Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, September 5, 19701 Characterizing 'The Merchant' FOH VILLGE 375 No.MAPLE RD.-769-1300 Tues.-Fri. 7:25 & 9:45 Sat.-Mon. 1 :00, 5:10, 7:25, 9:45 Director Jean Gascon's Mer- chant of Venice at Stratford, Ontario is enjoyable to say the least. Compounded with amaz- ing charicatures and an inter- esting study of Portia, Shylock and Antonio it is even better, but it is essentially studies of each character and scene that makes t h e production hang loosely together; not an homo- genous whole. - Donald Davis as Shylock, the Jewish money lender w h o is more interested in his ducats than his daughter, plays t h e role without the often applied stereotypes - no forelocks or large hooked nose. He plays him greedily ferocious and under Gascon's guide the aspect of the Jew is shunned for what Gascon believes to be the basic moral in the play, ". . . generosity - the sharing of life's riches with oth- ers." We are introduced to a new Portia in this production; one who no longer judiciously de- feats Shylock with her "quality of mercy" speech, but with her wit. Maureen O'Brien acts like a young girl who happens to be just slightly more clever than the others around her. Artistic- ally she downplays the 'Mercy' speech so that the audience hardly knows t h a t one of Shakespeare's speeches is ap- proaching. According to M i s s O'Brien, she had discovered on tour that her first approach, the traditional judicious Portia, was not well received - that the au- dience became alienated from her, so she dropped it all and played it her new, much more effective way. Slightly effeminate Antonio, played by Leo Ciceri, is portray- ed with casual grace bringing out the full understanding An- tonio has for his own life and situation and the compassion he has for his friends. Though each of these char-, acters are f r e s h and new to Shakespearian audiences they remain individual. Interaction, though necessarily p r e s e n t, stops the moment t h e actors leave the stage. This technique, however, allows a new singular development for the characters and is marvelous for the set of sketches of Portia and her for- tune's many suitors. Artistic designer P e s m o n d Heeley has taken these scenes and made them tableau images in black and white elucidating Gascon's charicatures. Powys. Thomas, as the Prince of Mo- rocco, enters in an a r r a y of black-black bodyguards, black costumes, black flags and black skins. White surrounds Thomas' face and his thin crook of a nose stares, almost as a third to his white eyes, over-dramatically but humorously out at the au- dience. Just a movement of his head creates a totally new study in black. And then . . . In a flounce of white appears the foppish Prince of Arragon (Eric Donkin) typifying the English mood towards the gen- tlemen of Spain in the time of Shakespeare. To complete the tableau, he is surrounded by men of the Catholic C h u r c h who pray continuously in their white purity and piety. This production of Mer- chant is a wonderfully enjoyable display of Jean Gascon's ability to bring a new creative inter- pretation of Shakespeare to the stage. L. H. 1, ELECTIONS '70 .. l 'I PROF. JACK WALKER, Instructor Course in contemporary political issues which will include work in the.1970 election campaigns, lec- tures by University dnd non-university authorities and discussion groups. -Douglas Spillane; Stratford, Ontario -Douglas Spillane; Stratford, Ontario Kenneth Welsh and Maureen O'Brien in 'Cymbeline' Maureen O'Brien as Portia and Powys Thomas as Morocco in 'Merchant' T-Th. .3-4 Nat. Sci Aud. By LAURIE HARRIS Shakespeare's Cymbeline is a concoction of every gimmick and motif the bard ever utilized. Director Jean Gascon has taken it as such and measured into it carefully applied humor plus each trick and style the Strat- ford stage has ever used before. The creation? - fantastic. Start with two brothers, sons of King Cymbeline, stolen from court twenty years earlier. His daughter, Imogen, is jailed for marrying without his permis- sion. Add the conniving witchery of the new queen, the daugh- ter's virtue falsely exposed dur- ing her husband's banishment, a potion that doesn't quite work in the manner prescribed and a 7basketful of mistaken identities. It all comes together with a 'happily ever after' ending that sounds like Jewish Geography placed in ancient Britain, (so you're related to .. .). That is Cymbeline and it takes Jean Gascon to make it a polished web of riotous nonsense. King Cymbeline, Powys Thom-- as, is a ferocious and yet laugh- able bunderer, blessed o n I y with the authority of his crown, who banishes his daughter's husband because he is a com- moner. Prompting him in this action is his second wife, Pat Galloway as the wicked, flame-haired queen who desires -to secure the throne for her son Cloten by marrying him to Imogen, the king's daughter. Cloten, Robin Gammell, is like the twenty year old who is still going through adolescence -his voice changing, charmingly clumsy and boisterously Ibreten- tious. Leo Ciceri is the wily Italian who cons Posthumous, Imogen's banished husband into a wager over her fidelity. Clever Iach- imo falsely proves Imogen's in- fidelity so Posthumous orders her death. She is taken to the woods and discovers the tender, masculine Belarius (Mervyn Blake) and his two adopted sons who actually are her long lost brothers. And the plot goes in- tertwiningly on. Gascon has left nothing out as people creep in and out of trunks, die and reappear - or maybe they don't die at, all. Even /the lovely Imogen (Maureen O'Brien) makes love to a head- less, bloods corpse who, of course, isn't who it seems to be. The scene is at first repulsive and slowly becomes comical as one is taken in by the absurdity 4 of the entire situation. Designer Tanya Moseiwitsch has carried the fairy tale into her incredible costumes a n d sets. The witch of a queen wears a thorny crown that reaches up Poli. Si. 300 Div. No. 450 4 credit hrs. no prerequisites Plus Discussion Sections TheArk (off ehdouse Welcomes You Back to Ann Arbor With another semester of fine traditional music Read and Use Daily Classilieds ... - "It is beyond all question a major work by one of the few true masters the film form has yet had. Visually it is a tour de fdrce, a feverishly brilliant succession of grotesque and macbre images which make the fantasies of '8%2' and'Juliet of I the Spirits' seem as child's play" -=Los Angeles Times 141 Hill $STT SATURDAY t The Queen of Cymbeline (Pat Galloway) lectures Imogene (Maureen O'Brien) and Pisanio (Bernard Behrens) like fingers covering her turban of bright red hair. (Walter Kerr, of the Times, says to see the show if only for the costumes.) But the climax to this fantasy comes with the thundering en- trance of a silvered Jupiter a- stride a golden eagle seemingly as large as a Boeing 747. Clouds of billowing organza smoke fill the stage making the viewer realize Cymbeline is only as ab- surd as our most believable dreams. It is no wonder that Cymbe- line is rarely produced. Often thought to be among Shake- spear's worst, Jean Gascon dis- cards this taboo with skill, as though he had dreamt it all up himself. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- agec. 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 through Sunday morningUner slty year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $10 by mal. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5. by carrier, $5 by mal. GET YOUR MAN'WITHA Want - Sept. 5, 6-Sat., Sun. SHOOT THE PIANO PLAYERI dir. FRANCOIS TRUFFAUT (1961) STARRING: Brooklyn's French gangster CHARLES AZNAVOUR Half thriller, half parody, one of the Greats of the New Wave, and a lot of peoples' favorite movie. Sept. 7-PILOT PROJECT WEEKEND. dir. JEAN-LUC GODARD (1968) 7 & 9:05 4Architecture 67 &29:0575c Auditorium I Rome. Michael. TwCooney young men proved to be both natural show stoppers and serious performers of rare skill. Bob Dylan and Michael .-San Francisco Examiner "Cooney drew a standing ova- tion until he reappeared." -Tucson Daily Citizen ' .in proceeded to amaze . other words one doesn't talk about M.C., one lIistens to him." -Mich. Daily $1.25 4-0 Before Christ." After Fellini. 0 I 141 Kill STREET 1615 "' UNIONSEAGUE O SHO' '70 "If you see with innocent eyes, everything is divine" -FELLINI F presents CAN-CAN An ALBERTO GRIMALDI Production "FELLINI SATYRICONi SAT. 1 P.M. (AFTERNOON) FREE Woody Guthrie Workshop by Guthrie biographer DICK REUSS SUN. 8:30 Bob Franke composer of songs good annh to1- Ic Ihn,,arnntia rl 4the SS EETI C starring MARTIN POTTER . HIRAM KELLER - MAX BORN - SALVO RANDONE - MAGALI NOEL ALAIN CUNY.- LUCIA BOSE - TANYA LOPERT. GORDON MITCHELL with CAPUCINE andeyy by FEDERICO FELLINI and BERNARDINO ZAPPONI COLOR by Deluxe* PANAVISION* Unud Ar hsts LR]71cl i R o dp uae 3' I . m Ii