The Michigan Daily-Friday, March 31, 1978-Page7 Dear Antoine S comedic spirit Crowd cool to marred by weak direc By MIKE TAYLOR ARLY ON in the Showcase produc tion of Jean Anouilh's Dear An- toine, or The Love that Failed, at the Trueblood Theatre, Cravatar, the drama critic, moans, "This whole thing is bad theatre." Unfortunately for the theatre-goer, his words couldn't be more true. The play itself is a clever farce. Given a troupe of actors and actresses who play off each other, and a director with the strength to hold it all together, it could be a witty, entertaining evening of theatre. But, alas, this production doesn't'even seem to try. All the "action", which is a word to be taken lightly in this play, takes place in a baroque castle high in Bavaria shor- Dear Antoine, orThe Love that Failed Trueblood Theatre March 29-April 1, 978 By Jean Anoilh Estelle................Devorah Eizikovic Marcellinn.................... Howard Andress Valerie ................:........ Libby Jacobs Anemone .................... Susan Perkoff Carlotta......... ..........Diane Tasca Cravatar..................... David Manis Lapinet........,..........Loren Dale Bass Lawyer ..................... Howard Weinblatt - Gabrielle .................... Rebecca Stucki Maria......... ....... Katherine Rizk Antoine ................... Leo McNamara Alexander..................Pat Garner Alexis....... ............ Joseph Ignagni Frida....................Claudia Archer Maid .........: ................ Linda Goodman Kathryn Long, director tly before World War I. Antoine, a playwright who collected houses, guns, and, as we soon find out, women, has recently died in a gun accident. As in- structed in his will, a small company of people who mattered in his life have been invited to the mansion for the reading of the will. One by one, they all arrive. * FROM THE VFRY first scene, it's clear something is very wrong with this play. Estelle, played by Devorah Eizikovic, is the classic example of theatrical overkill. Yet, with all her over-done gestures, expressions, and exclamations, she fails to conjure up any sort of a character. Howard An- dress, as Marcellin, is even worse. His idea of characterization is' a stiff delivery punctuated by short bursts of muffled laughter. Throughout the play, neither convince us that they are anyone but a couple of inept actors who need much more practice. Then Valerie (Libby Jacobs), and her daughter Anemone, (Susan Perkoff) arrive. This is a very weak scene, because at first it's hard to tell which of the two women are supposed to be older. Jacobs' performance, which is completely amorphous, doesn't help things, and Perkoff's role is so small at this point all she can do is whimper, which she does quite well. You see, though Estelle was Antoine's wife and Valerie his mistress, Anemone loved him. There are now four people on stage, but all seem oblivious to their surroun- dings. Good lines are, thrown away, and chances for hearty laughs are missed because the actors aren't com- municating with each other. They might as well be giving monologues. NEXT TO arrive is the lawyer, played by Howard Weinblatt with what I hope is considerable embarrassment. Weinblatt is just awful; his attempted German accent, came out sounding like a harsh, shrill miscast Brunhilde, and after the way he screamed his lines, it's a safe bet he'll have lost his voice by the end of the week. Between his lack of vocal technique and amateurish, inept acting, I cringed every time he walked on stage. Just when I had given up hope, a loud, colorful, extravagant, and very won- derful woman named Carlotta enters. Diane Tasca sizzles in the role, breath- ing life into a play that had begun to die. With her is the drama critic, Cravatar, played with finesse by David Manis. Like Tasca, Manis has created a believable, interesting character. Loren Dale Bass, as Lapinet, is unfor- tunately about as skilled as the rest of the cast. Though his hair is grey, nothing else about him seems old. IN THE SECOND act, Gabrielle, played by Rebecca Stucki, blossoms with a warm, sensitive performance. A short scene featuring Taska, Manis, and Stucki alone shows the great poten- tial of Anouilh's play. Unfortunately, when Andress and Bass-return, so does ennui. In a well-done flashback scene, An- toine appears for the first time. Leo tion, acting McNamara's portraya; is at first rather limited, ne simply doesn't say much. In a later scene, however, he reveals huge talent, giving a performance far more professional than anyone else in the cast. Perkoff is finally given a chance to show her stuff, and she too comes off with flying colors. She steals the flash- back scene as a wild, passionate six- teen-year-old girl. Like Stucki, McNamara, and Perkoff, Pat Garner as Gabrielle's son Alexander starts off slowly but springs to life in a charming scene with Perkoff towards the end. KATHRYN LONG'S direction is, of course, woefully inadequate. Letting performances like those by Eizikovic, Andress, Jacobs, Bass, and Weinblatt go unremedied is inexcusable. She clearly failed to understand the comic subtleties of the play, especially the humorous interactions between charac- ters. When a performance is as ram- bling, chaotic, and often incoherent, as this one is, the director has no business directing any ensemble. Susan Gratch's set is appropriately grand, but unfortunately rather tacky looking. It's a pity the company's limited budget had to show in this way. Marcia Grace Froehlich's costumes suited everyone fine, and D. Kenneth Beyer's lighting was adequate. Some of the sound cues were off, however, At one point, Cravatar complains about "that damn dog", at which point a howling sound begins. By the end of the play, we ae left wondering if Antoine might actually be alive after all. Were the performances we just watched a charade designed to please Antoine, who has been hiding in the wings, or is that just our imagination? Frankly, I don't care. The performance's lack of consistency left me uninterested in such questions. ' By PATRICIA FABRIZIO E RIC CLAPTON is one of the very few people in the rock world that can safely be called a living legend. The legekid himself appeared at Cobo Arena Tuesday night and played to a capacity, but slightly blase crowd. Clapton shared the stage with the Eric Clapton Band, including vocalist/songwriter Marcy Levy. Clapton's set was surprisingly short (barely an hour and a half), but his selection ,of tunes was excellent. He played five songs from his new album, Slowhand "The Core", "Peaches and Diesel", "Wonderful Tonight", "Lay Down Sally" and "Cocaine"), and an assortment from his past. Most out- standing were "Badge" (Cream), "Key to the Highway" (Dominoes), "Rain" and the usual collection of blues num- bers. He also included an excellent ren- dition of "Knockin' On Heaven's Door" and "She's in Love With a Rodeo Man;" and, oh yes, "Layla". "Layla" was the climax of the evening. When the first notes of the song came blistering out, the audien- ces' restlessness was immediately quelled and their attention was fixed unerringly on the stage. The 1978 "Layla" is like the 1978 Clapton: con- fident, almost cocky. This did not diminish the effect or beauty of You were too young to see it in 1 068; You're not too old to see it now- CA NDY An irreverent spoof of sex and society With MARLON BRANDO and RICHARD BURTON TONIGHT 7 & 9 PM Room 100 Hutchins Hall (LAW QUAD) $1.00 GARGOYLE FILMS "Layla," arguably the best song of the seventies. The guitar solo after the piano break was not nearly as technically exciting as on the album: after all, George Terry, second lead guitarist in Clapton's band, is no Duane Allman. But, nonetheless, Eric Clapton playing "Layla" just can't be beat, and the crowd got their money's worth then, if not at any other time. THE LACK of cheering from the crowd was puzzling. For example, after a great guitar solo in "Key To The Highway," and upon return to the ver- se, the customary applause was ignorably small. Main floor fights may have put a damper on the spirits, but whatever the reason, the crowd's heart wasn't won over until nearly the end, lapton and as if to punish us, there was only one encore. -- Marcy Levy was given two spc songs. The first was a Buddy Holly soig called "Fool's Paradise." Claptn played lead guitar and sang backgp here. Her other solo was "Nobody Loves You When You're Down and uit from Layla. This time she was l#i alone on the stage. It was here that 10r vocal power and range were put to M test. The result was that she madeLUp, da Ronstadt look very paltry. She is deservedly very well received. Eric -Clapton in concert is more thin just a show. It's an historical evern. Anything it might've lacked in leri was made up for in pure technical ex- pertise and the beauty that makes Cla- ton a living legend instead of a flasln the pan. i ALAN TANNIER'S 1976 JONAH WILL BE 25 IN THE YEAR 2000 This rich concoction of color, black and white, songs, skits, economics, dreams and sexual experiments tells the story of eight "minor prophets." The director has described his film as "dramatic tragicomedy in political science-fiction." IN FRENCH WITH SUBTITLES. SAT: DELIVERANCE CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT A.T 7 & 9:05 OLD ARCH. AUD. $1.50 I- SE"M * LU i i AnJEzI i JCEu DAILY EARLY BIRD MATINEES -- Adults $1.25 DISCOUNT IS FOR SHOWS STARTING BEFORE 1:30 MON. thru SAT. 10 A.M. tI I:3b P.M. SUN. & HOLS. 12 Noon til 1:30 P.M. EVENING ADMISSIONS AFTER 5:00, $3.50 ADULTS Monday-Saturday 1:30-5:00, Admission $2.50 Adult and Students Sundays and Holidays 1:30 to Close, $3.50 Adults, $2.50 Students Sunday-Thursday Evenings Student & Senior Citizen Discounts Children 12 And Under, Admissions $1.25 TICKET SALES MEDIATRICS presents ~ .' BLAZING SADDLES Mel Brooks directs a ludicruous comedy with Gene Wilder and the rest of the Rockridge gang. This particular Brooks film is a spoof on the Hollywood Western. Friday, March 31-7:30& 9:30 AND DOG DAY AFTERNOON Al Pacino portrays a bank robber, who, beseiged by the New York City police force, gradually gains sympathy from his captives and a number of curious onlookers. The ending will tear you apart. The Ann Arbor Film Co-operafive presents at MLB FRIDAY. MARCH 31 THE TALL BLOND MAN WITH ONE BLACK SHOE (Yves Robert, 1975) 7' 10:15-MLB3 Buggings, break-ins. and surveillance are the objects of this timely satire. A young violinist unknowingly becomes the decoy in a cutthroot bottle between spies. they turn his life into total mayhem. but the tall blond man remains a naive and lovable modernday Buster Keaton.,"s'he narrowly escapes peril at every turn. "This is one of the funniest movies within recent memory. It's so crammed with funny moments it's impossible to pick a favorite."-L.A. TIMES. Pierre Richard, Mireille Darc, In French, with subtitles THE WRONG BOX -Brion'Forbes, 1966)m . - ..8*:35only MLB 3 Hilarious British satire based loosely- very loosely-on a Robert Louis Stevenson story about a tontine. Fabulous comic performances by Michael Caine. Peter Cook and Dudley Moore (BEDAZZLED, BEYOND THE FRINGE), Ralph Richardson, John Mills. Peter Sellers and Nanette Newman (as the archetypically repressed Victorion heroine, so sensitive that she finds the mention of 'eggs" disgusting). See the Bourenmouth' Strangler and the venal Dr. Pratt! The climactic chase involves hearses, a resurrected corpse. the police. (naturally). two embezzlers, the Salvation Army, three misplaced coffins, on Englishman who speaks pure Swahili, and a British military band. Tomorrow: COLLISIONS (starring Lily Tomlin, Gilda Radner, and Dan Ack- royd) AND Fassbinder's JAIL BAIT and Norman Mailer's WILD 90 1. Tickets sold no sooner than 30 minutes - prior to showtime. 2. No tickets sold later than 15 minutes after showtime. Y,' r, }y}1 y 4,, :1 Saturday, April 1-7:00 & 9:30 Nat. Sci. Aud. I 10:30 1:00 3:30 6:30: 9:00: Admission $1.50 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE BEST ACTOR-JOHN TRAVOLTA Is There Something You've Got To Say? SAY IT IN THE CLASSIFIEDS CALL 764-0557 The Extraordinary Adventures of