Saturday, February 14, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Saturday, February 101 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY ail iberA long-awaited motion picture classic will be shown today at 1-3-5- "IT IS A MISSING CHAPTER FROM 'THE GRAPES OF WRATH' AND OF EQUAL STATURE." -Judith Crist, NBC-TV ..Jaadnitz / MATTEL Productions STARRING Phesenms l SOUNDER" CICELY A Robert B.Radnitz/Martin Ritt1 P" mTYSON , MIDNIGHT SNACK! Play It Again, Sam Alas . .. good intentions, but a poor production Play it Again Sam, a comedy in three acts, presented by the Mich- mimers, produced'by Mark LoPatin and Anne Martin, directed by Tom Katosic, Cast: Allan Felix Roby London Nancy Shelly Brown Bogart Pete Firehammer Rick Christie Chris Daniels Linda Christie Chris Daniels Sharon Sheila Heyman Sharon Lake Diane Landay Gina Joan Edwards Vanessa Linda Feinberg Intellectual Girl Pan Cherney Barbara Joan Edwards By ALVIN CHARLES KATZ Play It Again, Sam, the first offering of Ann Arbor's newest theatre company, UAC Michmi- mers, opened Thursday night at Mendelssohn Theatre. The com- pany is part of the Cultural Af- fairs committee of the Univer- sity Activitie Center, formed to produce a series of non-musical plays in order to give more stu- dents, particularly non-dama majors an opportunity to work in theatre. Producers Mark LoPatin and Anne Martin have worked hard to get the company going, and its inception fills a void in the Ann Arbor theatre scene, providing an opportunity for nonmusical students to get in- volved in a production. Sadly, Michmimer's production is as bad as their intentions are good. The play, a typically in- sane Woody Allen product, deals with the Allenesque hero, Allan Felix, who may be the ultimate neurotic. A varitable ganglion of psychological hangups, neuro- ses, and feelings of inferiority, he is so hyper that when a gun is pointed at him, he cries "Don't pull the trigger. I'm a bleeder!" His life is characterized by re- jection, Allen seeks a new girl after his wife leaves him. De- spite the attempts of his belt friend Dick and his wife Linda to fix him up with an assortment, of cuties ranging from intellec- tual to kinky, he is a failure. He turnstto his movie idol, Hum- phrey Bogart, for coaching, and under Bogey's guidance manages to have an affair with his b e s t friend's wife, the result b e i n g more self-recrimination and more neuroses. Tying all this to- gether are some of the best mon- ologue style one-liners to be found in any play. Whether or not there is act- ing to be reviewed in Play It Again, Sam is a matter of some doubt. Roby London, in the lead role of Allan Felix, looked dis- turbingly like he was trying to to look like Woody Allen, a n d managed to maul jokes that I previously believed were too fun- ny for even his delivery to de- stroy. The character he develop- ed was wholly one dimensional, and made no progress in the course of the play, as a success- ful portrayal must. Charles Wolfson, as Allan' friend Dick, portrayed the char- acter with all the intensity of a potato, and Chris Daniels was so marzipan and unconvincing as his wife Linda that her perform- ance would have gone unnoticed on a Lassie episode. Pete Fire- hamer, who looks less like Hum- phrey Bogart than I do (which is not very much), managed to look out of place wherever he stood, and sounded very little like Bo- gart the few times his lines were loud enough to be audible. The bevy of beauties who comprise the rest of the cast all managed to look and sound wrong for their roles, and the entire cast with- out exception read their lines with all the enthusiasm one as- sociates with a shopping list. Director Tom Katosic's block ing was stifling, and if in fact he did any directing, the fruits of it were not to be seen. En- semble and comic timing were totally absent. Perhaps the best thing about the productipn was that, despite the tedious tempo the play moved at, at an hour and forty-five minutes it was mercifully short. Not all of the blame for this poor show belongs to the pro- duction. The choice of play, I think, was a poor one. Play it Again, Sam was written by Woody Allen. Any attempt to substitute another actor merely calls attention to the fact that the actor, no matter how formid- able his alents, is not Woov Allen. The play offers little dra- matically, and was conceived mostly as a vehicle for Allen's rambling monologue style to be brought to the stage. It worked on Broadway and in the movies because it had Woody Allen to play himself (and Jerry Laey to play Bogey), and failed here because it did not. Hopefully, UAC Michmimers will continue to stage produc- tions. Doubtless, as the company matures and gains experience, the quality of its efforts w i II improve. As far as Play It Again, Sam goes, it is best chalked up to experience. t.ve tonight 6:00 2 News 9 This Is Your Life 50 Star Trek 56 Thirty Minutes With 000 " By SARA RIMER Watching young Detroit artist .Gary Smith demonstrate his art of vaseline-painting at the Lan- tern Gallery earlier this week, I couldn't help but be reminded of children playfully sketching de- signs on foggy windows. A mere jar of vaseline be- comes a serenely beautiful work of art in his hands. He applies the greasy, slimy ointment with his fingers and wooden tools to a large window glass. Working in- tiiitively and without prepara- tion, he produces a large rec- tangular pattern of grids filled in with vaseline design. Smith's creation quickly be- comes a totally involved, serious experience. It must be examined from all sides, since the work changes according to the re- flected light and passersby. Smith is interested in percep- tual ambiguities, trying to deal with a picture plane that oper- ates on many different levels. Perception becomes more im- portant than content as "how" we see interests us more than "what" we see. The grid at- tempts to reinforce the picture plane, emphasizing its flatness. The varying thick and thin ap- plication of vaseline both ne- gates and reinforces the picture plane, creating a sense of action. Smith's lack of color also allows him to concentrate on the pic- ture plane. Smith, whose rather conserva- tive appearance clashes with his striking work, which he regards as a "cerebral, uncompromis- ing" statement. "People can read it a lot more emotionally than I intended it to be," he says. For observers tempted to indulge in a little vaseline finger painting, he warns, "Once I've made a statement, I want it to exist as my personal state- ment." He does not want others to change it. Smith sees things in the con- text of art history. He' spent much timerdeveloping an aware ness of his place in its progres- sion. He considers any good work of art to be a comment on what has gone before it. But, he is critical of artists who work in a vacuum unaware of why they are creating. Although he deals with issues that other people have been concerned with, he does not want to re- peat what has been done, em- phasizing, "I don't want to waste my time on dead issues." He is trying with object art to deal with the issues of non- object art. When pressed to ex- plain these issues Smith says, "One issue is how we perceive things, but to pin them down more concretely would take a lot of their mystery away." Other artists who have dealt with similar issues are Robert Morris, Eva Hesse, Lucas Sa- maras, and Carl Andre. Smith is more concerned with personal than with popular suc- cess. Obviously, with its limited life span dictated by the medium of vaseline, Smith's work is not marketable. Having seen artists tailor their work to what a gallery can sell, he does not want to depend primarily on art as a means of support. Instead, he has a B.F.A., with distinction from Wayne State University and will be able to teach after he receives his M.F.A. from Cranbrook Academy of Art. Until recently he has been in- volved primarily with plastic sculpture. He describes those works as "very slick, finalized Look now before it disappears.. . that greasy, slimy Vase line art art objects: very 'beautiful' and relevant." Since he had already been working with transparency in his plastic sculpture, it na- turally occurred to him to ex- periment with vaseline. Unfortunately on1y photo- graphic records will remain of Smith's asthetic statement after Feb. 28 when the exhibition will close. He himself does not con- sider permanence as a measure of importance. "It is sort of like a theatre performance. At a given time it's over," he says. And as in a theatre perform- ance, we give an ovation and hope for an encore. plus FLASH GORDON We have the entire 13 weeks of the Buster Crabbe classic. This weekend we will be show- ing both Chapters One and Two, for the bene- fit of anyone who may have missed the First Chapter last weekend. LATE SHOW-Fri. and Sat. Midnight DOORS OPEN 11:45-ADMISSION $2.00 NEXT WEEKEND'S LATE SHOW-Feb. 16 & 17 Santana in "Stomping Ground" plus Chap. 3 "Flash Gordon" I ~7O O0 0 iI Subscribe to The Daily Phone 764-0558 Daily Photo by JOHN UPTON Gary Smith peers through his translucent work of art 50 Movie-Thriller 9 NHL Hockey 56 Movie "Beauty and the Beast" 50 That Good Ole Nashville Music 8:30 2 Bridget Loves Bernie 7 A Touch of Grace 50 Nitty Gritty 9:00 2 Mary Tyler Moore 4 Mozie- "The Andromeda Strain" 7 Julie Andrews 50 NHL Hockey 9:30 2 Bob Newhart 10:00 2 Carol Burnett 7Assignment: Vienna 56 Hollywood Television Theatre 10:30 9 Document 50 Movie-Thriller "House on Haunted Hill" (1959) 12:00 4 Johnny Carson 1:30 2 Movie- "Shoot Loud, Louder.. .. I Don't Understand" (Italian; 1966) 4 News 7 Movie- "Murder, Inc." (1960) 3:00 2, 7 News wcbn a 6:30 2 4 9 7:00 2 4 9 50 CBS News News What About Tomorrow? Untamed World Truth or Consequences George Pierrot News It Takes a Thief Hee Haw 7:30 2 Young Dr. Kildare 4 Adventurer 7 Town Meeting 56 Eye to Eye 8:00 2 All in the Family 4 Emergency? 7 Here We Go Again 11:00 2, 7, 9 News 11:15 7 ABC News-Sam Donaldson 9 Provincial Affairs 11:20 9 News 11:30 2 Movie- "Nevada Smith" 4 News 7 Movie- "The St. Valentine's Day Massacre" 9 Movie- "Marnie" listings 9:00 Maranatha Music 12:00 Radio Prison 2:00 Basketball: UM vs.-MSU 4:00 Jazz 7:45 Hockey: UM vs. Minn-Duluth 10:30 Progressive Rock 11:00 Potato Show _._____ _ CULTURE CALEINDAR C A P R A FESTIVAL - Cinema Guild shows Frank Capra's Meet John Doe tonight at 7, 9:05, Arch. Aud. FILMS-India Students Assoc. shows S. Roy's Uphaar tonight at 6:30, Aud E, Phys-Austron; Cinema II shows Kuro- sawa's Lower Depths tonight at 7, 9:30, Aud A; Couzens Film Co-op shows Something Big, tonight at 7, 9, Cafe- teria; New Morning Films shows Klute tonight at 7, 9, Aud. 3, MLB; Rugby Club Film Benefit shows Hitchock's Rebecca tonight at 7, Psycho at 9, Dial M for Murder at 11, RC Aud; Bursley Hall shows Bullitt tonight at 9, W. Cafe. DRAMA-Professional Theatre Program presents the Jul- liard Company in School for Scandal tonight at 8, Power; UAC-Michmimers present Woody Allen's Play It Again, Sam tonight at 8, Mendelssohn. MUSIC-Eastern Michigan University presents Miles Davis in concert tonight at Pease Aud.; University Music School presents Contemporary Directions: The Blackearth Per- cussion CGroup, in residence, U of Illinois, tonight at 8, Rackham Aud. DETROIT MUSIC - Elephants Memory in concert Sunday at Ford Auditorium; Tribe perforni tonight at the Strata Concert Gallery. UPCOMING CONCERT TIP- Dan Hicks and His Hot Licks appear in concert February 17 with Bob Seger at De- troit's Masonic Temple at 8. WEEKEND BARS AND MUSIC-Ark, Lou Killen (Fri., Sat.) Admission; Blind Pig, John Nicholas accompanied by Fran and Sara (Fri., Sat.) cover, Classical (Sun.) no cov- er; Del Rio, Jazz Music (Sun.) no cover; Golden Falcon, Phase II (Fri., Sat:) cover; Mr. Flood's Party, Brooklyn Blues Busters (Fri., Sat.) cover, Diesel Smoke and Dan- gerous Curves (Sun.), cover; Odyssey, Locomobile, for- merly Bad Luck and Trouble (Fri., Sat.), cover, Okra (Sun.) cover; Bimbo's on the Hill, Epic (Fri., Sat.) cover; Bimbo's, Gaslighters (Fri., Sat., Sun.), cover; Rubaiyat, Iris Bell Adventure (Fri., Sat., Sun.) no cover; NOW! Liv Ullm Voted " '' f e l Get to know the two of you be fore yoqu become the three of you. Get to know what you both really like. What you both really want out of life. Get to enjoy your freedom together until you both decide you want to let go of a little bit of it. But make it your choice. Research statistics show that more than half of all the pregnancies each year are accidental. Too many of them, to couples who thought they knew all about family planning methods. Get to know how the two of you don't have to become the three of you. Or the four of you. Or.-_ PInr'ed Parwntnhand "MASTERFUL ! OF A SECUREI LISTS OF C I GREAT FILMS!" Wins "One of the best movies in years! A rare gem!" Family Circle AA FILM WORTHY INTEGRITY PLACE ON AN ARTIS N E M A' S MENT AS THIS YEAR ton, N.Y. Post T - - E Max von Sydow-Liv Ullmann The Erirantis Technicolor From Warner Bros AWarner Communications Company on... Best Actress" N.Y. Film Critics OF IMMENSE Y, AS CERTAIN TIC ACHIEVE- ~I HAVE SEEN R !" he Notional Observer "A historical pageant ..- undeniably great." Vincent Canby, N.Y. Times -. ---------- ----- it I I SAT. 10 FEB. LOWER Pretzel Bell, RFD Boys Jack's, Rockets (Fri., Sat., MARX BROS. IN ~Cocoanut" ANDP (Fri., Sat.); cover; Mackinac Sun.) cover. RIO DE JANEIRO (A') - Rio's Botanical Garden gave up the fight to save its most famous tree -the 127-foot "Mother Palm," planted in 1809 by King Joao VI of Portugal. The tree was struck by lightning last October. DETH III