Sunday, February 11, 1973 THE MICHIGAN GAILY Page Three Sunday, February 11, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three SPECIAL! HOT CHOCOLATE Everyone Welcome! The Emigrants: Swede views U.S. LOTS OF PEOPLE GRAD COFFEE HOUR WEDNESDAY 8-10 p.m. West Conference Room, 4th Floor RACKHAM LOTS OF FOOD NOTICE Non-Native Speakers of English All Speakers of English as a Second Language* Are Invited to Take Part in an Experimental Test of English Language Proficiency to be Given in RACK- HAM LECTURE HALL AT 7:00 P.M. ON THE 15th OF FEBRUARY. You will receive $5.00 for Approxi- mately 1 72-2 Hours of Your Time. If Interested You Must Call and Register at the Following Number: 764-2416 on or before February 14th. *No ELI Students Currently Enrolled in the Intensive English Courses Are Eligible for the Test at This Time. ENJOY A SUNDAY NIGHT ROAST BEEF SPECIAL at the 9I tiei &ele( &t((et 2333 E. Stadium CHOICE ROUND OF BEEF POTATOES TOSSED-SALAD ROLL AND BUTTER BEVERAGE $1.98 COMPLETE 5-8 P.M. WITH THIS AD ONLY LOOKING FOR AN APARTMENT? You know what to expect-high rents, inadequate code enforcement, overcrowding and tight, dis- criminatory markets. City Council can move now to: " enact tenant-controlled code enforcement; * set up machinery for tenant-run rent control; * pressure the University to meet its responsi- bility for more low-cost housing. HAD YOUR PLACE BROKEN INTO ? Was it a desperate heroin addict, or the Ann Arbor police making another one of their famous "mis- takes"? Council must: Sdemand complete answers to citizen com- plaints about police; " take responsibility for setting law enforcement priorities;I 0 fund addict rehabilitation programs, while sup-I porting decriminalization of heroin. TRIED TO FIND CHILD-HEALTH CARE We need user-controlled facilities where everyone can obtain basic strvices. As a start, $50,000 of revenue-sharing money could fund a free or low- cost abortion clinic. The City can pressure the Uni- versity to provide child-care facilities for the 1,400 youngsters living in married student housing. mes a ELE m r emma a === School for Scandal School for Scandal... couldscarcely be finer' By MITCHELL ROSS After seeing the New Y o r k City Center's production of Sher- idan's School for Scandal, at the Power Center this weekend, I no longer wonder at how this work became the most popular in the language during the 18th century. The New York com- pany, in magnificent harmony, has fashioned a production which could scarcely be finer. All the points of Sheridan's wit,, whether merry or vicious, are sharpened here with superb precision. Every hair is in place, and the walk of each actor upon the stage is in step with the con- current line in the script. The genius of repertory theatre is brought to bear upon us, and our laughter is tempered only by our respect. There is, to be sure, an ocasional excess, but so vital a performance may be permit- ted this. Indeed, I might be forc- ed to admit that I prefer it this way, as perfection can be irritating. Those who are unfamiliar with the work should trouble t h e m- selves to make its acquaintance. Their researches will end in de- light, I can promise. Never-' theless, those among us who had known this work before, come away from the City Center pro- duction with a feeling akin to having strengthened an old friendship. Director Gerald Free- man and his cast deserved many thanks for such excellent mid- wifery. Set in the salons of mid-18th century London, The School for Scandal details the passions and prejudices of well-to-do English society in that era. For all the extravagance of its plot-line- mistresses hiding behind screens, wealthy, long-unseen uncles dis- guising themselves to inquire in- to the characters of nephews they have liberally endowed - this is an essentially h o n e s t play. Our foibles are essentially unchanged over two centuries, and so this comedy of manners fascinates us nearly as much as it did those people whom it di- rectly describes. _ Virtue m a v emerge triumphant, but not with- out its perils exposed; and evil may be banished, but without :is- surance that it shall not reap- pear. I grant that these are sober words for so light-hearted a play, and yet I think them useful in praising this production. The work itself is witty enough to earn laughs from even the drear= iest performance. But Freeman and his cast have labored to .le- tail the individuals - something all too rarely done in productions of works which describe a style of life that has vanished - and therein lies the secret of their victory. There is no weak acting in the entire cast, but certain work de- serves special praise. David Schramm, as Sir Peter Teazle, stands at the center, and I sur- mise that each of the other ac- tors drew strength from his clear-headedness. As huband vic- timized by cuckoldry, frazzled guardian, or surprised old friend, Schramm's performance realiz- es the integrity written into Teaz- le's role. Our hearts warmed m o r e slowly to Patti LuPone's Lady Teazle. The actress is not blessed, with an outstanding stage voice, and her thin figure does not im- mediately impress itself upon us. Yet her touch is sure, and with considerable grace, she, too, wins us over, before the night is through. David Ogden Stier,, is solid as Joseph Surface, but would do better to leave off the gim- micks he occasionally employs to woo the unsophisticated. As brother Charles, Kevin Kline is convincing, whether sotted or sober. In the person of Mary L o u Rosato, Lady Sneerwell lives no to her name, as does Mrs. Can- dour, in the hands of Cynthia Herman. Extraordinary is t h e work of Sam Tsoutavas in tw. character roles- Lady Sneer- well's many-faceted assistant, Snake, and Charles Surface's drinking companion, Careless, in whose person he roars out a drinking song whose power lies in its unintelligibility. This does not complete the cant list, but it completes the spe'ific citations to be awarded by a critic who does not wish to lose his reputation for wicked words. I hail all the others with a col- lective bravo, and leave it at that. Scenery by Douglas Schmidr, costumes by John David Fidge, and lighting by Joe Paciti all function well - which is not al- ways the case in productions - we applaud them, too. By DAVID GRUBER Every winter term the Amer- ican Studies department offers a course in American film. Twice a week some 600 students cram a Modern Language Building auditorium to learn about Amer- ican culture through the coun- try's most popular form of art and entertainment. Thanks to the generous heart of its instruc- tor and the natural attraction of the films he shows, the course has become one of the largest and most enjoyable on campus. By sheer coincidence, no doubt, Ann Arbor theatres have taken this course and blown it up to city-wide proportions. It's Amer- ica Week here in town, a n d wherever you go (almost) you will find a film which probes some aspect of American 1 i f e and history: Cinema Guild is running the Capra Festival (Cap- ra, the maker of "classic Amer- ican mythology," according to movie critic Richard Glatzer); Deliverance, Sounder, and T h e Emigrants are playing in the commercial theatres. If one were actually to treat these films as an educational ex- travaganza, it would .have to be done the following way: one must go to the films primarily for enjoyment. A film, once ex- perienced and enjoyed, o p e n s itself to serious thought, which can also be enjoyable, assuming that it helps a viewer to better understand and perhaps marvel over what he has seen. The Emigrants would be the logical place to start this educa- tion, were it not for the fact that throngs of people have already seen Deliverance and that the Capra Festival is presently mov- ing into its grand finale. But this is just as well; one gains a valuable perspective on The Emigrants when it is viewed af- ter the other films now playing. Capra's films are tributes to American ideals and virtues: honesty, individual integrity, common sense, fair-play. Their pace is fast and their language is fast, and in the comedies at least, the forces of wholesome Americanism win out over those of wealth, greed, and other social diseases. Sounder I have ,ot seen, though I know it deals with the struggles of a poor b 1 a c K family during the Depression. Deliverance gets dawn to a very basic American experience, one involving the land itself. lt acknowledges the powar and the awesomeness of the vanishing American wilderness, nd it knows, too, that an encounter with it on its own terms can rout a man, twist his head around, make him change or realize the truth about himself. The Emi- grants is as much concerned with the land as Deliverance, and as much concerned with American life in general as the other films, but in a more in- direct way. Even at the begining of The Emigrants, America is an ever- present thought, a guarded se- cret that is kept as a source of hope What director Jan Troell is primarily interested in early on, however, is Sweden and the Swedish people during the first part of the 1800s. Early in his film an elderly man is digging his hands into his native Swed- ish soil on a quiet, damp, fog- gy day. He is clearing rocks from his field, perhaps for the spring plowing. One very large rock must be moved with the greatest effort. The man tries, but the rock rolls back on his leg and he is trap- ped against the ground. He groans in pain. The film cuts to a pair of massive oxen standing a ways off, indifferent, impene- trable, silent, and then returns to the farmer, who is hobbling back to his cabin, supported by his wife. It has become the way of life in Sweden. There is a great deal of hardship, families toil in their fields but the crops consistently fail. Landowners beat their farmhands, a pastor is persecuted for spreading God's Word among social undesirables. Moments of beauty and humor are mingled in, such as Kris- tina (Liv Ullman) rocking gent- ly on a swing in the summer, surrounded by yellow wheat fields and chirping birds, or a tender exchange between her and her husband Karl Oskar (Max von Sydow). But, unfortun- ately for the people, these alone are not enough to sustain them. Almost simultaneously they de- cide, or feel compelled, to go to America. We are in the advantageous position of being able to com- pare the film's viewpoint with those of the other films in town. Of all the films, The Emigrants is the only one made by an out- sider to this country; it is film about Swedes, made by a Swede, which certainly lends a lot to the authenticity of its tones, set- tings, and characters. Moreover, it takes a predominantly histor- ical view of events, and in so do- ing m,1st concern itself w i t h the changes the Swedes wall un- deren in their "iromised land". Deliverance and the Capra films (and I presume Sounder tn4u are Pvnoinations of an Av",nri"an 0,qr-4ter and clltiire whii , ,lro.v h'-nome fixed by the t;,s the films were mnde- theV ?re criticsms of soc- i,1 cnstents that mav vary a litle but are too much a part of the American scene to be en- tirelv made over. The Emigrants os a kind of prelude to these films. It is an outsider's recog- nition that, on the one hand, America is not the great, just, continent the Swedes are led to believe it is, and it forshad- ows their disillusionment. The people in America are not divided into "gentry and com- moners," they have been told. But on the double-decked steam- boat to Minnesota after there ar- duous ocean voyage, the n e w "peasants" crowd the lower deck while men and women in fancy clothes peer down on them from above. And in a corner of t h e ship, two black men sit hunch- ed together, bound in chains. On the other hand, some of the claims made for America are found to be true. The land, for one, is plentiful, fertile and cheap, and the Swedes seem eag- er to create a new, life on it. In a way they are back home, for they will be able to do what they know best - till the soil. There are intimations of great changes in the future. Troell's film, and its forthcoming se- quel to be called The New Land, may be as close as we can now come to feeling what it was like to be new to this country and gradually be ingrained in i t s ways, both the good and the bad. When the sequel shows up, the theatres might even run simul- taneous showings of The God- father, Little Big Man (equal time), and the films of Sam Peckinpah, and perhaps extend an invitation to the arch-Amer- ican himself, Richard Nixon. We all need a refresher course now and then. CULTUkRE CAL.ENDA CAPRA FESTIVAL-Cinema Guild continues with It's a Won- derful Life Sun. at 7 and 9:05 in ,Arch. Aud.; Capra will appear for discussion after 7 p.m. show; Capra's The Bit- ter Tea of General Yen at 7 and Lady for a Day at 9 are featured Mon., with Capra holding discussion afterward in Arch. Aud. FILM-Cinema II shows Kurosawa's Lower Depths Sun. in Aud. A at 7 and 9:30. CONCERTS-The Musical Society presents George Shirley, tenor ,at Hill, 2:30 p.m. Sun. The Musical Society gets high stepping with Yugoslavia's Lado Folk Ensemble Mon. at 8 in Power. MUSIC SCHOOL-Sydney Hodkinson directs Contemporary Directions concert in SM recital hall Mon. at 8. THEATER-PTP performs Gorky's Lower Depths Sun. in Power at 3 and 8. FOLK SPECIAL-UM Folklore Society gives an open house at Friends Center (1420 Hill) Sun. from 2 until 5, featuring music and refreshments. Bring instruments. UPCOMING CONCERT TIP -Forget it! John Denver's show at Hill Feb. 17 is sold out. A long-awaited motion picture classic will be SAshown today at 1-3-5- 7-9:05 P.M. "IT IS A MISSING CHAPTER FROM 'THE GRAPES OF WRATH' AND OF EQUAL STATURE." -Judith Crist, NBC-TV 0 .,, adnitz / MATTEL Productions STARRING Preserns_ ! N ER1 C ICE LY A Robert B. Radnitz/Martin Ritt FilmTY ANN ARBOR FOR BOBBY SEALE SPEAKERS- BOBBY SEALE -Chairman Black Panther Party -Candidate for Mayor, Oakland, Calif. -Member of Chicago 8 JOHN SINCLAIR -Chairman Rainbow People's Party - RICARDO SANCHEZ -Chicano Leader from California Also film segment "TEN FOR TWO" -I 7 * ~~. - - -- cIR 8481.3300 FNEE LISNTEI PARKIIS The Magic Christian is: antiestablishmnentarian, antibellum, antitrust, antisepticantibiotic, antisocial, & antipasto. y t tonight 6:00 2 60 Minutes 7 Movie "North to Alaska" (1960) 9 I Dream of Jeannie 50 Lawrence Welk 56 Movie 6:30 4 News 9 Beverly Hillbillies 7:00 2 TV 2 Reports 4 George Pierrot 50 NHL Hockey 7:30 2 Peanuts Cartoon 4 World of Disney 8:00 2 Flintstones on Ice 7 FBI 9 Beachcombers 56 An American Family 8:30 Columbo 9 Bandwagon 9:00 2 Duke Ellington ... We Love You Madly 7 Movie "The Longest Day" Part 1 9 Sunday at Nine 56 Masterpiece Theatre 9:30 50 Detroit Today 10:00 4 Escape 9 Weekend 56 Firing Line 50 Lou Gordon 10:30 2 Evil Touch 4 Profiles in Black 11:002 4 79 News 11:15 9 Religious Scope 11:30 2 Movie "Frankenstein Created Wo- man" (English 1967) 4 Big Valley 7 ABC News 9 Movie "SergeantsRyker" (1963) 50 For My People 11:45 7 Movie "War Hunt" (1962) 12:30 4 News 1:20 2 Movie "Incident in Berlin" (1970) 1:45 7 News 2:50 2 News Mirthful! Magica,! Musical! DASNEYS *. . AL-CARTOON FF'TURE . wweeps monday, 6:00 2 4 7 News 9 Courtship of Eddie's Father 50 Flintstones 56 Operation Second Chance 6:30 2 CBS News 4 NBC News 7 ABC News 9 I Dream of Jeannie 50 Gilligan's Island 56 260 Degrees 7:00 2 Truth or Consequences 4 News 7 To Tell the Truth 9 Beverly Hillbillies 50 I Love Lucy 56 Archdiocesan Deport 7:30 2 What's My Line? 4 Mouse Factory 7 Let's Make a Deal 9 Wacky World, of Jonathan Winters 50 Hogan's Heroes 56 Great Decisions '73 8:00 2 Gunsmoke 4 Rowan and Martin's Laugh-in 7 Rookies-Crime Drama 9 Bobby Goldsboro 50 Dragnet 56 Cambridge Debate on Women's Lib 8:30 9 David Frose Revue 50 Merv Griffin 9:00 2 Here's Lucy 4 World Premiere 7 Movie 9 News 56 Net Opera Theatre 9:30 2 Doris Day 9 Carnivals 10:00 2 Bill Cosby-=Variety 50 Perry Mason 56 Speaking Freely 11:00 2 4 7 News 9 CBC News 50 One Step Beyond 11:20 9 News 11:30 2 Movie "The Corrupt Ones" (1969) 4 Johnny Carson 7 Someone at the Top of the Stairs 50 Movie "Gentlemen's Agreement" (1947) 12:00 9 Movie "The Deadly Affair (English 1967) 1:00 4 7 News 1:20 2 Movie "Jackass Mail" (1942) 2:50 2 It's Your Bet 3:20 2 News wcbn listings