I 0 The Michigan Doily-Friday, March 17, 1978-Page 5 Fest showcases vibrant By ANTHONY vogel " RAGIC ECSTASY ... is the best tha art - perhaps that life can give," said the Irish poet William Butler Yeats, (1865-1939). Yeats' drama and ideas are being celebrated and ex- plored throughout this week's Yeats CuchulainSaga University Museum of Art March 15-19,1978 Kathy Eacker Badgerow..........The Fool Constance Barron........... Guardian, Fand Gay Delanghe .....................Aoife Carol Ann Hart ............... Emer, Ensemble Donald Stephen Hart.......Bricrui, Ensemble Marshall Levijoke........... The Blind Man David Marshall................. Cuchulain' John McCarthy............The Young Man Mary Pettit ..........Eithne Inguba, Ensemble Folkart Schmidt.......... Old Man, Ensemble Sebastian Vittucci ...eConchubar, Ensemble by William Butler feats directed by Irene Connors; percussion, Bradley Bloom; flute, Glennis Stout and Edith Yoder Theatre Festival. The performances of The Cuchulain Saga by The Yeats En- semble, an integral part of the festival, are providing enthusiastic audiences with a taste of this "tragic ecstasy." Although Yeats wrote over 25 plays, his extraordinary reputation as "the greatest poet to write in English in our time" (T.S. Eliot), relies mainly on the body of his Collected Poems. Almost all of Yeats' poems are essentially dramatic, and as Denis Donoghue says: "Plays are the natural culmination of Yeats' idiom." But, his plays are very difficult to translate into production, and have,been neglected. Thus it is one of the Festival's goals to rediscover Yeats as a playwright. The Ensemble production is an element of this discovery process. The four plays about the Irish mythological hero Cuchulain (pronoun- ced Cuchoolin) which make up the Cuchulain Saga, (At the Hawk's Well, On Baile's Strand, The Only Jealousy of Emer, and The Death of Cuchulain, are among the most difficult of Yeats' plays tor interpret. They are also among his best. These plays abound withi lovely verse, and the Ensemble proves that they do work on stage as well as on the printed page. THE MEMBERS of the Ensemble are very conscious of Yeats' intention to allow the rhythm of the verse to predominate. I Everything else, (melody, percussion, movement, and lighting,) must therefore in some way derive from that rhythm. In general, the rhythm of speech is clear and is ar- tfully emphasized to produce what Yeats would call the exhausting in- tellectual "emotion that comes with the music of words." All aspects of rhythm of speech focus as the basic antagonist to Cuchulain's heroism as the four plays trace his "youth, death, spiritual purgatory, and' final release from the world." The sound alone of this production provides a full theatrical experience. The museum's acoustics tend to diffuse the actors' voices so that at times it seems the theater itself is speaking. The number of Ensemble voices speaking varies continually from syllable to syllable, to provied wonder- ful contrasts of vocal intensity. Sound ranges along a sliding spectrum:.from straight dramatic, to Gregorian chant to operatic singing. Judy Brown (com- poser) and Bradley Bloom (Musical Director and Percussionist) demon- strate how much can be done with music in the theater. The melodies for flute and for voice are beautiful. The percussion fascinates without distrac- ting. DAVID MARSHALL resounds deep Yeats and heroic. Marshall Levijoki and Sebastian Vittucci truly understand how to project the rhythmic power of words. Highlights include the rough and tumble between the Fool and the Blind Man in On Baile's Strand, and Fand's dance of seduction in The Only Jealousy, of Emer. Edward Thomas (Lighting designer) and Henry Van Kuiken (Costume designer) both deserve much praise. One only wishes that greater use had been made of Louis Allen's masks throughout the production. Members of the Yeats Ensemble have been working with the playwright's works since the fall Of 1975. This kind of performance inA tegrates a wide variety of artistic e-" pression and is only possible in a university setting. We owe much thaniks to Irene Connors, the Director of the Ensemble, and to Associate Directors; Marshall Levijoki and Mary L. Pettit, for showing us the direction "conten porary" theater should be going. David Marshall, plays the lead' in William Butler Yeats'"Cuchulain",a produetion of the Yeats Theatre Festival. B ra denburgseries scOres strong finale JIMMY CLIF Frdy ac 1,MBRo . diso 150 hwie:7:00:0 h By JEFFREY QUICK W EDNESDAY evening, the Ars Musica Baroque Orchestra con- cluded their traversal of the Branden- burg Coucerti of Bach by presenting the strongest concert of the series. The Ars Musica Baroque Orchestra Rackzai Auditorium 'March 15, 1978 Georg Philipp Teleinann ... Suite in D major for 2 horns, bassoon, strings, and continuo Johann Sebastian Bach ... Concerto to a Violino P incipaie, due Flauti d'Echo, due Violini, una viola e violone in Ripieno, Violoncello e Continuo Carlo Farina ......... CapriccioStravagante (An Amusing Quodlibet) for canto, alto, tenor, and basso continuo Johann Sebastian Bach........Concerto lera 2 Corni di Caccia, 3 Haut: e Bassono, Violno Piccolo concertato, 2 Violini, una Viola e violoncello, col Basso Continuo Lyndon Lawless, director works chosen did not present many op- portunities for the solo virtuosity heard in the past concerts, but the problems of intonation and ensemble which had marred the. earlier performances were almost entirely eliminated. The program "notes imply that conductor Lyndon Lawless' unorthodox gesticulations represented authentic Baroque conducting. In any case, he t. brought out ihe best in the orchestra. 1; The first piece was the Suite in D 'major for two horns, two oboes, bassoon, and) strings, which Georg Philipp Telemann wrote in 1765. .Though a renarkably vigorous com- position for a man of 84, it is definitely Msill in the older Baroque style. ,A Fren- 'ch overture was followed by a series of 'eharacter pieces, including a Rejouissance in triple time with light- rning trills, an oboes and bassoon trio, a ,carillon fpr the oboes and pizzicato violins, and a minuet including juicy features for winds alone. The playing was fine, throughout, and the oboes in particular have made noticeable im- provement throughout the series. Bach's Brandenburg Concerto No. 4 for violin, two "flauti d'echo" (alto recorders) and strings followed the Telemann suite. Michael Lynn and Beth Gilford played the recorder parts with liquid grace and accuracy. 'Violinist Susan Charney seemed to have difficulty keeping the tension in 'her bow, and the first movement wa "marred by stumbling passagework and Whining high sustained notes, though 4the brisk tempo did not make her per- formance any easier. Still, matters 'were evidently righted for the last two movements, and Charney turned in a "creditable performance. I HAVE to disagree with conductor Lawless' introduction of Carlo Farina's Capriccio Stravagante (1626) for 'trings as "the musical low point of the 'season." The work is a series of comic :vignettes held together by ritornelli. In order to depict various animals and "mbrusical instruments, Farina used techniques ahead of his time such as collegno, or striking the strings with the wood of the bow. (Though Lawless gave -"the impression that this was the first IFFRMSr use of this trick, I happen to know that Tobias Hume used it in a viol piece as early as'1605.) The harmony in the sec- tions depicting cats and dogs is reminiscent of Bartok's work. The en- semble played accurately and with wit. The Brandenburg Concerto No. 1 is a wind-lover's dream, involving three oboes, bassoon, and two horns which open with hunting calls. With this flashy instrumentation it might have been easy to neglect Deborah Paul's violino piccolo solo had she not played it with such fine musicianship. There were inaccuracies in the difficult horn parts which were easily forgotten when, in the third movement, one of the players produced the most perfect hair-raising lip trill I have ever heard. The first trio of the Minuet was marked by some very sensitive phrasing in the oboes and bassoon, and the second trio was pleasantly shocking: Three Baroque oboes in unison sound like a euphoniously honking 500 lb. duck. They kept generally well in tune, and, combined with the maniacal horn parts, brought this concert to a rousing conclusion. MEDIATRICS YE LLOW SUBMARIN E An animated tale of how the BEATLES drove the Blue Meanies out of Pepperland. A milestone in animation with some of the greatest Beatles songs ... MARCH 17th 7:00, 8:30 and 10:00 BOB3BY DEERFI ELD AL PACINO plays a despondent race-car champion. MARTHE KELLER is the only woman who can make him smile .. . MARCH 18th 7:00 and 9:30 NAT SCI OUD WED., MARCH 22- NINOTCHKA -7:00 and 9:00 in MLB 3 Friday, March 17, MLB Room 1, Admission $1.50. howtimes: 7:30, 9:3&. h Jamaican Film Classic. Jimmy Cliff stars in this extraordinary film about the' Jamaican society in which Reggae music defines the lives and fantasies of the people. A film of rebellion, conviction and liberation. TOMORROW: Roman Polanski's film THE TENANT r ' -s r -4 This Weekend at the Power Center r5 4 .. .. t i ,y z :, S I . THE OFFICE OF MAJOR EVENTS presents what was just the world is Ca star JAC BROWNE SPECIAL GUEST STAR KARLABONOFF WED., APRIL 12,8 PM, CRISLER ARENA Reserved seats $8 and $7 Tickets go on Sale Sun., March 19, 10 am at Crisier Arena >x After March 19, tickets available at Mich. Union Box Office, M-F, 11:30-5:30 (763-2071). Sorry, no personal checks. $2 ":. : 0 . iy ei : $4. .:.5 ecptSna .:is: 2.0 dac ae ei t60 ~ .frta ny ?{;: r, .~ Y "V VV VV. VVY W .v;.._v .v-r v :r v; v~r:v ..v;. .v~r v; .v" . ,.:~y v; :vY~ ,..,.............................. v t "AtA AA ;ASCREENING INFORMATION : Screenings are held in the old Architecture and Design Auditorium at 7:00, 9:00, 11:00 p.m. daily-100, 700,900 p m on Saturday. Winners and highlights are screened on Sunday at 7:00, 9:00, 11:00 p.m. in both the old Architecture and Design Auditorium and Auditorium A of Angell Hall. Single admission is $1 .75. Sunday: $2.00. Daily series: $4.50 except Sunday. Series: $20.00. Advance sales begin at 6:00 p.m. for that day only. SERIES TICKETS ON SALE NOW AT CINEMA GUILD'S NIGHTLY SHOWINGS AT OLD ARCHITECTURE & DESIGN AUD. N- mI I_____WE5T '5ioe STOPR"' MARCH 16-[9 1978 JUNIORS Don't be left out of your 1979 MICHIGANENSIAN Yearbook! we re europe / bound!. u-m men's glee club Lawrence B. Marsh, Director come and hear us sing .spring concert I a Sign up for an appointment TODAY by call- ing 764-0561, weekdays from 7 p.m.-9 p.m. I F to