The Michigan Daily-Saturday, April 15, 1978-Pag' New By OWEN GLEIBERMAN THERE HE is, looking so amicable and unruffled in a buttery-colored. custom-made three-piece affair com- plete with wedgewood blue matching socks and shirt, aluminum-shiny white shoes and velamint tie (wide - but not too wide) fastened securely in place by a gold tie-clip so as to extend outward just so, like a waterfall, as it were, cascading gently from the crest of the knot; into the mannerly vanilla vest. And while some might claim the outfit is ... well ... pas ordinaire, there's no denying he . has that charismatic charm, that yummy unencumbered feeling that is so playful ... so. . . ador- able (nobody influences hin!) amidst this veritable department store of drab fuzzy sweaters and jeans and Wallabees and tan sportcoats flowing around Rackham auditorium as the Hopwood winners, their friends and families and literature-lovers in general gather for a rousing afternoon of writers' pep talk. But then, no one ever claimed that Tom Wolfe belongs in the mainstream. As author of The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test, Radical Chic & Mau-Mauing the Flak-Catchers, and other excur- sions into the world of American fads and cultural behaviorisms since World War II, Wolfe has made his name by paving new ground. Since the mid-60's, when he gained notoriety as the prophet of the "movement" later christened the New Journalism, Wolfe's glittering style and genius for social observation have earned him, as a journalist, an unprecedented place in America's literary scene. AS THIS YEAR'S speaker at the Hopwood Awards ceremony, Wolfe spoke on "Literary Technique in the Last Quarter of the Twentieth Cen- tury." He included a fair dose of polished stand-up comedy while arguing the need for "crystalline" realism in writing, leading his cap- tivated audience through a whirling maze of "fun anecdotes" and literary allusions. Wolfe's thesis - at times throughout all this bordering on polemics- was the necessity for incorporating aspects of "reporting" into more fictionalized forms of writing. In the case of French novelist Emile Zola, Wolfe claims that Journalist in 01 fe's Co' such attention to objective detail "brought with it the most powerful metaphors in French literature." Wolfe has a passion for words that are diamond-edged, for the mot juste upon mot juste. It is understandable that he feels that high-voltage novelist Philip Roth "has no peer." Wolfe's specialty is an uncanny ability to organize words into vibrant, pulsating patterns that arrive at the essence of their target. Speaking to Wolfe several hours before his talk, I asked him how he came upon his various stylistic techniques. He.related the inspiration to his initial experiences as a journalist. Many of his pieces will open with a chaotic barrage of flashy adjectives and idiomatic "code"-words (i.e., a surfing gang's cult-password of "mee- dah"), whose meaning gradually emerges throughout the article. Writing features for Sunday newspaper supplements, he found "you had to grab the reader's attention very quickly and you had to hang on tight, and I figured one way of doing this was to do what in movie terms would be to start the movie with an extreme close-up. A close-up has to excite some sort of curiosity, and then you gradually pull back and reveal -the whole form of which you've shown only a small part. It was originally done because of jour- nalistic motives, but it began to intrigue me as a literary device, too. It can be a way of creating small-voltage suspen- se." WHEN WOLFS began writing his magazine pieces (mostly for Esquire and New York), he claims "there was a convention among magazine writers that you should strive for understan- ding, and that you created emphasis by underemphasizing terrible things .. - Well, this had become such a conven- tion that it was boring people. So I decided just to turn the whole thing around and start overstating, to call at- tention - just to wake everybody up." One can't argue that Wolfe failed to reach his goal. Not that absolutely all his subjects lay in the hotseat of con- troversy - it's just that in every one of his articles, Wolfe concentrated on delving beneath the surface of his sub- ject and transmitting the feelings and attitudes of those he observed. Wolfe's "objectivity" is akin to that of documentary filmmaker Frederick Wiseman. His reactions may filter through implicitly (foolishness, objec- tively related, is still foolishness), but the reader is allowed the final judgement, free of the author's diatribes. Perhaps because of his interest in ob- jectification of experience, Wolfe laments over a decline in the quality of "student writing in general. "There's certainly been a decline in the teaching of writing," he claims. "I don't mean creative writing essentially. There's just so much less emphasis on writing than there was twenty years ago. And I Wolfe (referred to throughout as "my namesake") based one of his charac- ters in Look Homeward, Angel on an unknowing and belatedly disapproving acquaintance. Following publication, the ex-friend was "waiting at the North Carolina state line" with hemp to lynch him with. Says Wolfe (the journalist), such hostilities "were the actual origin of his famous phrase that took on mystical outlines, 'You can't go home again.'" "WHAT SO MANY writers don't un- derstand," claims Wolfe, "is that this wallet manufacturer was out on *the discotheque floor with his shirt unbut- toned to his sternum and a lot of aluminum chainwork around his neck with his red eyes beating out of his walnut shell eyelids doing the watusi to hully-gully and the new boogaloo till the onset of dawn or saline depletion, whichever came first." The audience responded enthusiastically to this momentary lapse into Wolfean stream- of-consciousness. "IN THE 70'S," says Wolfe, "we're only a short step away from the time when there will be a much more profound change in the appetite for the real of the most talented novelists." Wolfe's concern for infiltrating con- temporary writing with this "realism" tends to be excessive. It is abundantly evident in his own writing, from the incredible care taken to providing masses of meticulously gathered detail. In Radical Chic, for example, when speaking of the New York apartment of Leonard and Felicia Bernstein and their now legendary par- ty for the Black Panthers, Wolfe took pains to describe the "white silk shade with an Empire scallop over one of the windows overlooking Park Avenue. Or maybe it isn't silk, but a Jack Lenor Larsen mercerized cotton. ." In much of Wolfe's work, the brand name is the message. Wolfe urges that young writers leave themselves open to whatever phenomena surround them. Only then will it be possible to explore what Wolfe perceives as a "hole you could drive a truck through" in the chronicle of American cultural experience. The feeling of freshness in all of Wolfe's ar- ticles, an ecstatic glee by which he em-, braces his subjects for their buf- ;ning foonery, is a testament to the sense o openness he brings to his writing. "N matter how much of a genius a write may be," says Wolfe, "no matter wha facility a writer has with words, or hov much music a writer has in his soul there is no one human mind that cad possibly conjure up the range of thing: that are actually happening out there-ii the real world." - , -a t w14 Wolfe's next book, about the A olIk astronauts, is nearly finished (the fibi'\ section was published in Rolling St.oRe1 several years ago, and he's beern working on it ever since). Wolfe told me, what attracted him to that particular subject was that "here's sometii 'gI that's tremendously well-known - i! been written about many, many tirpes - and there what intrigued me was tlka after all the things I read on the astronauts, I had never read anything that really got inside their lives." "' True, but no doubt Wolfe will find'a way. think the reason is that litera ded so rapidly that it beg assumed that you learn to wri you learn to talk. And it just is Wolfe's literary style has of books to be dubbed "journ< tion" (particularly the novel tric Kool-Aid Acid Test), but he's concerned, he's far fror to take that course. Throughc ture, Wolfe related anecdot ning writers who had novel biographies by changing the we may believe Wolfe, noveli Daily Photo by WAYNE CABLE Tom Wolfe acy expan- material that they use from their own gan to be lives should be regarded as a form of te the way involuntary reporting, reporting you sn't true." didn't mean to do." Wolfe recommends ften led his that writers avoid limiting themselves, alistic fic- and search beyond their own experien- istic Elec- ce for inspiration: "So many novelists t as far as are consuming their lives at a ferocious m the first rate to get material for their work, and out his lec- suddenly, there's just not enough fuel es concer- left - you just can't keep doing this." lized their To churn out a novel after twenty years names. If of living, and then another out of the st Thomas next five, is, in Wolfe's eyes, "a little bit uneconomical." Speaking about the 60's, Wolfe declared "this was a wild, manic, ex- traordinary era, and the talented young writers weren't looking at it; they were not writing about it ... There wasn't ting. Kate even any sort of faculty to record the ig short of amazing era of affluence in the 1960's, h ter when every single. 58-year-old vinyl MEDlATRICS presents PAPER CHASE TIMOTHY BOTTOMS plays a first year law student striving to do well academ- ically, and date his professor's daughter at the same time. By the end of the film he decides just how important grades really are. Definitely an appropri- ate film for the end of the semester. Saturday, April 15 7:30 & 9:30 Nat. Sci. Aud. Admission $1.50 " r. i; 'l , ' tip L out'Circ By NINA SHISHKOFF THE TREND= in theater at the moment seems to be toward the spectacular. The main attraction of On the Twentieth Century, a musical playing in New York, seems to be the scenery, an elaborate train set that does more than the actors. In some plays more thought seems to go into the costumes than the script. It is when the complexity comes from the plot, the cleverness from the dialogue, that a Full Circle schorhng Auorium April13 -16 By Erick Maria Remarque Anna Walter..... ....... Kate Conners Erich Rohde ............... Thomas Stack Grete....................... Laura A. Hitt Koerner ........... ..... eter Greenquist Mack ........... ...... James Konwinski Maurer .. .. ..................William Sygar Schmidt....... .........Robert Meiksnis Kott ........ .............Bruce G. Flynn Russian Captain ........... Greg Rosenberg Presented by the Actor's Ensemble Daniel Kanter, producer and director; F. C. Noon, sets; Thomas A. Coyne, lighting and sound; Harriette Lewis, costumes -' play can shine from the simplicity of its staging. The Actor's Ensemble's production of Full Circle is simple. A shabby room is the setting for both acts, and the fur- niture and props are all the staging devices needed. There's not a teacup on stage that isn't used. The lighting is simple and direct, and the special effec- ts are limited to the sound of a radio and a single onstage gunshot. This is the way it has to be, because Full Circle, a play by Erich Maria Remarque, is packed with complexity. IT OPENS simply enough. The set- ting is Berlin, in the last days of the war. Anna Walter lies in bed during an air raid, only wanting to be left alone. Then a concentration camp escapee breaks into her room. He needs to be hidden from the Gestapo. The man who was supposed to help him, the man who used to live in Anna's apartment, is dead. Will she help him? Reluctantly, she does. He is Erich Rohde, a German whose crime was to write an indignant letter to the editor about German atrocities. The real crime, he thinks now, after seven years- in prison, is that he didn't do more. He borrows one of Anna's late husband's uniforms, planning to sneak out when it gets dark. Then the Gestapo comes. Captain Schmidt suspects something is going on, but can't prove anything. He brings in a captured escapee, who jum- ps out the window rather than betray Rohde. The plot, as they say, thickens. Anna turns out to have betrayed her husband, who was the man Erich had been looking for. The Gestapo officer comes back, in a slightly different guise. To say more would be to ruin the clever- ness and irony of what Remarque was trying to do. FULL CIRCLE abounds in irony, It's about the importance of wearing the right uniform at the right time, about heroics and survival. It's about trust. Erich asks Anna to trust him. Later, Erich must decide if he can trust Sch- midt. It's also a surprisingly funny play. The neighbor's maid provides the comic relief, but more than that, the dialogue is wicked. The suspense is terrific, too, especially in the second act. The play depends on ac Conners, as Anna, is nothin cr~nfr+il dnir Tin hr spectacurar,aepicun nerc earacte with the perfect mix of despair and humor. Anna may have shut out the world, but she can't shut off her per- sonality. Laura Hitt, as the maid, is also good. It's hard topull off a comic role, but Hitt manages to create a believable character. The problem is with Thomas Stack as Rohde. It's hard to imagine what Anna sees in him. Remarque writes in the stage directions that he must be half destroyed by the seven years in prison, but still show a little of the great charm and magnetism he once had. Stack can't really convince us of either. Full Circle could be called "heavy" entertainment. It tries to say a lot, sometimes ponderously, but most often entertainingly. If for no other reason, one could go see it for Kate Conners' performance. SUBJECTS WANTED: Earn $3 in one hour. Participate in interesting research on human memory. Call Kim, 763-0044, bet. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. - The Ann Arbor Film Cooperative presents at MLB SATURDAY, APRIL 15 WIM WENDERS FESTIVAL THE AMERICAN FRIEND (Wim Wenders, 1977) 7 & 9-MLB 3 Wender's newest and biggest feature to date is a parage of great movie directors-Nicholas Ray, Jean Eustache, Samuel Fuller-with Dennis Hopper as the American friend. Bruno Ganz, Hopper's German friend, gets himself :r involved in some pretty nasty business with these shady characters. The action combines Paris, Hamburg, and New York in a blur of subways, N streets, wharves, and automobiles. Travel, rock 'n' roll, with a pace that is a totally new. In English and German, with subtitles. ANN ARBOR PREMIERE. TUESDAY: David Bowie in THE MAIN WHO FELL TO EARTH Metropolis Film Society Presents a different set of jaws. M LB Lecture Room 1 Friday and Saturday, April 14 & 15 Admission $1.50 Showtimes: 7:00 8:45 10:30 Special Friday Midnight Show v ... t f f ...:i1 :"'1 :"}: ' ":i i ti ti 1 22. 'i":G y{I ti : ti : M1, 1. . tiAif :Y 1 "" .} .. . y i "if FRANK CAPRA'S 1944 ARSENIC AND OLD LACE An excellent cast including CARY GRANT, RAYMOND MASSEY, PETER LORRE and PRISCILLA LANE works at breakneck speed in bizarre black comedy about a nutty household run by two old ladies and distinguished by their arsenic- flcvored elderberry wine. Grant is great as their perplexed nephew who doesn't know the score. SUN: THE MUSIC ROOM CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT A s9:15 OLD ARCH. AUD. $1.50 -CINEMA I I A 1