- Tuesday, February 13, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Tuesday, February 13, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three "Infinitely more interesting than 'The Godfather'!" CBS-TV, Los Angeles /1*s A VINO Of LAURENTi$ pr ssntstion A TERENCE YOUNG F.. F10M Cow'bs PtChes LI 7:05 and 9:15 LATE SHOW Fri. and Sat. Santana's "STAMPING GROUND" plus "FLASH GORDON" chapt. 3 Killen weaves his narrator's spell By LORRE WEIDLICH "... And the name they gave me was the croppy boy:" Lou Killen sings to his audience, hands holding a concertina, his bearded face intent. The sound is incredible - the result of a naturally fine voice governed by high artistic standards. The au- dience is intent, listening to each word of the old, bloody Scots bal- lads, the pastoral English coun- try songs, and the sea chanties. This is a typical evening with Lou Killen. Lou is a Geordie: he comes from the area of Northumber- land around the river Tyne, from a singing family. This is not to say that his singing is a sort of perpetuation of family tradition, as is the case with the Copper Family, for example, even though music has been an im- portant element of his life al- most from birth. "Some people grow up with several hundred songs," he says, and cites Jean- nie Robertson and Harry Cox as examples. "I didn't." His songs come from many sources, some picked up from his family and around Tyneside; many more from records and books, such as the collection in the Cecil Sharp house. Lou isn't a collector of folk songs - it was something he did only once, seventeen years ago, long before he became a profes- sional singer. He calls field col- lecting "an art in itself," but no way for someone who makes his living singing to get his mater- ial. It's hard work and time con- suming ,too much so'for the pro- fessional performer. But there is more than a little of the folk- lorist in Killen - he prefaces his ballads with explanations of their history and talks knowledgably about English traditions - the Morris Dance, the Christmas pantomime. Concertina and tin whistle, the instruments Lou relies on when singing alone, are only two of the several he plays, and his ability to play several instru- ments was one of the factors in his joining the Clancy Brothers after Tommy Maken left the group. Killen and the Clancys had kon each other for many years, and their repertoires ov- erlapped. The Clancys needed a good instrumentalist with show business experience: Killen was ;:.r: a logical choice. Besides singing alone and sing- ing with the Clancys, Lou intro- duced a new partner just a week ago, at the Kent State Folk Fes- tival - his wife, Sally. Their singing together is not a new thing - they've done it often at 4 home - but Sally had the be- ; ginning performer's usual ner- vousness about facing an audi- ence. Their duets are English country songs with beautifully arranged English harmonies, and Sally's clear voice matches and complements Lou's. More than one folksinger is a storyteller as well, and those people who've heard Killen weave his narrator's spell at the Ark for several years now can testify that he's one of the best. He can curdle your blood with a tale like "Mr. Fox" or have the audience laughing hysterically with one of his stories from the "Pitman's Bible." The "Pitman's Bible" is a Geordie retelling of some of the significant stories in the Bible, transmitted orally among the miners in the Tyne- side area.T Godfat her's gory andsenseless son Geor ge Shirley: tenor of times past By ROY CHERNUS George SHIRLEY, tenor with George Posel, pianist. Sunday, Feb.-11, Hill Auditorium. Choral Union Series of the University Musical Society. George Shirley transported his audience last Sunday back to simpler, less-troubled times past with his warm, infectious lyric- ism. A major portion of the pro- gram consisted of French 'Ro- mantic songs ranging from Ber- lioz (early 19th century), Mas- senet, Duparc, Faure, Debussy, to Ravel (early 20th century). Shirley more than matched the depth of expression in these pre- ciously beautiful songs with his own, but to the point of often letting his unbridled emotional intensity interfere with a firm control of soft dynamics. Therein' lies his only major flaw, for Shir- ley is endowed with a sumptuous, heavy voice; creamy-silken in texture throughout his whole range even in the most pronounc- ed crescendos, and supple in vi- brato and phrasing. His enuncia- tion and pitch were flawless-yet the static inflection and limited dynamic variation point up areas in whch he has room to mature. Shirley's interpretations of the program's works was romantic; taking liberal pauses at phrase endings for dramatic climaxes and linking notes in fluid phras- ing, both practices often result- ing in the extension of notes through the rests (silences). The two operatic excerpts from Orpheus and Acis and Galatea were incisively delivered with bitter torment and lyric sadness, respectively. The group of old nostalgic Irish songs by Munro, Sneaks, McGill, Del Riego, and Klemm (popular around the turn of the century, as Shirley in- formed the audience) had the dust shaken from them by Shir- ley's powerful melodramatic per- formance; they were vital in spite of all the predictable ca- dences. The lamenting rendition of two-gospel - spiritual encores further demonstrated his ability for melodramatic climaxes. Shir- ley's sonorous romanticism prov- ed highly effective in many of the French songs, yet the lighter, delicate little gems by Debussy and Ravel would have benefitted enormously if Shirley had peeled a few layers of sonority off his voice to produce a more trans- parent tone. His romanticism did not convey the brash lilting ca- baret mood and obscene humor of Blitzstein's Kurt Weill-esque Jimmie's Got A Goil employing the e. e. Cummings poem of the same name for text. Neither did Shirley convincingly effect the 'olde English' intonation he at- tempted in Purcell's coquettish There's Not a Swain. Posell's accompaniment was for the most part effectively com- plementarv although often void of dynamics contrast and a bit bungled in his attempt to impro- vise embellishments in the ex- cernt from Handel's Acis and Galatea. It is clear that Shirley's forte lies in trditional material calling for emotion and climax of or near operatic pitch rather than much or more contemporary ma- terial in a less-serious and emo- tional vein. Doily Photo by TOM GOTTLIEB Lon Killen By LARRY LEMPERT Movies procreate in strange ways. The happy embrace of cel- luloid and success attracts en- vious onlookers and, suddenly, there's a bastard lurking in the corner. Son of The Godfather, entitled The Valachi Papers for the sake of subtlety, is a vulgar bastard indeed, one whose only claim to legitimacy is the possibility that its story is true. Joseph Valachi did testify be- fore a Senate committee in the fall of 1963. The newspapers her- alded his testimony as the first revealing information from a soldier close to the top of the Cosa Nostra. The public recoiled at the horror stories revealed by this 60-year-old, self-confessed participant in five gangland mur- ders. Strangely enough, some of the film's less believable incidents were reported in New York Times articles on the Senate hearings - Valachi's Mafia initi- ation; the kiss of death from kingpin Vito Genovese, branding the suspected informer. One can conclude, if only for the pur- poses of argument, that most of the events in The Valachi Pa- pers happened, or at least a Ma- fia insider said they happened. The details are available to us. We can read news accounts, the book by Peter Maas, and the Va- lachi testimony itself. And now we can see the most gory and senseless series of homicides in the history of gangster films. Murder gives the film its only continuity; characters are knif- ed, gunned or strangled before you can figure out who they are, and no one can sit in a restaur- ant or stand on the street for more than a few minutes without getting hit by either his own power-hungry men or by the sold- iers of the rival faction. Against this sordid backdrop, life and love go on, stealing only an in- significant percentage of view- ing time from the all-powerful color red. The film raises valid questions: What twisted sense of unity binds men into such a violent brotherhood? What impulses force them to betray this brother- hood? How much s - - - can one person take before he says no to a perverted code of honor? A good film would not have to answer such questions, nor would it have to ignore blood- shed and hate. It would, how- ever, offer some insight: its por- traval of violence wo'ld contrib- ute to an understanding of the questions raised. The Valachi Papers does nei- ther and succeeds only in some- how being repulsive and boring at the same time. Note that the laudatory comments listed in ad- vertising for the movie all praise, not the film, but Charles Bron- son's performance. If Valachi's subjection to mandfinal betrayal of the Mafia are unconvincing, it is not Bronson's fault. He does well, particularly in carrying his character through 30 years of Mafia involvement. But the screenplay gives Bron- son too little to work with and, failing strength in characteriza- tion, the film can hold the audi- ence's attention only by increas- ing violence in every scene. This trend reaches an impos- sible climax when Valachi must witness the castration of his best friend. The scene goes on for- ever, showing everything but. A foot-long switchblade, piercing shrieks, Valachi's agonized face, not to mention the agonized face of - Enough. See The Valachi Papers if this kind of violence carries meaning for you. owe eatri By JAN BENEDETTI In this theatrical wasteland of quantity without much quality, it is temptingly easy to scour the Thesauras for superlatives to de- scribe any professional company that wanders into town. It is equally simple to leap to the other extreme and lambaste a touring group because the actors did not match the quality of Laurence Olivier in "Hamlet." Resisting both traps, I'm forc- ed to say the New York City Center Acting Company's pro- duction of Maxim Gorky's "The Lower Depths" last Sunday was not as good as I had hoped, but not as bad as I feared. This young company, drawn from the drama division of New Y o r k ' s prestigious Julliard School, chose a fiendishly diffi- cult play. Gorky's characters, f I ARTS i r Depths' stays in cal middle ground FUTURE WORLD LECTURE SERIES-Paolo Soleri, architect, "Future of Aesthetics" at 3 at Hill. COUNCIL ON BLACK CONCERNS-speakers: Bobby Seale, Ricardo Sanchez, John Sinclair at the Power Center at 7:30 tonight. FILM-The AA Film Co-op presents Allen's Bananas at 7, 8:45 tonight in And. A, Angell; Cinema Guild shows Von Sternberg's The Blue Angel at Arch. Aud., at 7, 9:05 tonight; New World Film Co-op presents The Magic Christian at 7:30 tonight; End of a Revolution at 9 tonight in And. 3 MLB. like the Chekovian sisters, are hypnotized by dreams of a bet- ter life but rooted by inertia. Living in a miserable slum, Gorky's collection of thieves, bums, whores and drunks fabri- cate pathetic stories, to convince themselves they still are worth- while human beings. One character, the "Actor", poisoned by alcohol, insists he played in Shakespeare but can only remember jumbled bits and pieces of lines from the plays. An old man, Luka, joins the prisoners of the flophouse for -a day, dispensing hope and pity. He accepts all the fantasies, comforting these sad people with his understanding and compas- sion, living by the law, "Don't hurt people." But this Christ-like character is unable to prevent the play's central tragedy. Vaska Pepel, a thief, tries to extricate himself from an affair with the married Vasilissa, the landlady. Vaska, encouraged by .Luka, wants to escape the slum with the land- lady's sister Natasha. But the evil Vasilissa ruins their plans, manages to have her husband killed and pins the murder on Vaska. When every dream turns into a mocking nightmare for these beings drowning in the slime of the lower depths, when illusion is the only defense against total despair, life .loses all meaning in Gorky's black world. People only live in the hope of something better. It's foolish to expect actors in their early and middle 20's to be capable of bravura performances in this layered, tragic-comic play. It's hard to keep the charac- ters alive and exciting for the, audience, while simultaneously emphasizing Gorky's philosophi- cal messages. Given the limitations of youth and of the play, there were many beautiful moments in this pro- duction. Director Boris Tumar- in, using designer Douglas W. Schmidt's cage-like set of old brick and rags, arranges the actors like parasites, leaning against walls, clinging to ladders to soak up strength and vitality. 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 WEDNESDAY Tony Richardson's Laughter in the Dark "As sensual and exciting as anything I have seen on the screen in a long time. A hypnotic nightmare which I found absorbing and fasci- nating." -Red Reed "Those nude love scenes have well-earned the film's (X-) rating. -N.Y. Post 0 ANNA KARINA NICOL WILLIAMSON JEAN-CLAUDE DROUOT based on the novel by VLADIMIR NABOKOV Also film segment "TEN FOR TWO" sene NICOL WIUAMSON ANNA KARINA-JEAN-CLAUDE DROUOT Seeptoy by EDWARD BOND domed a o<,b nove< b;VLADIMlR NABOKOV P NodcdOy NE ILHARTLEYC ; by TNY RlcHARDSON COLOR 7:30 and 9:30-MOD. LANG. AUD. 3 $1 .25 Friends of NR WE REGRET THE POSTPONEMENT OF Roman Polanski's film of MACBE T H originally scheduled for this evening. Instead, WOODY ALLEN in the knock-about comedy, ABAN A New York fumbler gets involved with Caribbean revolutions! 0 S 6~~~ 0 tonight 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 How Do Your Children Grow? 7:00 2 Truth or Consequences 4 News 7 To Tell The Truth 9 Beverly Hillbillies 50 I Love Lucy 56 French Chef 7:30 2 What's My Line 4 You Asked For It 7 Price is Right 9 Protectors 50 Hogan's Heroes 56 Evening at Pops 8:00 2 Maude 4 Movie "The Great Man's Whiskers" 7 Temperatures Rising Vhere Ann Arbor touches the Atlantic Ocean! Thins 85year old 9 UFO 50 Dragnet 8:30 2 Hawaii Five-O 7 Movie "TheGreat American Beauty Contest" 56 Bill Moyers' Journal 50 Merv Griffin 9:00 9 News 56 Common Ground 9:30 2 Movie "The Horror at 37,000 Feet" 9 Front Page Challenge 56 Black Journal 10:00 4 America 7 Marcus Welby, M.D. 9 Nature of Things 50 Perry Mason 56 Detroit Black Journal 10:30 9 Man Alive 56 360 Degrees 11:00 2 4 7 News 9 CBC News 50 One Step Beyond 11:20 9 News 11:30 2 Movie "Wild in the Streets" 4 Johnny Carson 7 Suicide Club 50 Movie "The Gunfighter" (1950) 12:00 9 Movie "Beat" the Devil" (1953) 1:00 4 7 News 1:30 Movie "The Killer is Loose" (1956) 3:00 2 It's Your Bet 3:30 2 News~ l MArWfu! Magi ca! Musical DISNEY }- AI'-tCARTOON Fr T'URE > .;I .:':;;.mr.: