HE MOST interesting event during my lazy Sunday afternoon watch- ing The Betsy occurred behind rather than in front of me: As the film's opening credits unrolled, a small baby parked in the middle of a large family the next row back began to exhibit an insatiable desire to do an imitation of anair raid siren. At which point his beleagered dad would raise a half-open fist over the kid's head and fix with with a gaze that looked fierce enough to vaporize Darth Vader. "Shuddup, dammit!," he undertoned menacingly. The threat of imminent annihilation seemed only to induce the child to bellow even louder, eventually driving pop, mom and himself to the exits in alternating shifts, amid mutual mutterings of consternation: "When's the kid gonna learn to behave himself?" "He's only a year old, Fred." "That's no excuse!!" In retrospect, the tyke was probably the most sensible spec- tator present - he didn't pay anything to get in and didn't feel compelled to stay around long enough to watch. This should have.been a warning to the rest of us. It was already a foregone conclusion that The Betsy would be an exer- cise in unmitigated schlock; but one at least entertained the hope that it might turn out to be fun'schlock, in the tradition of A Matter of Time, Demon Seed and other howlers so sublimely exhibitionistic in their incompetence that each endures as a kind of iconoclastic wonder in inverse proportion to its intelligence. Alas, The Betsy lends no such excitement to its own illogic. The film's plot, its people and its structure are unadulterously comatose, in- citing its audience to wince, to writhe, finally to snore. IN CASE YOU'RE fortunate enough not to know, The Betsy - based on Harold Robbins' sleazy best seller of the same name - was connived as a barely fictionalized shocker about Detroit and the auto industry that runs it. Aesthetic kneejerk notwithstanding, it's a potentially compelling American locale if placed in the hands of a sensitive film craftsman, as witness the success of Paul Schradeir's current Blue Collar. Unfortunately, craftsman- ship and sensitivity bear as little relevance to the world of Harold Robbins as liquor does to a Muslum.r Would that one could simply banish from consciousness the drab phallic scratchings of this literary vampire who endlessly excretes his computer- formula novels and his creatively stunted emotions. As bad luck would have it, trash can often be alchemized into loot, which is one talent Robbins has honed to a dagger's edge. And since'money still talks louder than anything else in Hollywood, we are thus forced semi-annually to gird our loins and dubious acumen in oder to suffer through two hours watching normally competent performers and technicians make somnambulistic oafs of them- selves. The Betsy's evolvement prompted considerable prideful stirrings throughout the Detroit area last year, what with the picture's much- trumpeted inner-city shooting, a cast headed by no less than Lord Laurence Olivier, and a general local euphoria over the Motor City's having finally earned a place for itself on the celluloid map. Well, the collective populace needn't have held its vainglorious breath: The sum total of on-location Detroit sequences totals approximately two minutes out of the entire film, car assembly line shots comprise perhaps one minute, a super-ballyhooed period sequence involving loads of area bigwigs decked out as extras in 1930's duds lasts maybe forty seconds. So much for local color. The rest of this enervated work consists entirely of various financial-carnal wheelings and dealings behind the closed, plush doors of the skyscrapers and mansions which supposedly make up the nerve centers of the industry. I cannot remember a film characterized by such a total lack of any form of physical action; it's a visual paean to immobility. The Betsy's small-minded though labyrinthian plot need barely be touched upon. It dimly catalogues the not-too-diverse gyrations of the four- generation Hardeman auto empire (patterned chronologically, tough cer- tainly not otherwise, after the Ford family). Proceedings begin in the present where we find elderly company founder Loren Hardeman Sr. (Olivier), apparently remorseful in his dotage over his robber baron past, struggling to develop an innovative economy car designed to permanently relieve the nation of its energy crunch. He dubs his new creation "The Bet- sy," named after his fast-budding granddaughter. Shortly thereafter, Loren Sr. hires American-Italian race driver Angelo Perino (Tommy Lee Jones) to help build and test his four-wheeled messiah. All well and good and ecological, except that Loren III (Robert Duvall), now actually in charge of the corporation, is violently opposed to the car for dark and dank reasons mercifully not revealed until nearly the end of this long opus. But wait, perhaps Angelo has plans of his own unbeknownst to either Hardeman. On such dubious cruxes of conflict The Betsy numbly turns, lunging clumsily from present to 1930's flashbacks to present again. In the process it drags out every drab skeleton in the Hardeman closet, from Loren Sr.'s ribald lecheries to Loren Jr.'s deviant lecheries to Loren III's oedipal lecheries. And all about as chocking and lively as half an issue of Cosmopolitan. ONE YEARNS FOR a few laughs amidst the general torpidity, but such moments are suffocatingly rare. Occasionally a Robbinsesque gem emerges (Loren Sr.'s daughter-in-law declares "I love you, Loren, even if I have to be damned for it," all the while oggling him with lascivious yet maternal soulfullness); but before you can say scene change it's back to offices, drawing rooms and intertia. The Betsy is simply too incompetent to enjoy its own inadequacies. The picture is laid out like a rigid but slightly defective clock: Its sex scenes are more sterile than steamy, with its myriad of lovers resembling objects of furniture very carefully placed and moving like stiff, precision robots. Most sequences are foreshadowed through a general poverty of in- spiration - eerie music in a car ramp preceeds a mugging, sinister whistling wind in a villain's apartment signals that he's about to get hurled out his upper-story window. There are no female leads, the women in Robbins' world being limited in character to clinging, aristocratic pseudo-groupies, either predators or vic- tims in turn exploiting or being exploited by the men who really run the world. Of the varied male cast only Olivier seems to be having a good time, though he tends too often to opt for a quasi-Lionel Barrymore imitation. As Loren III, Robert Duvall proves once again that he's an actor who makes a good role brilliant but a bad role horrible. Until The Betsy, I had sensed that Tommy Lee Jones might well become our next major movie presence, yet here he delivers a performance so stupefyingly pallid that a major re- evaluation of his talent already seems in order.E The female thespians, from Katharine Ross to Jane Alexander, shine even less - another tradition of schlock cinema. In all fairness though, it should be stated that Kathleen Beller, as granddaughter Betsy, has a nice body. And in Robbinsland, that's all most of the audience asks for anyway. Wet dreams should really be made of stiffer stuff, The Michigan Daily-Friday, March 3, 1978-Page-5 'Hope' lacks. diamonds sparkle By CHRISTOPHER POTTER I N ART as in wine, some things im- prove with age; others dry and de- cay, often to the point where various pseudo-connoisseurs most embarras- singly wonder just what in the world they saw in their once-coveted work. Howard Sackler's The Great White The Great White Hope by Howard Sackler Power Center Cap'n Dan .......,................ Loren Dale Bass Smitty ......................... Daniel Ziegler Goldie ....................... Lee McNamera Tick .....................Ron "OJ" Parson Jack Jefferson ...........James H. Hawthorne Eleanor Bachman........Lynn Ellen Musgrave Clara............................. Janice Reid Dixon ...................John v. McCarthy Directed by Richard Burgwin Hope seems a notable example of such a cultural regression: Wildly showered with Tonys and Pulitzers a decade ago, the play wears the test of time in a state of extreme aesthetic lugubriousness. It's not that Sackler's barely fiction- alized adaptation of the enforced tribu- lations of black heavyweight champ Jack Johnson carries less truth in it now than when first performed. It's more a problem of simple chronology - The Great White Hope premiered dur- ing the peak of the moral fervor of the 60's, an era when, in the spirit of social justice, one might be willing to overlook the play's periodic preachiness and its underlying structural barnacles. Sad to say, Sackler's work enjoys no such ideological immunity in the cool, inner- directed 70's. IN SACKLER'S VIEW, Jack Jeffer- son represents not only a growing black challenge to the fearful white majority, but on broader (and more hackneyed) terms symbolizes the individualist pit- ted against the monolith of society, the free thinker and doer who must be crushed in order that bureaucracy sur- vive. Thus Jefferson is harassed by both strong-arm tactics and legalisms, eventually forced to flee the country with his white mistress, still champion, but unable to get a fight anywhere in the world. Broken by poverty and humiliation, Jefferson eventually agrees to fight an American "great white hope" chal- lenger set up by domestic powers-that- be, on the understanding that he will throw the fight. Whether Jefferson ac- tually does "take a dive" is left cloaked in ambiguity (as indeed it was left in real life) by Sackler in the play's final, tumultuous scene. In order for Hope's "big" scenes not to stagnate, one needs a grand-epic Zef- ferelli-like approach, full of fervent tumult, white-heat pacing and, above all, lots of people; instead director Richard Burgwin has opted for a mode, of stifling austerity. He gives us a spar-. tan stage virtually bereft of props, scenery or people, limiting his visual efforts to a trio of slides depicting the scene locations, which were inadequately projected at that. WHERE THE PLAY needs a set full of commotion and controlled confusion, Burgwin's small ensemble clusters in various quiet, immobile groups, leaving vast expanses of barren stage and dead silence leering ponderously out at the audience. Only once, in the, escape scene at the end of Act I, is there enough verve and energy to overcome the overriding visual-rhythmatic apau- city. Otherwise, especially in the fight sequences in which the actual fighters are never shown), the unrelenting ocular famine combined with sloppy, technically erratic sound cues caused the proceedings to grind to a yawning, thudding halt. The play's more intimate scenes fare better, largely through the work of guest artist James H. Hawthorne, whose performance alone makes Great White Hope worth seeing. Although his physique and delivery are geared more toward Muhammed Ali than Jack Johnson, one still gets swept away in Hawthorne's absolutely stunning, galvanic effort. Hawthorne gives one of the most ferocious yet controlled per-. formances one could ever imagine,: modulating joy, anguish and sheer rage into an almost unbearable confessional. His Jack Jefferson is a man utterly aware of his mind, body and the things- that life is about, yet doomed to an en- dless hopeless struggle that slowly twists and squeezes him dry. Hawthorj ne's convulsive denoument at the end of Act II is monumental and terrifying. CAST IN HAWTHORNE'S shadow, the other players fluctuate rather frus- tratingly in quality. As Jack's mistress. Eleanor, Lynn Ellen Musgrave looks gorgeous but consistently swallows herl lines, and in the early scenes projects A tarty quality out of kilter with her char- acter's upper-class roots. Leo McNa- mara is crisp and authoritative as Jef-. ferson's manager Goldie, though hsis Irish brogue tends to intrude into his Jewish mannerisms. Ron "OJ" Park) son's Tick (Jack's trainer) is almost- pure Richard Pryor, but fun to watch. and certainly an audience pleaser. Among the smaller parts, Janice Reid deserves mention for her dyna- mite portrayal of Jack's ex-girlfriend, as does Terry Caza for her perforni- ance as a crooked sports promoter. Least effective is John V. McCarthy ih the crucial role of Dixon, an FBI agent: who hounds Jefferson throughout .h* global wanderings. Instead of exuding the ruthless impersonality required fpj the part, McCarthy opts for an adoles cent smirkiness, his Southern-tinged'. delivery approximating a spoiled brat snitching on his younger brother. ,. Yet, if the joy of watching a great act tor at the apex of his talent is enough reward for you, then by all means' break down the doors to see this play. Mr. Hawthorne's performance is surely worth a dozen admission prices. 'CA Suite By SUSAN BARRY N THE ONGOING dramatic movement to capture the essential mediocrity of American life in all classes, no one has been quite as prolific as Neil Simon. His production, California Suite, which began at the Fisher Theatre in Detroit last week, concerns four groups of visitors to a California hotel. The four vignettes each take place in the same suite, and the visitors ra'nge in class from a suburban Philadelphia couple to a movie star and her husband. Each group of guests has its own reasons for being in California, and each experien- ces a significant alteration in perspec- tive before leaving. The first performance in the series was by far the worst. Hannah Warren, an associate editor of Newsweek, comes to California in search of her runaway daughter, who has left New York to live with her divorced father. An unofficial custody battle ensues between the parents, which rapidly turns into an exchange of insults con- cerning their respective lifestyles. William Warren (Don Murray) has apparently disguised himself as a cliche. He sports blue jeans and side burns, pops vitamins, and gives up hard liquor in lieu of natural tea. He writes screen plays and lives with a young ac- tress in a French-style farmhouse in Beverly Hills. Hannah Warren (Elizabeth Allen) has remained in New York, sharpening her acid wit, and having an affair with the second best mind she has ever met in- the form of a Washington Post reporter (no, not one of those two). OBVIOUSLY SIMON has written some witty lines into this scene. However, through some disturbing blocking that leaves Billy rocking on his toes while his ex-wife verbally abuses him from an armchair, and some sim- ply poor deliveries, many of the lines are thrown away. Hannah's zingers have about as much vigor as her husband's weak tea. Billy is colorless and limp. When he supposedly penetrates his ex-wife's in- vulnerability, one begins to speculate that this couple's marriage must have been even more boring than their divorce. The dialogue becomes so mud- goes sour died that it is difficult to extract the couple's respective objectives. The second scene fared much better. Marvin Michaels (Warren Berlinger) awakes in the hotel suite with a hooker, a present from his brother in honor of his son's bar mitzvah. His wife is on the way up to the suite and the hooker is out cold. Berlinger excels as the chubby, befuddled husband, whose uninten- tional stumble into adultery bewilders himself almost more than it bothers his wife. Patti Karr as Millie Michaels charms with her trusting innocence, and extracts a memorable revenge. THE TWO SCENES comprising the first vignette of the second act, however, are undoubtedly Simon at his best. Diana Nichols (Elizabeth Allen) breezes into town from London with her husband Sidney (Don Murray) as an Oscar nominee. The dialogue in these scenes is honed to a fine point and delivered withsuperb timing and em- phasis. The second scene glows with creative humor, and pathetic climax as the drunken actress returns. If one scene could redeem a play this one would have tocome extremely close. The final scene, about two couples from Chicago vacationing together, is pure slapstick, three stooges style. The accident-prone vacationers battle it out until they all become casualties and, under tnreat of more violence, swear their devotion and friendship to each other and declare their intention to travel together again. In all the entertainment has its ex- tremely funny moments, as well as moments of stirring pathos, but too of- ten it wallows in the mediocrity of its subject matter and settles for slapstick rather than authentic humor. rather than authentic humor. ,, INDIVIDU6L NEEDS' and SOCIfiL TASKS x a lecture by D1IETRICPI V. EOSTEN President of the Asten Group, Inc. Saturday, March 4-8:00 P.M. Rudolf Steiner HouseI 1923 GEDDES AVENUE ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN The public is welcome Sponsored by the Rudolf Steiner Institute of the Great Lakes Areu r r-.- Af- C ,'Guest Artist-Setres Featurin JAMES H.HAWTHORNE Guest Artist-n-Resid.rice Wed Sat Mach,-4. 8pr HO~e Power Canter A Play by Howard Sackler Pultzer Prze Wnner Tny Award - Best Play S ICa E. e , h !f BARRY AVEDON DRAWI NGS MARCH 1-31 RECEPTION MARCH 3 7:00 - 900 pm Tues -Fri. 10-6 Sat, Sun. 12- 5 '764-3234 FIRST FLOOR MICHIGAN UNION ::".'A''11 ' ' ' f A . .. . . ..."?. .. . . . . . x::" ""i:",'" "", ENJOY OUR SALAD BAR A GREAT TASTING STEAK ATA PRICE THAT'S EASY TO SWALLOW Our price includes a juicy 4 lb. steak (pre-cooked weight) with all the trimmings. Such as a baked potato warm roll and butter plus all the freshcrisp salad you can eat from our Salad Bar. + 6 f-~h 'V T