Wednesday, December 6, 1972 i HE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Wednesday, December 6, 1972 THE MIGHIGAN DAILY Page Three BLOOZIANA I 217SASH 2RM-2AM TUE. WED. PASSION OF ANNA Dir. Ingmar Bergman' 1970 With Bibi Anderson & Max von Sydow. Together with Shame, this is prob- ably Bergman's best of the recent films. In some sense a sequel to Persona, it is less dependent on personal symbol ism. Bergman's treatment of violence in life & art. The acting is particularly good in this film. THUR. GRIFFITH Way Down East Architecture Auditorium 7 & 9 p.m. 75c Subscribe to The Michigan Daily 1. '4k CULTURE CALENDAR MUSIC-The University Arts Chorale, conducted by Maynard Klein, gives a Holiday Concert at 8 in Hill. The School of Music also presents a Percussion Student Ensemble per- forming at 5 in the SM Recital Hall, as well as William David presenting a piano doctoral at 8 in the SM Recital Hall. DRAMA-The University Players perform Jellicoe's The Knack in Mendelssohn at 8. A collection of original one act plays, presented by the Student Lab Theatre, can be seen in the Frieze Arena at 4:10. FILM-The AA Film Co-op screens Russell's Women in Love in Aud. A at 7 and 9:30. Cinema Guild offers Bergman's The Passion of Anna in Arch. Aud. at 7 and 9:05. Behav- ior Therapy with an Autistic Child, presented by the Psych. 171 Film Series, can be seen at 4 in the UGLI Multi-purpose Room. Friends of Newsreel shows R. D. Laing's Asylum in Modern Language Aud. 3 at 6:45, 8:30, and 10:15. JAVELINS-Ann Arbor's own Javelins perform tonight at the Roostertail in Detroit. UPCOMING CONCERT TIP-A benefit performance featur- ing Beethoven's Ninth Symphony will be presented in Hill Auditorium, Friday, December 8, at 8 P.M., by faculty soloists, the University Choir and University Symphony Orchestra directed by Theo Alcantara. General admis- sion is $2.00 with all proceeds going to the School of Music Scholarship fund. Faculty soloists for the Beet- hoven will be Elizabeth Mosher, soprano, Rosemary Rus- sell, mezzo soprano, John McCollum, tenor, and Leslie Guinn, baritone. Also on the program will be University Symphony Orchestra performing Bach's "Brandenburg Concerto No. 2" and the University Choir under Maynard Klein singing Bach's "Motet No. 1." Tickets are now available at the Hill Box office. Lady Sings Blues' a realistic musical Dr. John the Night Tripper Dr. John (alias Mac Rebennack) will appear in concert at the Crisler Arena this coming S By BRUCE SHLAIN The time-honored cinematic form of the musical is having its artistic growing pains, and while Lady Sings the Blues does not signal the end of these pains, it certainly does move in the direc- tion of a compromise to the eternal question: How does one make a "dramatically serious" musical?, I realize that to some this is not an eternal question. Many people, I am sure, have that curious knack (at least I find it curious) for loosening the floodgates of the aesthetic unconscious at will and tolerating any and every bit of joyful ludicrousness in the name of "escapism," as long as they are watching a musical. By "joyful ludicrousness" I refer to such things as dancing in eleva- aturday tors, casts of hundreds singing in kets are the street, etc. But'joyful ludicrousness" can be hopelessly out of place at Arbor. times. In certain situations a nteby. character in a musical will ucted by "burst" into song and his cred- Saturday ibility as a human being will ac Stern, burst with it. Moviegoers who nn Arbor insist that there should be a per- perform petual suspension of reality while o. 1, and wacthing a musical will not un- . 1. The derstand this review; to them I Wagner's award a smile button and a rue- nd Tchai- ful glance, for I feel they are 4. Series unaware of what shapes up as a ormat of "movement" in movie musicals. v be or- Over the past few years, some ier office of the biggest productions in the sical So- way of movie musicals have ar- currently dently tried to integrate the song nn Arbor and dance with some semblance s will be of reality. They have done this primarily by basing the musical night. The Allman Brothers and the Rockets will appear with him at available in the Union lobby. ayFestial to h aesta ne fm have nw forat the dance concert. Tick eighth appearance in Ann The final concert, cond Eugene Ormandy on night, will feature Isaa violinist in his sixth An appearance. He will Beethoven's Romance N the Mozart Concerto No orchestra will performN Prelude to "Parsifal" an kovsky's Symphony No. tickets for this new f four concerts may now dered at the Burton Tow of the University Mu ciety. Brochures arec being mailed to all An residences. Single ticket available after March 1. 0 tonight 6:00 2 4 7 News 9 Courtship of Eddie's Father 50 Flintstones 56 Maggie and the Beautiful Machine 6:30 2 4 7 News 9 I Dream of Jeannie 50 Gilligan's Island 56 Making Things Grow 7:00 2 Truth or Consequences 4 News, Sports, Weather 7 To Tell the Truth 9 Beverly Hillbillies 50 I Love Lucy 56 Zoom 7:30 2 What's My Line? 4 Family Classics 7 Wild Kingdom 9 News 50 Hogan's Heroes 56 Consumer Game 8:00 2 Appointment with Destiny 4 Adam-It 7 Paul Lynde 56 How Do We Get From Here to There? 50 Dragnet 8:30 4 Cool Million 7 Julie Andrews 50 Merv Griffin 56 Playhouse New York 9:00 2 Medical Center 9:30 7 Movie "The Wild Heart." (1952) 10:00 2 Cannon 4 Search 50 Perry Mason 56 Soul! 10:30 9 All Outdoors 11:00 2 4 7 News 9 CBC News 50 Mancini Generation 11:20 9 News 11:30 2 Movie "My Favorite Brunette." (1947) 4 Johnny Carson 7 Madhouse 90 50 Movie "The Last Rebel" (1971) 12:00 9 Movie "Second Chance." (1953) 1:00 4 News 7 Blue Angels 1:30 2 Movie "Spook Busters." (1946) :2News 3:00 2 News The 80th Ann Arbor May Festi- val will combine the best of tra- ditions with new features that will altogether celebrate this mark in local history. Four concerts on the evenings from Wednesday through Satur- day, May 2, 3, 4, and 5, will fea- ture the Philadelphia Orchestra at all concerts. Eugene Ormandy, IMusical Director, will open the Festival with an All-Beethoven program, beginning with the Overture to "Leonore" No. 3 which echoes the first work that opened the series in 1894. The program then features pianist Rudolf Serkin, in the Concerto No. 4, followed by the Symphony No. 3 ("Eroica"). This will mark Mr. Serkin's fifteenth appearance in Ann Arbor. The second program, conducted by Mr. Ormandy on Thursday night, will be all-orchestral, fea- turing the Philadelphia Orchestra in the Brahms' Symphony No. 4, and Strauss "Ein Heldenleben," in which Norman Carol, Phila- delphia concertmaster, will be the solo violinist. Friday night's program (Alum- ni Night), conducted by alumnus Thor Johnson, will feature the traditional choral concert with the full University Choral Union performing Verdi's Stabat Mater and Te Deum. The alumna mak- ing her Festival debut this year will be Jessye Norman, soprano. This young artist, who studied at the University of Michigan under Elizabeth Mannion and Pierre Bernac, has made a sen- sational rise to fame in the past few years. In 1968, she won first prize at the International Music Competition sponsored by the Ba- varian Radio in Munich, and be- gan a three-year contract with the Deutsche Oper in Berlin. Shortly thereafter, she performed as the Countess opposite Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau (last year's May Festival artist) at the Berlin Festival. In 1971, she made her debut at the Maggio Musicale in Florence, and in 1972 at the famous La Scala Opera House in Milan, and the Covent Garden, London. There have been a dozen Festival cities in Europe where she has won acclaim, including Snoleto and Edinburgh. In Amer- ica, she opened the Hollywood Bowl with the Los Angeles Phil- harmonic this past season, and sang at the Wolf Trap Festival in Virginia, and at Tanglewood with the Boston Symphony. She is under exclhsive contract to Phil- ips Records. There could be no greater list of tributes to a young artist who returns to her alma mater to make her debut in our Festival. Miss Norman will sing the Songs of the Rose of Sharon by La Montaine, and two Wagner arias -"Du Bist der Lenz" from "Die Walkure" and "Dich teure Halle" from "Tannhauser." On this same program Friday night, Van Cliburn will perform the Rachmaninoff Piano Con- certo No. 2. This will mark his Ioledo Symphony richly satisfyij By DONALD SOSIN concerto since his prize-v Toledo Symphony Orchestra; performance in Warsaw. A Serge Fournier, conductor; Gar- he looms large over th rick Ohlsson, pianist; Sunday, board, there is never an Dec. 3, 3 p.m. Toledo Museum of tality in his playing; on Art. the slow movement of t Ravel - Pavane pour une in- pin was particularly fin fante defunte; Chopin - Piano I was thrilled to hear th Concerto No. 1 in E minor; Mah. as a true singing instr ler - Symphony No. 1 in D Despite the percussive me major.yof the piano, Ohlsson cons A trip down to Toledo this past draws sound out of it, in Sundy t hea GarickOhlson forcing it into the keys Sunday to hear Garrick Ohlsson technique seems limitless play the Chopin First Concerto with the growth in his m with the Toledo Eymphony prov- ship that is evident over t ed immensely satisfying. I had few years, he ought toI not heard the orchestra in over one of the outstandingr a year, and it is much better than of his generation. I remember from its past per- formances. This is due in no The orchestra, after be small part to the U-M music stu- the afternoon with a gent] dents who make up a sizeable ing of Ravel's Pavane, a portion of the ensemble, several viding a generally sensit holding principal or assistant posi- companiment in the Chop tions. There is a liveliness in cept at one point when 1 the sound, and a good deal of lins got off by a measure richness, too, despite the acous- red up a powerful brewi tics of the hall, which tend to ler's Symphony No. 1. F make the orchestra sound dis- who conducted from m tant, while dampening high fre- was impressive in his care quencies. trol of the jigsaw-like fra Garrick Ohlsson is, as a musi- that grow in the first mo cian, better than ever. He has to a point where one fin had a steady schedule of con- gins to understand whe certs since winning the Chopin music is leading, and att Competition in 1970, and this ish, revels as the last few performance marked the 30th are put in place and the time he has played the E minor ment ends. Ing winning lthough he key- ny bru- Sunday he Cho- ne, and e piano rument. chanics istently stead of s. His ;s, a n'd usician- he past become pianists eginning le read- nd pro- :ive ac- pin (ex- the vio- e), stir- in Mah- ournier, nemory, eful con- agments vement ally be- 'e t h e the fin- e pieces e move- itself on a singer's life (Funny Girl, Star, Cabaret, etc.) so that there is an "excuse" for the sing- ing. Nobody, then, ever has to "burst" into song in such a framework, because the audience is in the film waiting to be enter- tained itself. But these character- izations of the Singer's life were hopelessly shrouded behind the Star's energetic, and often ob- noxiously egotistical, perform- ance. Thus in Funny Girl we learn as much about Fanyy Brice as Streisand allows, and it does not require an abacus to figure out that is zero. Diana Ross' portrayal of jazz singer Billie Holiday, meanwhile, is by no means free of the com- mercial taint of the "look at me I'm a superstar" syndrome; Mo- town mogul Berry Gordy obvious- ly made sure of that. But in the film's finer moments, and there are a few, she does convey a sense of the magical connection between Holiday's troubled life which ended at 44, and that beau- tiful voice. To be sure, Lady has the most gritty backdrop ever seen in a musical. Sidney Furie's unobtru- sive direction skips smoothly through Billie's life, from rape to prostitution to drug addiction, un- fortunately as if a George Pierrot travelogue of the seamy side of life. Combine this with a more- than-liberal insertion of black slang, intermittent intrusions of brown-tinted still photos of Billie, and a scene in which we watch her sing while on morphine, and one can discern, Ginger Rodgers forbid, a baldfaced attempt at capturing realism in a musical. The sets are realistic, the cos- tuming is all 1940's and even the supporting players, Billie Dee Wllams and Richard Pryor (as Piano Man), have personalities. All of which serves to make Miss Ross' performance seem closer to Miss Holiday, more than simply a deification of herself. Even in her singing, she moves away from the Motown sound to sing with what Malcolm X once said of Holiday: "Lady Day sang with the soul of Negroes from the centuries of sorrow and oppres- sion." While the film certainly has its failings, the absence of any "joy- ful ludicrousness" was appreci- ated. The second movement was rath- er faster than I have heard it, but Fournier made the tempo convincing, as he did the ironic humor of the semi-funeral march third movement, where a varia- tion of Frere Jacques turns into a gypsy-like tune. If the Finale tended to drag on, it is probably more Fournier's fault than Mahler's; if the move- ment seemed long-winded, it is a trifle compared to some of his later works, and Fournier might have created more tension in the slow section, which brings back themes from the first move- ment. The human eye can distinguish an estimated 500,000 different col- ors, according to the Society f o r Visual Care. III $2.00 British I Isles TOMORROW Ceilidh (A musical party) with the "Friends of Fiddler's Green" (Fiddler's Green is an English-style coffeehouse in Toronto. It is run by seven professional singer-performers from the British Isles who call themselves the "Friends of Fiddler's Green" when they perform together. They have appeared in the Mariposa Folk Festival among others and many clubs throughout Canada and the U.S.) In Revolution SUNDAY- Jim Ringer MARLONP": BYDO "BURN A FILM BY GILL PONTECORVO An ALBERTO GRIMALDI Production with EVARISTO MARQUEZ RENATO SALVATORI, Story and Screenplay by FRANCO SOLINAS and GIORGIO ARLORIO Art Director PIERO GHERARDI Music ENNIO MORRICONE COLOR by Deluxe* GP9 O I Hear The ENNIO MORRICONE single version"Theme from 'BURNI'"on United Artists Records.- - - __ Mary MCCaslin - m