The Michigan Doily-Wednesday, December 7, 1977-Page 5; Chicago' a powderkeg By SUSAN BARRY "CHICAGO" strutted into Detroit last week and Detroit stood up and took notice. From the first sultry horn notes above the stage, shadowed by huge blow-ups of slightly pornographic portraits, the musical at the Fisher Theatre wound its delightful decadence around an enchanted audien- ce. Bob Fosse, who won an Oscar for directing Cabaret, has once again let his grotesque imagination run wild in another depraved society. This time, instead of Berlin in World War II, he has chosen Chicago in the late 1920's. The announcer in the beginning of the show promises us a story of murder, adultery, and depravity, all of which go wickedly unpunished. And indeed there is actually a plot to this musical. Roxie Hart (Penny Worth) is a thoroughly un- fulfilled wife of a chunky garage mechanic, who dreams of making it big in Vaudeville and sleeps around a lot. She shoots a lover after a quarrel and her husband agrees to take the rap until he discovers that it is not a burgler but their fur- niture salesman, and off to jail goes Roxie. The rest of the story concerns Roxie's adventures in jail with various other inmates, and a fast-talking lawyer who has a perfect record for changing justice into greenbacks. GEOFFREY WEBB, standing in for Jerry Orbach, was fine as the lawyer Billy Flynn, who, for $5,000, could turn a courtroom into a circus with the defendant in the center ring. "If Jesus Christ had lived in Chicago and came to me with $5,000," says a modest Flynn, "things would have worked out different." But it is Penny Worth as Roxie who grabs the show by the tail and hangs on. In "Funny Honey" she is an irresponsible boozer who muses while her husband explains to the police how he shot the "burgler." In "We Both Reached for the Gun" she is a limp dummy to Flynn's marvelous ventrilo- quism while he explains her motive to the press for her. But it is in "Roxie," the best solo number in the show, that Worth transcends her one-dimensional characterization and becomes, in the introductory monologue, the woman who just wants to be loved. She takes her dumpy husband because he idolizes her and makes her feel like a kid. And she dreams of being a star, with idolizing fans and her name in a news- paper headline. WORTH'S VOICE is deep, throaty, and magnificent, and her dancing is even better. She is equally as appealing with a wicked leer as with a pouting frown. Her presence is vibrant and seductive. Haskell Gordon, as the balloonish husband Amos, is as pathetic as his wife is wild. He is willing to give Roxie every break but he is perceptive enough to be heartbroken and angry when she deceives him. His song, "Mister Cello- phane," performed in tattered overcoat and clownishly large shoes, expresses his despair at being so non-descript that everyone looks right past him. When Gordon shuffles self- apologetically off the stage it is with a sense of a moral casualty,,and unrecognized goodness that is trampled under the feet of more aggressive passions. Carolyn Kirsch is a sassy Velma Kelly, one of Roxie's inmates. She opens the show with an astonishing bump and grind in "All That jazz," and performs a positively acrobatic Chicago Directed and Choreographed by Bob Fosse Fisher Theatre, Detroit November 29-December31 Velma Kelly ........................... Carolyn Kirsch Roxie Hart ............. .............. Penny Worth Amos Hart............................. Haskell Gordon Matron.........................Edye Byrde Bill Flynn ........... Geoffrey Webb (Jerry Orbach) dance routine in "I Can't Do it Alone." Her characterization is often more obscene than sensual, as it usually lacks Roxie's innocence and is delivered with a bristly, crackling voice. Edye Byrde is a husky Matron, whose "When You're Good to Mama" accentuates her warm-hearted greed. FOSSE peoples the stage with dancers in grotesque costumes and make-up to emphasize the licentious atmo- sphere. The band is placed on a platform above the stage and the conductor addresses the audience several times from a large moon-shaped microphone, as though it is a twenties radio show. Several of the dance numbers are particularly creative. Billy Flynn's introductory song entitled "All I Care About" is a campy number with girls in bikini's encircling Flynn with large pink feathered plumes while he strips to shorts and gar- ters. And Roxie's trial, called "Razzle Dazzle," is a full-blown circus, with David Kottke protraying each member of the jury in turn. The several ingenius poses he strikes, with the help of various mustaches and facial props, are simply hilarious. THE "Cell Block Tango," although I have seen it per- formed with more spirit, is one of the most cleverly written songs in the show. The dialogue itself is predictably inane. The jokes are, in most cases, notably unfunny and become brief pauses in the anticipation of the next dance number. Occasionally the social commentary, institutionalized immorality contrasting with individual immorality, becomes a bit heavy, as one inmate is actually hung in silhouette on- stage. And attempts to show that all that sleeping around isn't always so much fun are inherent in songs like "Class" where the Matron and Velma bemoan the lack of manners in the current society, and "Nowadays," where a deserted Roxie sings of the emptiness that informal attachments inevitably bring. The end is a gratuitous salute to the audience by Velma and Roxie that seems strangely incongruous with the plot of the musical. It seems to be an acknowledgement that the singing and dancing takes precedence over the plot and characters. But even so, "Chicago" is a sensuous powderkeg of a musical. Its sentimental sensationalism and pure raun- chiness has earned it a devotion which will certainly ensure it a long run in the future., Dance concert to air Graduate dancers enjoy themselves as they practice for this production of "Moving Right Along", a series of three dance concerts to be presented in the Dance Departments studio theatre (second floor of the Dance Building, 1310 N. University Court-next to CCRB). Shows will be Dec. 9-11 at 8 p.m. Hammer records lukewarm funk ByMARK BEYER THE LATEST musical contribution by jazz keyboardist Jan Hammer is Melodies (Nemporer JZ35003). The simplicity of the title is matched by the contents therein. The new group con- sists of leader Hammer controlling electronic synthesizers and pianos drumwork and vocals, along with Tony Smith, Steve Kindler, and Fernando Saunders contributing drums, violin, and guitars respectively. The major fault of this slick sounding collection is Saunders' disappointing lead vocals. The mood of the whole al- bum comes off as a pop white-funk mish-mash that doesn't live up to its potential. Saunders tries in vain to sing like Stevie Wonder, but- isn't good enough to pull it off. In fact, the whole album attempts a Songs in the Key of Life flavor and sound. The singing up- stages Hammer's artistry on most numbers. "I Sing" starts off with some attrac- tive guitar picking, and Hammer doing his jazzy thing. Thep.thesinging starts, and the guitarist starts squeaking his chord changes horribly. The song is a minor-key drifter with an upbeat change to major in the middle, but alas, the Stevie Wonder vocals again are a turn-off. "Honey 5379" is an upbeat lit- tle ditty that show cases Hammer's keyboard artistry, but also has a tinge of commercialism. Occasionally, when it tries to be "sonic" or "spacy," it just doesn't get off the ground. The outer- space noises are pretty overused, and Hammer should know better than to use them without giving them an appropri- ate imaginative twist. Background hand-clapping 'matched with quasar noises is not appropriate. Side Two is better. It opens with. "Don't You Know," a breezy, ethereal composition that includes beautiful syn- thesizer work and perfect, sparse per- cussion. The vocals are restricted and smooth, and make this one of the best selections on the album. Side Two, band two is "Just For Fun," and starts off promisingly. But then the singing starts, and the fun is over. Musically, it's the most success- ful funky piece on the album, with strong rhythms and peppery dashes, but Steve Kindler's vocals just don't have the range or basic appeal of, say, Earth, Wind, and Fire. The electric vio- lin solo is obviously based on the new Ponty style. The song title itself is re- peated in cold, breathy harmonies through 90 per cent of the song, which becomes very tiring. THE NEXT SONG, "Hyperspace," is an instrumental, and the best piece on the album. Written by Steve Kindler, who multitracks himself playing cello, electric guitar, and both electric and acoustic violins, it also shows off some fine work by Hammer, both of them shining on effectively sinister key changes. It ended too soon. Melodies ends with a splendid Jan Hammer instrumental, "Your Love." Hammer uses an acoustic piano, simul- taneously with his electronic hardware, and the effect is very nice, smooth and quiet, a real relaxer. Hammer, laid- back and throughful, succeeds on this warming array of skillful progressions and key drifts. All added up, Melodies is an fairly decent album. Hammer hjas taken a drastic step away from his jazzy home- land, and into the territory of funk, rhythm and blues, and doesn't succeed all too well. His horrid vocalist Saun- ders brings the albums stock down about 50 per cent. I can't understand why Hammer would allow so mediocre a vocal treatment to permeate his work. The pseudo-funk is the weakest musical element. Jan Hammer also produced the album, and did a commendable job. However, I noticed a few embarrassing bloopers, such as a clipped-off end fade and a couple of sloppy mix spots that prove that Hammer is no Alan Parsons. Hammer should rely more on his own potentially brilliant improvisations and less on what's selling on the commer- cial market. Melodies has several good moments, but just sounds a bit too stale, throughout. LSAT WE CAN INCREASE YOUR LSAT SCORE Call or Write: ' University LSAT Preparation Service Inc. 2200 Fuller Rd., Suite 9128 Ann Arbor, Michigan 48105 313-995-4014 CALL ANYTIMEI UP! to Dai1i OPEN EVENINGS MONDAY THRU FRIDAY FOR HOLIDAY SHOPPING . 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