Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, December 3, 1970 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, December 3, 1970 Black consciousness explored in U' drama i - 1 "' . } } E ' . . ' j . : .. ., By JIM HENNERTY Black Theatre is a new and important concept in the Ameri- can cultural scene, and last evening the University Players introduced us to the movement with a production of Ron Mil- ner's Who's Got His Own. The playwright claims that the function of Black Theatre is considerably different from tra- ditional concepts of what drama is all about: "Black Theatre is an attempt to explore the psychic conciousness of black people . .. (it) functions . . . as in the most primitive cultures where it was the primary ve- hicle for the transmission of cultural values ..." M i I n e r has written a play which attempts to illustrate the dehumanization of black people resulting from the oppression of white society. The three members of the Bronson family each have dif- ferent approaches to life and how to mitigate its pain and suffering. Mama Bronson places her faith in religion. Clara tries for an accommodation with the white man, a sort of ideal inte- gration. which fails. Tim has come to realize, through experi- ences with his dead father, that all illusions must be shat- tered, and he does his best, on the day of his father's ;funeral, to make his mother and sister face the ugly truth: that they are more than ever under the thumb of the white man. This cathartic process is painful for all three characters. But, by the end of the play, they have at least partially succeeded in this realization. But Tim's is an impotent rage, which needs a construc- tive outlet. His striking out at the white man by physical as- sault is useless. There are no solutions to this particular prob- lem in the play, only a hope that the black man will devise an answer. When Tim learns of his father's hidden rage, similar to his own, he hopes that that / is an indication of progress. He sees an ,evolution from enslave- ment to revolt to positive solu- tions. To borrow Faulkner's fam- ous phrase; the black man will not only endure, but overcome. Unfortunately, Milner's dra- matic skills are not adequate enough to put his point across forcefully. The play is too loose- ly structured and too sluggishly paced. Tim's rage and the pow- erful family catharsis fall flat- .too diffuse to hit the audience where it hurts. The dialogue is very talkative, the speeches are too long, the action minimal and not very well placed. Leonard Smith's direction only emphasizes these faults, allow- ing careless timing and a slow pace to get the best of the per- formance. Little attention is paid to building climaxes and giving the play ultimate shape. The humorous lines don't come off due to this general sluggish- ness. Worse, the actors often 'step on' their colleagues' lines at the wrong times, entering too soon or waiting too long to speak. Despite these faults, Robert McCullough, Gaynelle Clement and Cassandra Medley perform well, making the characters be- lievable enough. Their gestures should be more frequent and more varied, and their timing is often slack. However, McCol- lough's Tim has a good deal of vitality and Medley's third act speech, as Tim's mother, is the best part of the evening. This is a worthwhile experi- ence as an introduction to Black Theatre, but it has serious dra- matic deficiencies. Hopefully we can look forward to the im- provement of Milner's skills in this area. Then, he will be able to communicate his interesting and important ideas more ef- fectively than he does in Who's Got His Own. Barbour The University almost t o r e down Barbour Gymnasium. But somewhere along the line the building priorities got screwed up, and they repainted it in- stead. The lockers are still too small to hold your clothes, and the heating system often gets the sniffles, but otherwise the old barn, with its fresh pink, blue and yellow walls, is almost as good as new. Squatting in the shadow of the 1950-sterile Chem Building, it seems almost hom- ey, quaint. Every day a lot of leotard- clad girls, swathed in sweat pants, sweaters, and long under- wear for warmth, and a few brave b o y s in tights and T- shirts, climb the wide staircases of Barbour to the second floor dance studio, where they twist their bodies into attitude crois- es or rotate their hips to an Af- rican drum beat. For this high- ceilinged studio, baby grand in the corner and a closetful of Wigman drums, is the sole home of the University's dance dept. Yes, a select group of dancers are alive and kicking in Ann Arbor, trying to get their heads aid bodies together and to learn why dance has suddenly become so important here - now. And it ain't easy when you are stuck THURS, FRI., & SAT. A MUSICAL PARTY with MICHAEL COONEY (Thurs. & Sat. LARRY HANKS JOE HICKERSON SARA GREY (Fri. & Sat.) BARRY O'NEILL ROGER RENWICK I U Gym is somewhere I -2 I away in the physical education department and have no the- ater and no lighting equipment, few costumes and no money. But they keep trying, though they sometimes get discouraged and almost depressed. They keep beating their heads against those freshly painted walls, for the sheer joy of moving. This Friday night, at 8 p.m., the dancers of the University want to share their moving ex- perience: they want you to be their guests, gratis, at an infor- mal little dance-together. They will dance together while you watch, or you can dance while they watch, or everyone can sit and watch each other. It will be about movement, about what they have been brewing all term up in that stone-cold stu- dio in their sweat-stiffened longjohns. It won't be the Rockettes - what can you expect f r o m a bunch of phys. ed. students? It won't even be Martha Graham; you'd have to pay a tidy sum to get close enough to her dancers to hear their joints crack. But the Barbour crowd crack f o r free, and at a close range too. So climb the stair to the Studio Friday night, and see the shape of things to come as well as a few nostalgic bits of the Ann Arbor dance past. See for your- self: Barbour Gymnasium lives! 4 -0 DIAL 8-6416 Still Filmdom's Most Popular I Ann Arbor Blues Festival Benefit FEATURING EVENTS DEC. 6, 1910BLG Picture- The Academy Award Winner 4i I BUDDY GUY and JUNIOR WELLS DIAL 5-6290 - A NIIV Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9:05 also "The funniest movie I've seen this year! Just go, run to see it!" --New York Post lOVRS anD O~ERSTAAGRS7 CC COLOR --NEXT - "The Baby Maker", Daily Cassifieds Get Results Phone 764-0558 .. . OTIS RUSH Only four men have walked on the moon. For the rest of us, "2001" is as close as we're likely to get. LUTHER ALLISON and Dave Alexander JOHNNY WINTER TICKETS ON SALE: Discount Records, Union Lobby, Students international TICKETS $3.50, 4.50, 5.00, 5.50 I _________ _______________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ NOW SHOWING MON. -FRI -7:00-9:00 SAT. -SUN. 5:10-7:00-9:00 move PANAVISIONd Color by DE LUXEO BLACK THEATRE WHO'S GOT HIS OWN THRU SAT. Mendelssohn Theatre BOX OFFICE-1 2:30-8:00 UNIVERSITY PLAYERS th I I - State 6' Liberty Sts., STARTS TODAY!I """ OPEN 12:45 ______________ SHOWS AT 1:15-3-5-7-9 P.M. DIAL 662-6264 Feature 15 min. later! IIssonto acowboyi ............... SINAT.9 f4, . t&A 4 R I'm, the Joe the whole country's talking about! "tA TRIUMPH! A RIP-SNORTER! A 'THIS MINUTE' F1LW" -Judith Crist "'JOE' MUST SURELY RANK IN IMPACT WITH 'BONNIE AND CLYDE'1"-Time Magazin. t**** I LOVE ITI"--Chicago-sunTn.e eTAUT AND COMPELLING!"-washington Pose tWILL BE A BOXOFFICE SENSATION!" --Chicago Tribune "AN OCCASION FOR CHEERING!" -Philadelphia Daily News teA MASTERPIECE!--chicago Today "CLEARLY THE MOVIE OF THE MOMENT AND MAYBE THE MOVIE OF THE YEAR!" -Washington Star "*** * BRILLIANTLY DONE, DEVASTATINGLY FUNNY I"-New York Daily News 0 q% mllk. Thurs., Fri., 7, 7, 9, 9 11 HELD OVER AGAIN 6TH WEEK 0 ENVIRONMENTS DISC TWO CAN HELP YOU FEEL. 30oer We'll spare you a science lesson. This is a new type of sound -in astonishing stereo. It can do for your mind what a mas- sage does for your body. Environments, Disc Two has two sides, each superb in its thoughts. Colors and smells will become more vivid. What else it can do for you, we don't know exactly. Side Two is"Dawn at New Hope-a superb re-creation, in stereo, of rural America as it might have sounded 100 years