Brillian t musicianship highlights Music School's 'Magic Flute' The Michigan Daily-Saturday, April 1, 1978-Page 5 Oates: Portrait of a poet By JEFFREY SELBST F ALL the Mozart operas, The Magic Flute is per- haps the most musically delicious. It deals in heavy lyricism and light pyrotechnics with equal success, and the magic in the inconsequential plot is translated beautifully by even the most minute orchestral phrases. This is particularly true in the overture. When Ingmar Bergman filmed this opera three years ago, the only way he could convey this feeling on celluloid was to 4ilm the faces in the audience listening to the overture, and one could feel anticipation and delight watching other people expressing the same. This makes it clear just how im- potent words become in describing the music. The Music School's production, which opened Thursday night at (unusually) the Power Center, was vocally quite good. This is not surprising - the School is known for its operatic presentations. Where the production perhaps fell short of the mark was in the acting department. The Magic Flute Power Center by W.A. Mozart libretto by Emanuel Schikaneder and C.L.Giesecke Tamino .......... ......... Randy Lambert Three ladies........Mary Elizabeth Smith Carol Madalin Kathleen Segar Papageno.................David Parsons Queen of the Night..........Lauran Fulton Monostatos..................... Gene Sager Pamina............ Jacqueline Paige Green Sarastro.......... ......Carlos Chasusson Papagena.................. Eileen S. Moreman English translation by Ruth and Thomas Martin Ralph Herbert, direct or Gustav Meier, musical director virtue. Sigh. This is really too much to take just after din- ner. I get heartburn. A LITTLE BACKGROUND: Marie-Therese, empress of Austria, hated the Masons. They were considered wicked. But Mozart and Schikaneder (the librettist) were Masons. Guess who the Queen of the Night is yet? Yup. So they chose to perform The Magic Flute in Metropolitan Opera style, which means standing-and- singing. This might halve been deliberate. After all, the music is heavily stylized, both for effect and because of the traditions of the time. It is pockmarked with Virtuosic candenzi (for the Queen, who has in Act II one of the most spectacular arias ever written) and is written in set pieces with connecting dialogue. That is another custom, for this was Singspiel, not opera; Singspiel was like the musical comedy of Mozart's day. Randy Lambert, who sang Tamino opening night (and will again tonight) is Pavarotti-shaped. He has a lovely, clear voice, and gave a faithful if uninspiring performan- ce. THE THREE Ladies, played by Mary Elizabeth Smith, Carol Madalin, and Kathleen Segar, attendants of the Queen of the Night, were superb. Each was alluring, acted their parts, and sang - well, what can I say? Their trio work was of the utmost precision, and their voices were simply fine. Pamina also acted. Jacqueline Paige Green played the princess as a bit of a minx, which is fine. Dignity is im- plied by the role, but for heaven's sake, the whole thing has so much dignity that it barely moves, and it's nice to see someone disregarding convention for a change. She sang her numbers with aplomb and grace. The Queen of the Night, Lauran Fulton, had a bit of a thin voice for the role. She simply couldii't project beyond the tenth row (which brings me to another point - why not Mendelssohn? Such a delightful theater. Why put this show on in the cavernous Power?) but her technical facility is amazing. PAPAGENO WAS very amusing and well-sung. David Parsons did a nice job, prancing about as Mozart's ver- sion of Kasperl the clown (another convention in Viennese Songspiel of the period). Eileen S. Moreman was a creditable Papagena.- The set was a mess. Visually it was lovely, but the designer apparently was caught between conflicting desires. He wanted to build a mountain of platforms that could double as rocky terrain and the steps in front of Sarastro's palace. Buthe didn't want to push this moun- tain too far back lest it obscure sight lines. The result is that the singers had about three feet between the base of this creation and the point where they would fall into the orchestra pit. The blocking suffered. And oh, did it suffer. Climb up the steps. Down the steps. Trip over each other as you walk across the front of the set. Ugh. Stylizing the already-stylized makes for dull, dull theater. For my part, most of the time I just pretended I was home listening to the record player. I can't even begin to say how good the singing was. The orchestra was also very fine, with just a few sloppy edges to their playing. Likewise, I cannot describe the mediocrity of the stage values. Oh, well. One further note: The opening night cast per- forms tonight as well. The Sunday performance will be by last night's group. It may be a whole different show. THIS IS THE eternal bane of opera. Most opera suc- ceeds best played on the stereo. Operas as a whole display a singular stupidity of plot, and the acting style of most xoperatic performers over the centuries has been of the stand-and-sing-school. They are never taught acting: it is simply not deemed important. What is surprising, then, is that the Music School has almost always avoided this pitfall in the past. The Marriage of Figaro of a couple years ago, last year's Crucible, and even the Cosi fan Tutte last year were distinguished by the fact that they were acted as well as sung. In general, the trend in opera, though, has been towards acting. Regional opera companies - Detroit's own Michigan Opera' Theater among them, emphasize the dramatic. The Music School's Magic Flute, however, does not. WHY? WELL, perhaps because the script is preachy and dull. The opera is a thinly-disguised allegory of the Masonic movement in late eighteenth-century Austria. As an historical matter, perhaps it could be interesting. The plot, however, revolves around a prince who is com- missioned by the Queen of the Night to rescue her daughter from the clutches of the wicked sorcerer Sarastro. Tamino (the prince), and his sidekick Papageno the birdcatcher, do the following: a) go to Sarastro's castle, b) try to escape with Pamina (the daughter), c) discover that Sarastro is Goodness Incarnate, not Wickedness (and in fact that the Queen herself is wicked), d) endure or- deals,"and e) join the brotherhood of truth, wisdom, and By SUSAN BARRY HER EYES are vast, brown, almost ant-like. Her nose slips in bet- ween them and extends to a protrusive point. The rest of her face quickly narrows, shortens, and disappears, emphasizing her eyes. She focuses them on you, attentive. "Joyce Carol Oates," you say, noting the subdued pink turtleneck sweater, the black wide-belted skirt, and the black, round-toed flats. You remember when you owned a pair like that, years ago. Brushed suede with buckles at the ankles, and the toes with tiny fingers of the leather cut out like lace. These shoes remind you of her remark that there is a fourteen-year-old girl still alive in all of us. Only the many little wrinkles framing her huge eyes betray her chronological age. You ask which of her eight novels is her favorite. She notices the paperback edition of Childwold you have been clutching to your notebook, and says, "I think that any writer likes her latest book best." You relate your obser- vation that the women in her novels lackthe bitterness common to the characters of other women authors. Her eyes cloud momentarily and she agrees. Her women are satisfied with their gender, savoring the creative possibilities inherent in sex and pregnancy. "I try to create characters that people can identify with," she says. WEDNESDAY afternoon the tiny Rackham Amphitheater is packed. The audience lines the stairs, leans on the railings, jams the doorways, and fans out into the hall. Oates will perform the "punultimate reading" in the poetry series, and she begins by relating several comical incidents that have oc- curred in previous readings at colleges. She begins to read two poems about New York City. Her voice sounds weak, high-pitched, nasal. She doesn't read well, running her lines together and un- deremphasizing the metaphors. When the audience does not respond to the punch line she repeats it apologetically. The second poem concerns stories in Time and Newsweek about ,the cameraderie that prevailed during the New York power blackout. It is entitled "Gala Power Blackout of New York City," and it describes the cheerful at- mosphere in which neighbors help each other cart their newly-looted merchan- dise into their houses. Oates calls her poetry awkward and clumsy. She jokes about her bad luck and tells stories of the absurdity of some of her experiences. Reading her lengthy poem "He Traveled By Jet Fir- st Class to Tangier," she wails, "I forgot to bring my epic poem." It is 11,000 lines long, but she has lost it in a stack of papers that blew away. SHE SPEAKS about her awe of eighteenth century fiction. Detached literary forms, such as irony and satire, that deal with subjects so essential and real to the contemporary human con- dition as poverty and death, disturb her. Her own work deals with such sub- jects soberly, placing them under in- tense scrutiny. Her serious poems are more profound, her introductions poetic. She says of one of her poems that seems to get longer and longer, "I take it out of the drawer and it has added lines, as if they have written themselves." But essentially her poetry cannot be compared to her fiction. Her fiction has a rambling, abstractly rhyming, com- fortably poetic quality. Her poems soundmore like prose. She loves her poems, but 'only her fiction seems enlivened by her love. The audience appears to be em- barrassed, in spite of Oates' efforts to put them at their ease. A few volunteer questions clumsily. She is asked why she chooses particular forms of ex- pression to convey ideas. Fiction, she explains, is a "divine form. There is .something about taking a person through space and time. What we do in prose fiction is to give life to different forms of consciousness that is not our own primarily:" Poetry differs in that it is "expression of our private selves - dealng in abbreviated form with emotions." OATES TALKS of her interest in characters who have obsessions. She reads a poem called "Addiction," and explains that everyone has the potential for paranoidactions similar to those of Joyce Carol Oates "cranks," but most people repress them. Someone in the audienceobjects to the term "cranks," and Oates apologizes. "I'm sorry, I made a facetious remark," she explains, inquiring facetiously "are you a crank?" But she admits that few people can be quite as obsessed as an artist with his art. "Art is a fanaticism," she declares, but a fanaticism that communicates." Although she is only scheduled to an- swer questions for half an hour, Oates continues for over an hour. Finally someone asks her what kind of music she likes. Music, she replies, explores "a consciousness that is not verbal," it "touches some chord in us that is so very deep that we cannot articulate it." Every day, before. she begins to write, she practices difficult com- positions by Bach or Chopin on the piano to activate her own creative muse. "There's nothing in language that .can come close to Chopin's preludes," she explains. Oates smiles modestly and gracefully concludes the session. She has been wit- ty, clever, and sometimes profound. Those in the audience who have read her fictin, expecting something in her poetry of a similar quality, are probably somewhat disappointed. Those who have only heard her name might wonder what lies behind the fact of her popularity. A brief poetry reading simply does no justice to the genius of Joyce Carol Oates. INTERNSHIPS WASHINGTON (AP)-Three intern- ships in health sciences library management for 1978-79 will be offered by the Council on Library Resources Inc. and the National Library of Medicine. The aim of the program is to provide "opportunities for mid-career librarians to be exposed to and par- ticipate in all facets of health sciences library management." Beginning in September 1978, interns will spend one year working with the director and administrative staff of a leading academic health sciences library. STEREO CLEARANCE HOUSE HAS LOWEST STEREO PRICES l f 444 44 Pioneer S 90 neceive rS12. Tehis c900Turtbe 120 Akai CS702D Cassette 8125. Our Free Catalog has many more deals on major brands, even lower prices on "our monthly specials sheet. Send now and find out how to buy current $7.98 list lp's for $3.69. Stereo Clearance House Dept E039 1029 Jacoby St.. Johnstown- Pa. 15902. Phone Quotes 814-536-1611 - Burns ver By GERRY PROKOPOVICH A FAMILY atmosphere prevailed at the Ark Thursday night as Mar- tha Burns entertained a small, recep- tive audience with a pleasing variety of traditional music. The Ann Arbor native displayed her skills on guitar, fiddle, and mandolin, as well as of- fering versatile, authentic old-time singing.- Wearing a flannel shirt and jeans, Burns began the performance by singing several interesting traditional songs, the names of which were unfor- tunately left unmentioned. Before her third song, there started an evening- long struggle with a borrowed capo that resisted her every effort to change keys. Overcoming this difficulty, she played the beautiful Carter Family tune "Dixie Darling," inserting several quiet and competent instrumental breaks. Following this was the Depression classic "Hard Times," in which the audience joined in for the chorus. Burns then switched to fiddle, accompanied by Bill Myer on guitar, and played several Irish-accented tunes in a light, easy style reminiscent of J.P. Fraley. An absorbed look came over Burns' face during the fiddle numbers, and her concentration was well-rewarded in the effect her fine, unpretentious style had upon the audience. ST TH14 /r.- UI satility delights Ark CHANGING THE MOOD completely, she then sang "the most morbid song I know," a haunting a capella ballad en- titled "The Old Church Yard." Her hard-edged, slightly nasal voice was at .its best on this and other ballads. Returning to the guitar and its stubborn capo, she sang the humorous "Get Away, Old Man, Get Away," warning the girls: Don'tever,,arr, n old man, Tell you the reas on why is lips are all tobacco-chewed, Hs chin is never er The second set centered on songs about train wrecks, cowboys, and the Depression. Burns' stage presence, which had been shakey on occasion during the opening, now became relaxed and confident. She sang the an- ti-Prohibition song "Don't Let the Women Vote," the old favorite "Darling Nellie Gray," and the famous ballad "Barbra Allan." IN IBETWEEN songs, she discussed their origins and pointed out that the folk tradition was still alive: "I learned this song from a friend in Calumet who learned it from a record. When I finally heard the record, my version was com- pletely different." She observed that much of the tradition is perpetuated in the cities rather than in the country nowadays. "If I hum a tune and then you hum it, that's tradition." AY COOL S SUMMER Enjoy our air conditioned luxury and our heated swimming pool. Very low summer rates with short term summer leases. Stop by or call. Picking up her mandolin, she played an instrumental, "Grand Picnic," then returned to the fiddle. Gone was the look of intense concentration she had shown earlier; instead, she smiled, oc- casionally commenting "I like this part," as she played. For her last few numbers, Burns sang the amusing "Hard Core Crazy Money Craving Folks," another train wreck song, a song about a cello player that she described as "the silliest song I know," and finally the Uncle Dave Macon ver- sion of "Goin' Back to Dixie." She was quickly brought back for an encore and, at the insistence of some friends, per- formed "Lucky Lindy." She followed this with a sentimental cowboy song to close the show. The crowd responded enthusiastically; many stayed to congratulate Burns on her excellent performance, and the evening ended on a pleasant note. 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