Tuesday, September 17, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Richard Pryor's EASTERN MCHIGAN UNIVERSITY PRESENTS BACHMAN-TURNER OVERDRIVE crazy universe By DAVID WARREN and IRA MONDRY "Glad to see so many niggers in school." With that, Richard Pryor opened his act Saturday night at Hill Auditorium. The black comedian, whose outrage- ous style has been stymied by T.V., was able to work to his fullest potential, free of censor- ship. The predominantly black audience responded in the most positive way: they laughed. For the last 10 years the comedic style of Richard Pryor has gone through numerous changes. He began his career as a basically establishment comedian, who appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show, and a series of T.V. shows sponsored by Kraft. Since then he has writ- ten and appeared in motion pic- tures, including Blazing Saddles and Uptown Saturday Night. However, the proper forum for Pryor's talents has always been, and remains, the live per- formance. Pryor is basically a social comedian, who attempts to deal humorously with serious con- temporary issues. The subjects covered in his concert ranged from Ford's par- don to the Patty Hearst kidnap- ping. Speaking of the famous photo of Patty holding a machine gun; during a bank holdup, "We don't know what she was doing there, maybe she's having lunch. The nigger's definitely robbing the bank.", Pryor also use personal ex- perience in order to comment on race relations. "I grew up in a whorehouse. That's where I first saw white folks." Pryor's genius lies in his ability to take a common situ- ation, expand it to fantastic pro- portions, and thus show the ab- surdity of it. He immerses him- self in a specific setting, and develops a dialogue between, various characters. Through this process he lends insight into1 everyday reality.+ Pryor seemed at ease with the audience. His casual man-+ ner and strange outlook on life1 helped to settle the otherwise noisy crowd. At one point he' had to deal with a heckler.; Rather than reacting with hos- tility, he used the heckler as a foil for his humor. Because of his great comic attitude he saved himself from a potentially ugly situation. One of the negative aspects of the show was the poor sound system of Hill. This particularly hurt the opening act, Labella, a group consisting of three wo- men singers and a backup band of four pieces. Their lyrics were almost totally unintelligible, and the loud, electric music was filled with unpleasant echoes. A great deal of Pryor's ma- terial was also lost because of the poor acoustics, and it was frustrating to try and under- stand garbled words and phras- es. In addition, his rapport with the audience may have been impaired by the bad sound quality, as it is very import- ant for a comedian to be able to speak directly to an audi- ence. Despite these problems, Pry- or was able to compensate with talent and raw energy. There were very few slow moments in his entire hour and a half set, and in addition to being crazy, as his album advertises, Rich- ard Pryor also happens to be an extremely funny man. WITH BOB SEGER Bowen Field House Sunday, Oct. 13-8 p.m. TICKETS $5.00 & $6.00 Available at McKenny Union-EMU a Brass Ring Production Daily photo by KAREN KASMAUSKI Richard Pryor Sesquicentennial photos exhibit city buildings By SARA RIMER one man said, "I wish they had i.,UU Y d d Wnt1 Gjiaj ' I. 7 The photographic sampler of tink at'swamreatyil i the city's architecture currently think that's a great building." on view at the University Mu- Representing the University s um of Art provides a visual in elegant Italianate style is awakening. President Fleming's house. Ac- For the past year photogra- cording to the exhibition cata- phers Lester Fader and Harold log the house was the first in Himes stalked the town's 19th the city to have flush toilets and 20th century architecture, installed in 1871. carefully searching out both the While Fleming5s residence, famous and the forgotten for several times enlarged and re- their collection entitled "Ann modeled, and enhanced by a Arbor Architecture, 1800-1918: A manicured lawn and gardens Sesquicentennial Selection." easily reveals its graceful lines, While the pair, both profes- a photographer's skill and dis- sors in the College of Architec- cerning eye are required to il- ture and Urban Planning, focus-, luminate the faded beauty of ing their cameras on noted, the Ann Arbnr R ilro adD nt oblivion when its train station days ended in 1950. It became first a beer warehouse, bounced briefly back into the spotlight as a teenage nightclub, and then steadily deterioriated until ouite recently. Now undergoing extensive restoration it will soon enjoy a renaissance as a col- lection of specialty shops. Waller hopes the exhibition, which runs until Sept. 22, will "suggest opportunities for pre- servation." Indicating the fire which se- verely damaged the Emmanuel Baptist Church and the re- peated vandalism attacks on the Ticknor - Campbell House, also known as the Cobblestone Farmhouse, Waller w a r n s, "Historic architecture in theI city is an endangered species." ALBERT KAHN'S massive design for Angell Hall is one of the1 tecture. Architect Kahn supposedly patterned th e multi-columned Lincoln Memorial in Washington. highlights of Ann Arbor archi- dI concrete building after the 603 E. LIBERTY DIAL 665-6290wat '35 7 &15 Andrews Sharif Seed Paavh s onasoEasnn Coor i [P anA AoEmassy resese The Unversity of Michigan PROFESSIONAL THEATRE PROGRAM P LySe'tS N EW YORk n the POWER CENTER A MUSICAL COMEDY REVUE A BISSFUL DELIGHT Jan. 17-19 THE RIVER NIGER "OG.ECIT N, WARM x ANMOSTPORTANT ASTORYOFTODAY. eT Feb 14,6 SAM LEVENE & EDDIE FOY JR SttnginNeSmon' I El D1' I N'HETC "SHnREWDLY BALANCED. RATHER TOUCHIN( SLICE OF THE SHOWBSIZ LIFE."-Do..N Ma. 29.30 )ice Mendelssohn Theatre 764.0450 beautifully - preserved residen- ces like President Fleming's: house on South University, they also recorded the more subtle charm of old buildings like the Ann Arbor Railroad Depot on S. Ashley, neglected until quite recently. Fader explains, "We wanted to create images that would open people's eyes. The whole thing should be a creative and exciting visual experience.' The two photographers reject-E ed the advice of people who suggested, "Why don't you put in the garbage cans or the cars?" According to Fader, "We didn't want to create sociologi- cal works. We wanted people to look at buildings as physical forms in their historical con- text." Describing the response of visitors newly sensitized to their environment by the exhibition, museum director Bret Waller reports, "People exclaim, 'I've driven by that house for years, but I've never really looked at it. It's beautiful."' Familiar faces in what the photographers call their "por- traits of buildings" are the Wil- son - Wahr House on N. Divi- sion, the University Observatory on E. Ann and the Ann Arbor Firehouse on E. Huron. But, the photographers' eye- opening architectural tour also extends along the less-traveled route down to the Anson Brown Building, the oldest surviving commercial structure in town, on Broadway. It stops at the Ticknor - Campbell House on N. Packard, a farmhouse being slowly reborn under the aegis of the Cobblestone Farmhouse Association, and lingers at the Guy Beckley House on Pontiac Trail. The House was a station on the Underground Railroad for runaway slaves in the 1800's. Only a few visitors decry the absence of favorite buildings. While no one voted for a shot of the Undergraduate Library just beginning to climb out of its abandoned shell w The Depot sunk slowly into I" The relationship: between sensual people is limited They must find- a new Way. LARRY KRAMER and MARTIN ROSEN present KEN RUSSELL'S 1tm of R. H. LAWRENCE'S "WOMEN IN LOVE" Q COLOR/by DeLuxe United Artists Starring GLENDA JACKSON, who won her first Academy Award for her acting in this film, OLIVER REED, ALAN BATES, and JENNIE LINDEN, -AND ENCYCLOPEDIA OF FILMMAKING TECHNIQUE.--"'Women in Love' is extraordinary. In particular, the sexual encounters have both a power and a tastefulness that we rarely see in to- day's sexually frenzied films."--LIFE MAGAZINE. TONIGHT & TOMORROW NIGHT September 17 and 18 7:00 and 9:30 p.m. - ADMISSION $1.25 THURSDAY-September 19-ONLY!-7 & 9:15--$1.25 "A MOST EXTRAORDINARY FILM!" BIPR'!TL OF ALL SHOWINGS IN AUDITORIUM "A", ANGELL HALL tickets for all of each evening's performances on sale outside the auditorium at 6 p.m, r Ap, r 1974's MOST HILARIOUS WILDEST MOVIE IS HERE! "Mnay be the funniest movie of the year. Rush to see it!" -Minneapoh s'tribune "A smashing, triumphant satire' -Seattle Post Intelligencer "Riotously, excruciatingly funny:' --Milwaukee Sentinel "Consistently hilarious and brilliant --Baltimore Daily Record "Insanely funny, outrageous and irreverent'-Bruce Williamson-PLAYBOY MAGAZINE A GREAT NEW MOTIONPICTURE COMEDY MELIES, PORTER & GRIFFITH PROGRAM (at 7) Some very early and rare films from the pioneer silent years of 1900-1915. This is an opportunity to see "experimental cinema" in its oldest and perhaps genuine form. QUEEN CHRISTINA 1933 Produced and Directed by Ken Shapiro " Written by Ken Shapiro wtit Lane Sarasohn A K-S PrOeuction A Syn-franx IF En~terprises a, Fm .orporaoii R RESTRICTED A Robert Mulligan/Richard A. Roth Production JENNIFER O'NEILL - GARY GRIMES - JERRY HOUSER- OLIVER CONANT Written by Produced by Directed by Music by HERMAN RAUCHER RICHARD A. ROTH ROBERT MULLIGAN MICHEL LEGRAND ?-