The Michigan Daily-Friday, December 2, 1977-Page 7 Glorious 'Hamlet' graces Power By JOSHUA PECK R ICHARD BURGWIN has been known (feared?) around the Speech Department as a "play- wright's director" forquite a few years. A "playwright's director" is a beast more concerned with the message than the medium, thus often leaving his actors wallowing in their audience's incomprehension and boredom. Playgoers who saw Burg- win's Othello last season will know what I'm talking about; there was an austerity, a pomposity about the whole business, that made sympathy for the characters nigh on impos- sible. But now with Hamlet, playing Power Center through December 4, all that overstarched pomposity has vanished. Burgwin has given us a production to share with the actors, to roll in and savor. He even ventures to poke fun at us at times, as when Hamlet spits his verbal dismember- meqt of the "groundlings" directly at the audience. Guest artist Robert Sevra as Claudius was okay, but never achieved the glowering evil I attach to the incestuous adulterer. Still, he was sensitive and pitiful in what is perhaps his most crucial scene; his prayer of repentance. POLONIUS' "To thine own self be true" speech and Laertes' subse- quent departure were nicely done, but faded into mere background for Ophelia's striking first speaking scene. Monique Fowler -at first generated a robust, even lusty hu- mor, helped along by the natural ...- coarseness of her voice. Her earthy energy grabbed attention up until her mad scenes, when another kind of enchantment took over. what a rogue and peasant slave am I" soliloquy. He begins in a relaxed, even happy mood, which makes his cursing self-chastisement all the more fiery later in the speech. He comes down to the audience, seeking a challenger on "Am I a coward? Who calls me a villain?", and finally settles back into 'a sympathetic, heart-breaking dirge for the re-devo- tion to his vengeful duty: "I, the son of dear father murdered. . . Must, like a whore, unpack my heart with words." Edward Stasheff proved a comic delight in the role of the Gravedig- ger, a role he last played in Ann Arbor 23 years ago. He would have pleased me more had Burgwin not let Dell Allan Potter loose as the second gravedigger, gawking, stiff and stu- pid. ,Space limitations prohibit proper treatment for Carol Ann Hart, kind.; and regal indeed as Gertrude. Willie Brown's Polonius, though often over- done, was amply pompous and funny: !?;aie 4ia - . !;lsPa GIVE the perfect holiday gift call 764-0558 to order Sevra -~ w...~ ~ Chico Freeman Saxophonist Chico Freeman and percussionist Don Moye will be performing a series of duets tonight in East Quad Auditorium. There will be two shows at8:00 and 10:30 p.m. Matisse 's flowers in full bloom By KAREN BORNSTEIN THERE'S A magnificent garden in full bloom at the Detroit Institute of Art. It's a garden planted by Henri Matisse (1869-1954), and each flower is one of his paper cut-outs, budding with the beauty of pure, pulsating color. Matisse, noted particularly for his vividly colored paintings from around 1905, also sculpted, drew and printed with the same enthusiasm for color. When he was no longer physically capable of working in these mediums, he developed the technique of the paper cut-out which he found to be the simplest and most direct way to express himself. This exhibition, in the DIA Fordx Wing until Jan. 8, is the first and perhaps the last to examine the full-range of Matisse's cut-outs. The works radiate with the bril- liance of their color shapes; shapes cut from paper painted with emerald green, fuchsia, surging purple and yellow gouache, which are then pin ned to another background. This display of 57 luminous cut-outs was organized by Dr. John Hallmark Neff, curator of Modern Art at DIA, and Matisse scholar. Because Ma- tisse made many of his ..paper cut-outs when he was over 80 years old, Neff described the French master as, "the only one thus far to have had a great late period ,like Titian or Rembrandt." THE WORKS are hung chronolog- ically, the earliest ones revealing hs thought processes through the visible pins. These show how the cut figures were moved around until just the right effect was achieved.,z In Polynesia, the Sky and Poly- nesia, the Sea, a tapestry effect is created in the arrangement of pasted bird or fish forms against a back- ground of sectioned shades of blue. In these cut-outs the balance and har- mony of nature is revealed in the complex environments of sky and sea. Like all of his cut-out-forms, they are lyrical yet simple, containing all the intricacies of thriving life. Matisse considered his cut-outs to be a combination of painting and sculpture. Cutting allowed him to unify form and outline with each shape congruent to a piece of colored clay which he would build upon. The Thousand and One Nights, a twelve-foot long narrative work, is considered the major cut-out in the exhibit. The innovative master of color created five large rectangles filled with magical shapes, referring to the story of Scheherezade, a heroine of the Arabian Nights. THE BEAUTIFUL colors, flowing with life and mysticism are constant- ly changing, yet establish spatial re- lationships and rhythm within the work. Deep red cut-out hearts border the bottom of the piece, balancing the jet black, and vividly powerful green hearts bordering the top. Like all of Matisse's cut-outs, The Thousand and One Nights shouts with joy,, happiness and positive feelings to- ward life. The exhibit continues on the second floor with a reconstruction of stained glass windows, ceramic murals, a tabernacle door and liturgical vest- ments, Matisse designed for a small Dominican chapel in southern France. The two long rectangular windows, entitled The Tree of Life, are a vibrant exaltation of Matisse's joy for life. The irregular blue, yellow and green leaf shapes seem to move by stretching and straining until they reach the powerful sun disc that cuts across both panels. Other masterpieces include The Swimming Pool Which Matisse worked on at night due to his acute insomnia. This is an incredible study in negative and positive forms which glide through space, radiating a sense of nautical beauty, changes and frolic. THE WILD POPPIES is the cut-out the DIA is in the process of purchas- ing. The poppy has been a symbol of death and sleep since antiquity, and represents the aging artist's physical state one year before his death. Despite his illness, the work still thrives with passionate color and intense light. The enthusiastic master viewed his art as a means of emitting light and felt light aided in recuperating the ill. Due to this, he frequently surrounded his room and sick beds in French hospitals with his works. Matisse's cut-outs are like the most beautiful, dreamy, fanciful flowers the human imagination can conceive. Like flowers too precious to pick, they implant a sense-of joyful energy upon the human soul. CHR ISTMAS ART FAIR The University of Michigan Artist & Craftsmen Guild SATURDAY, DEC. 3 10 a.m.-8 p.m. SUNDAY, DEC. 4 10 a.m.-5 p.m. U-M Coliseum, Ann Arbor Fifth Avenue at Hill Street Matthew Casey's Horatio was aw- fulness itself. Exhibiting an astonish- ing Midas touch in reverse, every scene, virtually every line he touched, turned to mud. The only relief from his travesty of a perform- ance came when he improved enough to be merely unnoticeable towards the play's end. He even managed to drag down John Wojda, in the title role, in several of their scenes together. And speaking of John Wojda: Bravo. He and Burgwin have symbi- otically created an ,ever-so-sympa- thetic and truly unorthodox Dane. As he chats' with Rosencrantz and Guildenstern in the first act, he manipulates a difficult bit of script with dexterity, persuading his com- patriots that things are going well for him, while his inner thoughts, fraught with unhappiness, give the audience a different picture. WOJDA'S HIGHLIGHT is the "Oh, TONIGHT Law School Films PRESENTS MR. SMITH GOES TO WASHINGTON James Stewart, Jean Arthur Frond Copra's 1939 classic Room 100, Hutchins Hall (Low Quad) Show at 7:00 & 9:30 ADMISSION $100 a 9 M t 3 Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre December 1, 2,3,1977 8:00pm Tickets $3.00/ $3.50 available at UAC Ticket Central in the Michigan Union. A UAC Sophshow Presentation TICKETS NOW AT LYDIA MEND)ELSSOHN.BOXOFFICE.. Sun Dc- 9-3 01 ill Xmas Sale ,,, a X9 0AJ uality G ijt 3ets 0 0 " 6 Ph Sant-SaeV MESSIAS, Symphoy K 3sh pOr,~ae tra Neddt CQLINf){ t~t, A ptis paniei naru.e' ilips Imports &i D~eutschli 1iii1)11)Ol I ff x! Urivrt ofMihia U) I Gilbert and Sullivan Society Presents or flunthorn&ei ]bride a 0 SI il 898 per disc series price per disc 3 LP Set G qjw Becau s r Philips Imports. se excellence is priceless. 3 LP Set "the mark of qualit GISEP P VERDI Simn B Occane trGamder sn ran s am Foia Fren, CCAUDIO 898 per disc series price Arts brief The Ann Aroor Symphony has im- mediate openings in all string sections for the Tuesday, December 20th con- cert in Hill Auditorium. The concert will include works by Thaikovsky, Vaughan-Williams, and Mozart, as well as traditional Christmas carols. All bow-slingers are invited to attend. T er5d998rLP is Q5rdis 798 per disc. per disc series price Ourr eltir e seh~ctioiiof 1Philil)s Imports K Dusc r .mss. =: < t tiCl o!o 1-A.IEV I i I