAX BORN - SALVO RANDONE - MAGALI NOEL ALAIN CUNY - LUCIA BOSE - TANYA LOPERT- GORDON MITCHELL with CAPUCINE Stoeay by FEDERICO FELLINI and BERNARDINO ZAPPONI COLOR by DeLuxe* PANAVISION* Unftd A --q- t":e - - *ne 1 * grs cam h ot-R I U-m