THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five I. rodsk 's poetry By EILEEN LOEHER Despite the cold drizzle that fell yesterday afternoon, students and faculty poured into the Mo- dern Languages Bldg. for a poe- try reading by Joseph Brodsky, 33 year-old poet-in-residence at the University. The Russian-born poet left his native country in the summer of 1972 at the "invitation" of Soviet officials. His poetry has never been published in the Soviet Un- ion. Listening to Brodsky relate his poems' in Russian was a unique experience. Interpreter Tom Mac- Intyre did an excellent job of reading the English translations. Yet, it was Brodsky's song-like recitation (He did not read any of his works from print)that was most striking. Most of the works which were read came from one of Brod- #~ sky's newest books, Joseph Brod- sky, Selected Poems. The poems were not at all of a political na- ture, but were rather of a per- sonal and frequently religious nature. In his poetry Brodsky looks deeply into himself and the mean- ing of life. Frequently he high- lights death in his works. In "Nature Morte" the poet con- trasts the life of people w i t h the barrenness of things. S "What then shall I talk about?/ Shall I talk about nothingness? Shall I talk about days, or nights?/ Or people? No, only things,/ since people will surely die." CK Death is not treated hopelessly in all of Brodsky's works. In "Nunc Dimittis" Brodsky speaks of the moment of transition be- tween the Old and New Testa- o fe rs ment when the old man Simeon bri sees the Christ Child. si "He went forth to die," Brodsky list says. Yet adds finally, "The old ris man's torch glowed and t h e T pathway grew wider." eve Although born a Jew, Brod- con sky has turned increasingly to or, ideas of Christianity in his poems. tur He also writes vividly about my- wh thology as his poem, "Odysseus ofl to Telemachus" indicates. A T confused Odysseus is portrayed '1 in a manner relevant to our sy times. rec ofl "I can't remember how the thi war came out; fic even how old you are -- I er can't remember." oft Such themes as death, 1 o v e, T passion, and suffering weave sky throughout Brodsky's poetry. His wh complex works do not, however, ine 'Last,17t figh ts cc HOLLYWOOD (UPI) --Ber- gu nardo Bertolucci, the man who B directed Marlon Brando in Last to Tango in Paris cannot see his Ro own X-rated picture in Italy. wa. The film has been branded the pornographic by the Italian gov- to ernment and is banned in Greece, bu Brazil, Portugal and Spain.T It is considered such a hot to item in Brazil that the govern- en ment won't allow even the cen- his sors to see Brando and M a r i a do Schneider cavort around in +he i nude, muttering off-color dialo- fin challen ge ng themselves down to mple level. They require tener or reader to attemp e to the poet and his wo The poetry is not based eryday experience. Much o ,mes from antiquity, the Bi deep insights into human re as does his poem, "Lov ich reveals the guilt and passionate love. Througiuout his works B :y seems to be attempting concile himself with his vi life and death. It is basic s which makes his poetry ult to understand. The lis needs to identify with m the situations Brodsky rela The final question that B y leaves with his listener ere is life leading? Deat vitable but what it itsc ingo ?nsors e. Bertolucci, however, is g court for the fourth time ome to try to beat the rap. as sentenced to two month e pokey, suspended, and sta see the negative of hisi rned if he loses his legal fi The young (31) director c Hollywood to search for t for a new picture. Du s stay he failed to contact B "I haven't seen him since ished the picture," Bertol id in halting English. "I he om mutual friends that he li e film, but he has never essed his feelings to me. "I wanted Brando for the1 om the beginning. I had ni ard his voice in my life. pictures are dubbed inl n. 'We spent a day together aris and he agreed to play rt without ever seeing t ript. Then I spent 15d th him in Hollywood gttin ow him, seeing how ne c the sequence? In "Nature Morte" he the cries, t to "Dust is the flesh of time/ rld. Time's very flesh and blood." on In his final poem, "Nunc Di- f it mittis," Brodsky seems to have ble, found some answer in Simeon's h opefulness after seeing Christ. joy "And Simeon's soul held the form of the Child- rod- its feathery crown now envelop- to ed in glory- ew aloft, like a torch, pressuring ally back the black shadows/". dif- Perhaps this is the hope he ten- has found for himself. In the any final analysis only the poet him-j tes. self really knows. Yet, Joseph rod- B r o d s k y's poetry contains r is thoughts and language which can h is both puzzle and enchant the Ps- con- tener. dir1ctort incourt. invest his character into t h e oing role. e ;n "I think the picture is a docu- He mentary in fiction form of Bran- s in do. I feel shy about seeing him nds now because I think I violated film him artistically. I took things ght. from him he has never given ame before." tal- One element of Brando ca ring exorcised was the famed Marlon ran- mumble. "For the first time in a move, we p e o p 1 e can understand what ucci Brando is s-aying," 13ertolucci Bard said triumphantly. "I don't ur,- iked derstand English so well. When ex- I couldn't understand him on the set I made him repeat his line part until I knew what he was say- ever ing." All The volatile Brando, acco-d- ial- ing to his director, did not blow his stack. r in "I found Brando a complicat- the ed man, but ours was the easiest t h e relationship I ever had with an day3 actor," Bertolucci said. "I am g to told he can be difficult. But I ould never saw the bad side of him.' UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN ,UN" 'ERTY PLAYERS OPEN AUDITIONS FOR UPCOMING PRODUCTIONS SHOWCASE PRODUCTION: BRAVE LITTLE TAILOR (a children's theatre production) FridayJkn. 25, 3-5 p.m.. 7-9 p.m., Rm. 2518 Frieze Bldg. (Production dates: March 28-30) SHOWCASE PRODUCTION: THE CRUCIBLE Friday, Jan. 25, 3-5 p.m., 7-10 p.m., Saturday, ian. 26, 2-5 p.m., Rm. 2528 Frieze Bldg. (Production dates: April 10-13) For further information call 764-6300, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Daily Photo by DAVID MARGOLI Joseph Brodsky, Tom Maclintyre (left) Local drum troupe instills spirit i j By SARA RIMER "Gimmee some drums," calls Vera Embree. Congo Phil breaks into a toothy grin, hits his drums, and the beat begins. For the next hour the Third Stone From the Sun, formerly the Afro-American Drum Troupe, gives Embree's African Dance class a pulsating, rhythm to follow. Only an occasional "cool it," from Embree halts the music's flow. It is just as Congo Phil says, "We're, giving energy to the dancers, and they're giving it back to us." The group, composed of horn player Vaulx and conga drum- mers Lowell Thompson, George Martin, Congo Phil, and S t e v e Grisham, plays for Sylvia Lam- bert's jazz class in addition to the African Dance class. A fricai Congo Phil explains his begin- ning with Embree's class. "I 1 just sorta fell into it about three I years ago." After the class, hot summer days found him elec- trifying a crowd on the Diag with his catchy drumbeat.1 The group has also played the Blind Pig, Primo, Free Park Con- cert, and some dorm parties. + Embree comments on their de- velopment, "Creativity is I i k e + that. If you've got it, it springs l forth wherever you are. It snow- balls, and picks up momentum and gathers other people into it." Continuing to. gain momentum,- the group hopes to play formal ; concerts, eventually incorporating their own concerts into the group. I Phil states their prime interest, "We're working on being con- cert musicians." dance classes Vaulx writes the tunes on which the group improvises and jams. He cites Charlie Parker and John Coltrane as influences. He de- scribes his composing. "We play what we see as we live from day to day. That's how I compose. I take a melody and improvise it, creating many structures to extend the music." Vaulx refuses to be p i n n e d down to a concise explanation of his music. He says impatiently, "I don't like to phrase it up. Just listen to it. Form your own idea." Certainly, the dancers, progres- sing through their movements with growing spirit and energy, understand Vaulx's tunes. When Congo Phil flashes that contag- ious smile and gets into his mu- sic, words become superfluous. At one point in the class E bree points to her chest, d claring "All movement starts the center of the body." ' h, accompanying music seems M - de- at me to sa fro the pre fro he, his ian Pa pa sc S wi kn J spring from the same source. Congo Phil feels that "a lot of people can relate to conga drums from Santana. It appeas to everybody. The drums have a different feeling in themselves. About his listeners he says, "Il like a responsive audience -- essential for a musician." The dancers, matching the group's beat in intensity and joy fit the description well. The group doesn't like to talk about the black appeal in their music. Vaulx believes, "A 11 creativity can mix and blend when people blend. It's every- body's music." Discarding jazz as an archaic label, the group prefers to term their style, "new, black, classi- cal music." But, Vaulx empha- sizes, "That's not a racist term whatsoever." He elaborates fur- ther, "We're getting away from Western ideas. "We're going back to pre-Church mode days." Another broad grin from Congo Phil, and the beat takes over where the words leave off. As. Embree says, "Creativity is like that. ______ U CAl IN DAR FILM-Cinema Guild features D. W. Griffith's Way Down East at 6:30 only in Arch. Aud. and Birth of a Nation at 9:30 only; Ann Arbor Film Co-op presents Siegal's Dirty Harry in Aud. A at 7 and 9; New World Film Co-op offers Gavras' State of Siege in Nat. Sci. Aud. at 7 and 9; Picasso is 90 in W. Lounge of S. Quad at 10. MUSIC SCHOOL-Thomas Hilbish conducts a Faculty Cham- ber Concert at 8 in Rackham Aud. ATTENTION GRAD STUDENTS AND TRANSFER STUDENTS If you are anxious to share your experiences with student governments at other schools, the Regents Commission on Student Governments is anxious to hear from you. CALL: LINDA SILVERMAN-764-7567 Rt &CIE 603 E. Liberty L I-p=1 N0,I D.W. GR IFFITH'S WAY DOWN EAST at 6:30 Lillian Gish and Richard Barthelmess star in Griffith's masterful adaptation of o popular melodrama into moving story that ends with the famous rescue on the ice } (actually done by the stars). BIRTH OF A NATION at 9:30 The film that created an industry, established an art, made Griffith famous and started protests and demonstrations is still a controversial but great look at the civil war and reconstruction. The twist-the KKK comes to the rescue. CINEMA$GUILD$1 for ARCHITECTURE CIE AGIDeach show AD Daily Photo by DAVID MARGOLICK DIAL OPEN DAILY 12:45 SHOWS AT 1, 3, 5, 7, & 9 Starts Friday Woody Allen's 'SLEEPER" DIAL6 1214 South University SAT., SUN., WED. SHOWS AT 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 P.M. MON. & TUES. AT7&9 ONLY OPEN DAILY 12:45 SHOWS AT 1, 3, 5, 7 & 9 P.M. 668-6416 RO- I Drum troupe THE PRIMo SHOWBAR PRESENTS WED &THUR JAN 23 & 24 LE - . BOB SEGEuR I I , 11 * 231 S. State I L ______ ____- - El