Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, November 20, 1970 OVI'I Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, November 20, 1970 i Both bitter and By MARCIA ABRAMSON Plaza Suite is brittle, o f ten bittersweeticomedy. Beneath the 1laughter is the sickness of our society. At' its worst, the laugh- ter comes from stock situations, characters and jokes; at i t s best, the laughter is real' and. it hurts. Neil Simon's play consists of three one-acters about middle- aged marriage in America, more specifically in the (Jewish) sub- urbs of New York. Plaza Suite is aimed at a very specific aud- ience, and as such was of course a smash hit. The second piece, called "Visi- tor from Hollywood," was an V example of Simon's humor at its low point. Two high school sweethearts are reunited: he is a Hollywood producer and she is. a New Jersey housewife. Aided More sooper ARTS on Page 7 'Suite LAST CHANCE TO SEE! 8:30 at HILL AUD. Otis Rush IS COMING DECEMBER 6 Blues Festival Benefit PAUL JOANNE ANTHONY NEWMAN WOODWARD PERKINS "WUSA A STUARI ROSSNIERG - PAUL NEWMAN - JOHN FOREMAN PRODUCTION cosor~ LAURENCE HARVEY W~,G3 1eEt4IC0WR"Ft' WAVlS10N' A PARAMOL*IT PICTLft WUSA 0- Nov. 20 "AN AVALANCHE OF HILARITY!" -Time Magazine SHOW TIMES Mon.-Fri. 7:00-9:15 Sat.-Sun. 1 :00 5:00-7:00-9 -3:0c 9:15 rr i r I { 4. The Contemporary Jazz, Quintet IS i I Spend An Evening With THE FIFTH DIMENSION CHARLES MOORE-Trumpet LEON HENDERSON-Tenor Sax, Flute KENNY COX-Acoustic, Electric Piano RON BROOKS-Acoustic, Electric Bass ARCHIE TAYLOR-Percussion Satu day, Nov. 21-8:30 P.M. by name-dropping, he is quick- ly able to get the bored house- wife right where he wants her. Larry Parks as the visitor was all bellbottoms. and love beads, very slick and with no special characteristics. Betty Garrett did not. do much with the house- wife, who ostensibly is playing the good girl while longing to hop into bed with the "famous Hollywood producer." She was too nasal and repeated "Otto Preminger" and "Humphrey Bo- gart's house" just too many times. The act was entirely predict- able and only became funny at certain moments; for instance, when Parks got "casual"sand spread. his legs to show a skin- tight peacock blue crotch. Garrett carried over the man- nerisms she used much more ef- fectively in her first role as a 48-year-old housewife, dumpy from childbearing and stupid from her years of confinement in the 12-room mansion in Ma- maroneck. Here Garrett's portrayal has achieved a genuine tragicomic intensity. There was something special about her Karen Nash; unlike Norma Hubley of t h e third skit, she was not the stock, wealthy matron trying to be young and keep cool. Karen Nash was sad and sil- ly; but she kept her sense of humor no matter what happen- ed, unlike her stuffy husband who is terrified by aging. He struggles to keep his w e i g h t down and prove his youth with his secretary; Karen cannot keep .up,. for she has sense enough to see how silly he is. Garrett's Karen Nash was a perfect and pitiful example of the plight .of middle-aged wo- man, the first to be thrown on the junk pile of this y o u t h- mania. society. Her children. don't needher, and her husband wants to start it again with a chic, young secretary. On the The Michigan Daily, edited and man. aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class'postageI paid at Ann Arbor, Mich. gan, 420 Maynard St.. Ann Arbor Michigan 48104. Published daily 'Hues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity' year. Subscription rates: /$10 by carrier, $10 by main Summer Session published Tuesday thro'ugh Saturday morning.'Subscrip tion rates: $5. by carrier, $5 by mail. THE JIMMY CASTOR BUNCH Trueblood Aud. I TICKETS $2.00 at Union, Discount Records, Students Infernational Store I night she plans a pathetic anni- versary fling, she learns w h a t she has really always known. Yet she triumphs over him be- cause she can still laugh and he cannot. He is a wooden auto- maton, who, she says, can't even bother looking outside the! of- fice for someonetoshave an af- fair with. He refuses to face the truth, and tells her to lie about the son whoris a drop-out and even about her age, since' her age marks him. For the husband, she is an efficient old servant, a neces- sary piece of furniture. He does not want to lose her; but he does not want to bother talking to her, either. She knows only about house painters and dinner parties, while his secretary can fix computers. So there she is: trapped. He can escape, pretending to be young again, but she is, left alone, undesirable, very much a victim of society. In this piece Simon's touted one-liners were at their best, es- pecially in Garrett's role. "If you don't come out I'll tell the waiter you wear dentures!" she tells Parks, in a moment of exas- peration. Or, at the height of her intensity, she cries, "You're a bastard. Do you want cream or sugar?" Here Simon has cap- tured her perfectly. In the third piece Garrett be- came a socially conscious, still attractive mother in her mid- 40's with a reluctant bride for a daughter. Garrett and the blus- tering father try to persuade the girl to come out of the bath- room in which she has locked herself. Nothing works. As Garrett and Parks run through some fairly funny lines and slapstick devices like a jacket that tears down the back or falling out a window, they argue over who is to blame. In the end the bridegroom con- vinces the daughter to come out with two words: "Cool it." She has been afraid that their mar- riage will turn out just 1 i k e her parents', full of anger and pretense. But she does come out, hope- ful that theyscan do it better. And as somebody well under forty, I could not help but think that Simon's plays must say that to people in my generation. So much of what he pokes fun at is both true and tragic. Per- haps he is not conscious of h i s social criticism: but his com- edy, at its best, reflects the deeper wounds of our time. Friday, November 27, 1970 at Cobo Arena Show starts at 8:30 P.M., Doors Open at 7:30 P.M. Tickets are: $3.50, $4.50 and $5.50. Tickets on sale now at all J. L. Hudson stores, Grinnell stores and cobo Arena Box Office, Washington Blvd., Detroit, Michigan 48226. Phone No. 962- 5870. An Aruse Production Friends of the White Panthers Ann Arbor Rock & Roll Jamboree 4th RECORD BREAKING WEEK! "AS ALLEGORICAL PARODY JOE IS BOTH THOUGHTFUL AND POWERFUL" -Neal Gabler, Mich. Doily SRC "I HAD MY GUTS TWISTED BY 'Z' AND 'EASY RIDER,' AND I DID NOT THINK THEY COULD DO IT AGAIN!" -Harlan Ellison, L.A. Free Press UP Iron Horse Exchange Light Show: People's'Light & Power Films, Speakers Co. UNION BALLROOM SUNDAY, NOV. 22 "Peter Boyle, performs with as much .harsh power as the young Brando. Ranks in impact with BONNIE AND CLYDE " -Time Maqazine 'Such movies as 'Bonnie and Clyde- The Graduate'- 'Midnight Cowboy' - 'Easy Rider'- the new 'Joe' enter the national blood- stream. -Pauline Koel, The New Yorker 7-12 midnight M.C.-Jerry Lubin Adm. $1.50 WXYZ-FM I r I C IMA BUIL Friday, Nov. 20 THE APU TRILOGY, Aporjito dir. SATYGAT RAY 1958 Second film in Ray's great trilogy about the life of a young Indian boy. Apu goes off to the big University of Calcutta. On Saturday we will show the last film in the Trilogy, The World of Apu. Sunday at 7, 9, and 11, all three films will be shown. 7 & 9:05 ARCHITECTURE 662-8871 7C AUDITORIUM _____________~__~ '_'----I CINEMA 1I Rita Tushinghom and Michael Crawford demonstrate "THE KNACK (And how to get it) " directed by RICHARD LESTER ("Hard Days Night", "How I Won the War", "Petulia") PLUS A SHORT-"The Fatal Glass of Beer" starring W. C. FIELDS Friday and Saturday-Nov. 20, 21 Aud. A, Angell Hall 1:00, 9:30 NEXT WEEK AalWat Disney Extravaganza "Davey Crockett" "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow" "The Wind in the Willows" Friday & Saturday-3 shows: 7:00, 9:00, 11:00 "JOE" is rated R. Persons under 1 8 mustbe accompanied by an adult quardian. CH ILDREN'S MATINEES SAT. & SUN. 12:45 p.m. 2:45 p.m. all seats 75c "The Adventures of ; Huckleberry S AFinn" *SAT. 5, 7,9, 11 r 4. I O FIFTH VO('UM PIPTh AVIUMJU AT LIERTY DOWNTOWN ANN ARBOM4 INFORMATION 701-9700 THUR. 7,9 E FR .7, 9,11 ARTS CHORALE CONCERT FAURE REQUIEM AND Works By BRAHMS and MOZART MON. NOV. 23-8:00 P.M. HILL AUDITORIUM Admission complimentary; II mmmmmmmeSALE ENDS MONDAY, . NOV. 23, 1970 '"_"_"__" I OVER 25,000 LP'S, OVER 300 LABELS IN STOCK WATCH FOR SPECIAL SALE ITEMS CHANGING WEEKLY 4 iscount records I 1235 S. UNIVERSITY " 300 S. STATE "0- ANN ARBOR, 668-9866 665-3679 MICH. A HELD OVER! 2nd WEEK IN STEREO SOUND! "AN UNPRECEDENTED PSYCHEDELIC ROLLER COASTER OF AN EXPERIENCE" iI (ontemporary Directions 1910-11 PRESENTS The Michigan Contemporary Directions Ensemble SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1970, 8:00 P.M. RACKHAM LECTURE HALL YOU HAVEN'T HEARD ANYTHING UNTIL YOU'VE HEARD T I N A TURNER SING "PROUD MARY" NOW ON SALE ONLY &* -ik gr Iv John Roberts and Tony Barrand from England (the hit of the bawdy song workshop at the Philly Folk Festival.) . confident & tightly harmonized team ... voices that leaped & 'Milted, eyes that danced, and a variety of hats to give atmosphere to their songs." John S. Wilson New York Times. Ike & Tina Turner Workin' Together. NEW on Liberty DAVID BATES, Conductor -PROGRAM- CHARLES IVES ........From the Steeples and the Mountains JACOB DRUCKMAN .... ..Animus I for Trombone and Electronic Tape JOHN HAWKINS..............Remembrances KARLHEINZ STOCKHAUSEN ...........Refrain Compare our prices on 20 top LP's Listed Below List SALE 6.98 49 n Chicago II ......................... n Sly-Greatest Hits...... .. II IE r. .moo- .......................-