Saturday, ;April 14, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Saturday, April 14, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three 0 By DONALD SOSIN f PELLEAS AND MELISANDE, a lyric drama in five acts; music by Claude Debussy, text by Maurice Maeterlinck, English translation by Joseph Blatt. Presented by the School of Music. Mendelssohn The- 9 atre, April 13-16 at 8 p.m. J o s e p h Blatt, conductor. Ralph Herbert, stage director. Alice Craw- ford, set designer; Robert Prouse, lighting designer. GOLAUD John Lueck (Fri., Sat.) Wayne Brown (Sun., Mon.) MELISANDE .... Mardy K. Medders (Fri., Sun.) Candy Goetz (Sat., Mon.) GENEVIEVE...........Susan Bayha ARKEL ............ Edmund Toliver PELLEAS .......... Samuel Chapin (Fri., Sun.) Charles Roe (Sat., Mon.) YNIOLD ............ Lynne Wieneke (Fri., Sun.) Marcia Holmes (Sat.,- Mon.) PHYSICIAN . t: . Nicholas Smith Editor's note: This review is based Pel leas and Melisande:* ~Music theater at its best' High quality marks Little Feat album' on dress rehearsals. The sumptuous music of Claude Debussy fills the Men- delssohn Theatre this weekend as the School of Music presents its captivating spring opera production, Pelleas & Melisande. Last performed here twelve years ago, the opera deals on one level with the basic themes of innocence, love, and jeal- ousy. Set in the mythical kingdom the BEST STEAK HOUSE Now Open Fri. & Sat. Until 2:00 A.M. Serving Steak Dinners, Cocktails, Pitcher Beer SPECIAL STEAK DINNER -- Fri. & Sat. 9 P.M. to 2 A.M. 5919 .i 117 S. State 761-0630 BURSLEY HALL ENTERPRISES Presents: BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID Starring: PAUL NEWMAN of Allemonde, the action con- cerns Golaud, who meets inno- cent Melisande one day in the woods. He marries her, but soon loses her to his more youthful half - brother, Pelleas. At first Golaud believes the pair simply to be children, but gradually discovers the depth of their re- lationship. Surprising them in the forest, Golaud attempts to make her confess her guilt, but ever-innocent Melisande can on- ly state that she loved Pelleas, and feels no shame for it. The tragedy of the opera is equally contained in Maeter- linck's richly symbolistic text and perhaps the most perfect and insightful score in all of opera. Debussy matches the forthrightness of emotion with themes of utter simplicity, con- tinually altering their context through the ingenious use of harmony and orchestration. The vocal line, furthermore, is like one long recitative: There are no arias as such, no interrup- tion of the action within a given scene. This breaking away from 19th century operatic convention causes no problems for the spec- tator; a c t u a 1 1 y, the cur- taincomes as something of an intrusion, and the cuttain calls sadly tear one away from the magical power of the drama. The curtain calls are well de- served, however. Both casts are composed of extraordinarily fine singers; the acting is, by and large, convincing, and a credit to director Ralph Herbert. Some problems are created by the set, confining even for the petite Mendelssohn stage. Since a fair proportion of the scenes are rather static, this is not too great a weakness, though. Some contemporary critics see Golaud as the opera's central DANCE CONCERT APRIL 13--8:00 14-8:00 15--2:30 ADULTS---2 STUDENTS-- S R.C. AUD. E. UNIV. and MONROE AADT figure. In this production the emphasis is. on Melisande. Per- haps it is because both Mardy Medders and Candy Goetz cap- ture the role so well. In Med- der's interpretation, there is earnstness mixed with the inno- cence at times, while Goetz seems not that innocent to be- gin with. She and her Pelleas, Charles Roe, give an older im- pression which tinges their scenes with some regretfulness: Medders and Samuel Chapin play the part of adolescents caught up in a situation not en- tirely of their making. John Lueck and Wayne Brown are strong, vital Golauds, vet neither conveys the intense jealousy that would have shifted the dramatic balance to their role. Among the other charac- ters. I would like to single out Marcia Holmes, who is altogeth- er perfect in the part of Yniold, Golaud's child by a previous marriage. Her size is to her ad- vantage; her vocal quality and impish movements confirm her credibility. The success of the opera can be made or broken by the or- chestra, of course, and I think it fair to say that while numerous subtleties remain buried in the score, the overall level of play- ing is quite high, and that as the musicians become more fa- miliar with the difficult score, they will be able to loosen up, enabling conductor Joseph Blatt to do more with them. Familiarity is obviously no problem for Blatt, whose En- glish version makes the best of a seemingly impossible task. He conducts the score from mem- ory, and takes great pains to see that entrances are exact while keeping the smooth lyric- ism of the music evident. The lighting ranges from very effective - especially in the dungeon scene, softly lit behind a scrim, and the closing scene, where reds and greens are jux- taposed in a moving tableau -- to very curious: the first act is altogether too dark. The visual effect is ultimately of secondary importance here, though Go hear this operatic marvel. At least aurally, it is music theater at its best. By TOM OLSON A cursory look at the output of Little Feat over the last three years would probably leave the uninitiated at least mildly be- wildered. From the outside, the eccentricities that give the group its style might appear to be no more than bizarre affectation. The cover art of their second al- bum, for example, dominated by the voluptuously spread legs of a luscious piece of devil's food cake as it let fly its Sailin' Shoes, is known to have given pause to many a casual record browser. The group has likewise never fallen into p e t t y conventional- ism in naming its songs, choosing titles like "Snakes On Every- thing, "Tripe Face Boogie," posterous and irresistibly con- tagious.) The music is typically intelligent Little Feat rock. Newcomers to Little Feat often remark on their musical kinship to the old Band and the old Byrds. "Fool Yourself" invites such comparisons, an agreealy dense arrangement of a splendid song. "Juliette' 'is a song made for headphones, laden with in- scrutable entertainments for 'the ear. It is carried along by Low- ell George's almost sweet vocal, which glides masterfully over his growling guitar. "Fat Man in the Bathtub" is one of th great south-of-the-bord- er songs of our time, complete with the perfect "Oh Juanita" chorus. The album's final master- ARTS 1 1' 9:00 P.M. W. Cafe 75c mediatrics HELP MEDIATRICS, as part of UAC's attempt to become more responsive to the students, is setting up an EXECUTIVE BOARD. Take part in MEDIATRICS '73-'74 film for more info. CALL UAC, 763-1107 DEADLINE WEDNESDAY MAiLON BRANDC VIVIEN LEIGH ELI kAZAN I TENNESSEE WILLIAMS THESE ARE, THE GREATS! THIS WAS THEIR GREATEST'; Daily Photo by TOM GOTTLIEB S thricu1 imagination Di-rna Marcovitz sings a variety of comical-satirical songs-all her own-at the Ark this weekend, accompanying herself on what she calls "sort of ragtime" piano. DRAMA-~MECHA presents El Teatro Campesino, guerrilla theatre by Chicanoes in Hill at 8; Seligson Plautus Play- ers (Classical Studies Dept.) perform Plautus' Roman comedy The Haunted House in Angell Hall foyer at 2:30; Professional Theatre Program presents Story Theatre in Power at 3 and 8; U players perform Cesaire's The Trag- edy of King Christophe in Trueblood at 8. FILM-Cinema Guild and Future Worlds . show Wilcox's Forbidden Planet in Arch. Aud. at 7 and 9:05; Cinema II presents Bergman's Virgin Spring in Aud. A at 7 and 9; UAC-Mediatrics shows One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich in Nat. Sel. Aud. at 7 and 9:30; Friends of Newsreel present A Streetcar Named Desire in MLB at 7:15, and 9:30; Bursley Hall presents Cat Ballou in W. Cafeteria at 9. DANCE-Ant Arbor Dance Theatre presents a concert at 8 in RC Aud. MUSIC SCIHOOL-Debussy's opera Pelleas and Melisande in Mendelssohn at 8. WEEKEND BARS and MUSIC-The Ark, Diana Marcovitz (Sat., Sun.), admission; Blind Pig, Brooklyn Blues Bust- ers (Sat,) cover; Pretzel Bell, RFD Boys (Sat.) cover; Rubaiyat, Iris Bell Adventure (Sat., Sun.) no cover; Bimbo's, Gaslighters, (Sat., Sun.) cover; Del Rio, Jazz (Sun.) no cover; Golden Falcon, B.J. and the Holding Company (Sat.) cover; Mr. Flood's Party, B. C. Papke (Sat., Sun, at 3 p.m.) cover; Bimbo's on the Hill, Cricket Smith (Sat.) cover. BARBERS hair stylists I n I { /1T.r A X\ "Brides of Jesus," and most re- cently the show-stopping "Fat Man in the Bathtub" Part of Little Feat's apprecia- tion of .such non-ordinary states of reality is no doubt explained by the apprenticeship that lead guitarist, vocalist, and song-writ- er Lowell George served with the Mothers of Invention. Dixie Chicken is Little Feat's newest release, and like their first two it will probably r a n k among the year's finest albums. No record of theirs has ever re- ceived a less than enthusiastic review anywhere - and none has sold more than three or four dozen conies. The first had the nightmarish bad luck to be re- leased the same month as Layla and All Things Must Pass, and sales were predictably less than brisk. The second release drew an equally ignominious non-re- snonse from the public, and a liberal publicity campaign from Warner Brothers may not save Dixie Chicken from the s a m e undeserved ohlivion. The group's admirers will probably grow smug in their continued exclus- iveness, but tiny cults are not enough to keep six-man groups out of poverty anymore. Even a bathtub full of technical Dixie Chicken is five brilliant skill, though, would come to noth- songs and five very good ones. ing if Little Feat lacked good The rousing title tune opens the aterial. Three outstanding' al- first side, the tale of a wonderful bumsought to prove that t he woman of song who makes friends and influences bartenders group has two consistently orig- with her spirited refrain "You inal and melodic composers in be my dixie chicken, and I'll George and Payne. Out of 30 be your Tennessee lamb/ and songs by he two, so far no more we will walk together, downin than two have been of less than dixie land." (Lowell George has a genius for composing chorus- high quality, and neither of- the es that are both completely pre- weak ones is on Dixie Chicken. piece is "Kiss It Off," on which pianist Bill Payne successfully sustains a beautifully haunting and ominous tension with some inspired synthesizer work. Sam Clayton contrbutes some quietly dramatic conga drumming to complete the mood. Little Feat's assets are many, blt they are mostly Lowell G e o r g e. His musical imagina- tion makes the band one of the most versatile around, n e v e r predictable, always reliable. George has a devastating gift of syncopation (try out "Fat Man in the Bathtub") and his knock- about rhythms keep drummer Richard Hayward doing interest- ing things in the background. George's vocals have improved with each album, and by now are simply superbly expressive. He has the confidence to let his voice almost melt away into gentleness, before returning to his usual powerful resonance. His control over enunciation is com- plete: his words get stretched out into pure sound and then crisply bitten off. He is in strong con- trol of his band, and its mem- bers seem to thrive under his direction. to' g o Sbomv r corpicie and unc /A ~ n'o-" ("Iia~)is a 'rerkh il hseen playin for ni to drves of Swedes, and to sev ral r ion p eople a nmost everywere. It is ne story or a youngJ gir who r:, orws. auneaus abheut politics, nonvoa rnca. on nnmmitrnon', soeialism. omoer Swxdeer and to hesre sex It is da er cai V t~~em ita ilgna,"says Lo aa e The Eve reen Filmysent Groveress rs Lena Nyman A San ADMISSION F'ESTRIGTLD T0 ADULTS MENDELSSOHN THEATRE Tuesday & Wednesday 7:30 & 9:45 P.M. NEW WORLD FILM COOP tonight 6:00 2 4 7 News 9 This is Your Life 50 Star Trek 50 Para Mi Pueblo 6:30 2 CBS News 4 NBC News 7 Reasoner Report 9 Fishin' Hole 56 Consumer Game 7:00 2 Truth or Consequences 4 George Pierrot 7 News 9 Untamed World 50 Hee Haw 56 Another Life to Live 7:30 Young Dr. Dildare 4 Johnny Mann's Stand Up and Cheer "VIVIEN LEIGH gives one of those rare performances that can truly be said to evoke pity and terror. When MARLON BRANDO as the realist, Kowalski, shatters her system of illusions, she disinte- grates." TONI -Friends of Newsreel- Mod. Lang. Auds. 7:15-8:20-9:30 $1.25 UPEN TJDUAY & MONDAY Michigan Union ..__ x .-- - --.-- , r 7 Town Meeting 9 Flipside 56 Lenox Quartet-Haydn Opus 20 8:00 2 All in the Family 4 Emergency} 7 Here We Go Again 9 Front Page Challenge 56 Movie "Hamlet" 50 That Good Ole Nashville Musie 8:30 2 Bridget Loves Bernie 7 A Touch of Grace 9 Movie "The Mountain" (1956) 50 Nitty Gritty 9:00 2 Mary Tyler Moore 4 Movie "A Thousand Clowns" 7 Julie Andrews 50 Black omnibus 9:30 2 Bob Newhart 10:00 2 Carol Burnett 7 Assignment: Vienna 50 Lou Gordon 10:30 9 Education Week 56.VD Blues 11:00 2 7 News 9 CBC News 11:15 7 ABC News 9 Provincial Affairs S 11:20 9 News 11:30 2 Movie "Pirates of Tortuga" (1961) 4 News 7 Movie "The Hustler" (1961) 9 Movie "East of Sudan" (English 1964) 50 Movie "She-Devil" (1957) 12:00 4 Johnny Carson 1:30 2 Movie "The Trunk" (English; 1961) 4 News 7 Movie "Mister Cory." (1957) 3:00 2 7 News wcbn 89.5 fm 9 Maranatha Music 12Radio Prison 4 Jazz 8 Progressive Rock 11 The Potato Show ___ __ THE BLACK MARKLEY COUNCIL Presents "Reflections of Spring" Sunday, April 15-at Markley Hall Social Hour 4:30-Fashion Fair 5-6 LIVE ENTERTAINMENT. Vera Embre Troupe Dancers, Mike Davis on the piano. BE THERE DOOR PRIZES!! TONIGHT LAST SHOWS 7:15-8:20-9.30 pm. "Brought to the screen. by its Broadway creators . . . won Oscars for Viven Leigh as the disintegrating Southern Belle; Karl Maiden as her naive suitor; and Kim Hunter as her pragmatic sis- ter. It won only an Oscar nomina- tion for Marion Brando, but his role as the blunt, shrewd, brutish brother-in-law who is the element in the woman's destruction, was nothing short of brilliant." w w LAST PERFORMANCE TONIGHT! 8:00 P.M. The University Players proudly present ,) prsnA IME CESAIRE'S j"THE TRAGEDY OF S! KING CHRISTOPHE"I t AFTER YELLOW ,. .: . .,. .. f} s U