Page Four THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Four THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, October 5, 19 !5 BOOKS f Ragtime concern and forA Nashville: Identical American priorities RAGTIME by E. L. Docto- migrant, his wife and laughter, row; New York: R a n d o m and the third, a black iaaz mu- House, 270 pp. $8.95. sician, his beloved, and their NASHVILLE directed by illegitimate son, become en- Robert Altman (1975). twined, not only with one an- other, but with the great cele- By BRUCE WEBER brities of the day-names we all k n o w - Sigmund Freud, EARLIER THIS year, while Harry Houdini, Admiral Perry, Nashville was still revelling J. P. Morgan, and Henry Ford, in its first laudatory reviews, it to name a few. was disclosed that director Rob- ert Altman had purchased the To notice these unlikely com- screen rights to E. ,L. Docto- binations as unratifiable coin- row's novel, Ragtime. cidences is nocriticism; for it is within these coincidental At the close of the first chapter, Docto- row has a little boy saying to Houdini: "Warn t h e Duke," which we later find t RN HOUSE SUPERVISOR FULL TIME 7-3, ALTERNATE WEEKENDS. Successful candidates would have a minimum pf 2 years supervisory experience at a level of assistant head nurse or greater. Bachelor's degree preferred: Consideration will be qiven to candidate who is currently working towards Bachelor de- aree and willing to complete education and hospital's tui- tion refund plan. Competitive salary and fringe benefits in accordance with experience. At least 5 years' clinical ex- perience required. For further information contact: Personnel Office FLOWER HOSPITAL. 5200 Harroun Road Sylvania, Ohio 43560 (419) 885-1444, ext. 2070- r ADVERTISING IN, THE MICHIGAN DAILY DOESN'T .1- COST I3 ___- 1975 IsraEli Chassidic fstival vIsrael's most popular stage production Is coming to a a IT PAYS 764-0554 Ragtime, which deals with the y lives of three families in and about the New York metropoli- a tan area around the turn of the 2 twentieth century, is so full of characters whose individuality is sustained through visual sug- gestion, and so full of shifting scenaries and rich, live action, that not only does the novel appear to be suref ire movie material, especially in the hands of a talent so deft as Altman's but that in fact, Ragtime is so well suited to Altman's nega- tivism towards America and to Nashville's peculiar, kaleido- scope style, that the similarity is disturbing. RAGTIME TAKES in the en- tire first decade of this cen- tury in one huge swoop, much the way Nashville encompasses the decade we have lived half- way through. The long weekend of the film and the ten years or so of the novel serve similar tragic ends. But whereas Docto- row has relied on history to sup- ,ply his conclusion, Altman had# the disadvantage of not knowing the conclusion of the period he essayed. The novel ends at the inception of the first World War and with the imvlication that America's firm hand on the world was no small inducement to that end. Certainly Altman{ could not match the historicalE authenticity with which Docto-1 row loads his novel and which urovides the tonnage for the am- nie power or its conclusion. Yetj the two works are so in agree- ment, esuecially about what is inherently American, that theI differences in time and n'acej gtting seem lareely a one-tion of details. Insofar as w'lat is imnortant to each of the two, and both seem inevitablv con- cerned with what is really im- nortant to Americans, they areI remarkably similar. We are shown, in Nashville, brief slices of the lives of twen- ty-four individuals who are gath- ered in the same vicinity during' a single weeeknd. Within this frame the individual coinci-I dences are amusing, and num- erous enough to be suspect. But they pale beneath the coincidences of Ragtime, where- in the lives of three families, one of upper class suburbanites the second, a poor Jewish im- i - - - - - -- - - - - - events that the representation to refer to the Arch- of life that is realism resides. In terms of Doctorow's novel, it duke Ferdinand, as- is important to know what hap- pens when J. P. Morgan meets sassinated at Sara- Henry Ford, or when an upper class executive meets Houdini. jeVO. In DOCorOws This, in fact, is the 'hrust of Ragtime - that the important terms, the end of all issues of the early part of this the iycrisy is ele- century, that is, important tohyors e - representative America, are not graphed by the inno- only reflected and detailed by a rather motley sampling of cele- Cent. By the t i m e brities, but pale in importance seventy ears have themselves against the stature given these celebrities by Amer- gone by and Nash- icans.,ville's world has roll- NTASHVILLE'S world, in the ed around, the inno- eyes of Robert Altman, is a hvoocritical one whose tm der- Cent are no longer side he is always exposing to the viewer. This underside is an; te le g ra phin g any- insidions thing, with the aware- i ness that Altman's viewers now They have of hypocrisy hin high promulgators of dis- alaces. We are shown the sense of cower that vast majortes aster. endow to such minor heroes es country musicians, and see that the power is not only tinde- served but abused. Altman miss- es no trick in turning the tables on those characters he is =attack- Sing, and it is hard to exempt this fictional reality is more: nnvone. He constantlv evokes easily judged because we have the folk myth strroimdine lHs more access to the actual real- characters as farce. 'The irony ity with which to compare it. of the final assassination is not Ragtime thnt the noor singer did not da- two ways. uses ts hiseoy in: t rh erftlnttnth i w as It begs to have us be- sorve her fate, but that she lieve in the attitude of a narra- t e victim istead of the more tor who could not have been r' nventional one, the politician. rst tm h e bw t- The Amuman's bullet is aimed present at the time he i3s writ- "PaTiTyh We are led to believe ing about. It creates a mood ,ll lanek.Wariteis te ndidbe that the narrator was not him-! all olng that it is the candide self present to feel. And it suc- who will get it. ceeds by using explicit and im- But truthfully, the film ends; mediate detail. To wit, a pass- in an appropriate way. Nash- age concerning New York's im- ville ccuir .Atately de cts.qtheo Ufl R; POWER CENTER FOR PERFORMING ARTS ,7 T MONDAY, OCT. 20, 1975 8:00 P.M. sponsored by B NAI BRITH HILLEL FOUNDATION at U-M '4 ' TICKETS Students-$3.00 Non-students---$5.00 j A 7 " I rapher knows his subjxct well enough to create, from fact, his personality. It is a relati ilship that is not altdgether different from the relationship that ex~sts1 between a fiction writer and his purely fictional charac-ers. In Ragtime, the sense one has of all the characters, real or fictitious, is on a singlular plane. They all pop in and out of the thickening plot with an irregularity that is coaxing and it is this, along with the clues that each of them holds to the puzzle of the whole, that makes Ragtime so wonderfully read- able. This is not to imply that thej characters are as fully drawn as they might be. One would' like to get to know all of them thoroughly. Rather I would aug- gest that what we do know of them serves perfectly the other tendencies of the novel - the Tickets are available at the off ice of the H illel Foundation, 1429 Hill St., Ann Arbor. This group and performance has no con- nection with or resemblance to any per- formance that appeared last year in Ann Arbor. Read ANY 600 page book in 15 minutes! METHOD CAN BE LEARNED IN 1 HOUR New revolutionary reading techniue. No tools or ma- chine required. Send $4.95 for complete program and written money back guarantee. SPEED READING INSTITUTE P.O. Box 478A Detroit, Michigan 48232 i Vil dU~d~ y UPIL C1 shifting cultural emphasis in this country. Altman recognizes the irony of our priorities. We4 are directed by a few select individuals, and an unacceptable few at that. * * * TT IS TIME that a word be said about the sense of reality one gets from Ragtime. It is; important in a historical novel that the reader have confidenice in the reality of the descriptive writing, or else the history sops working in cahoots with the fiction. In a contemporary piece 'T - It I r cerned with Houdini, but some- thing in the world which Hou- .dini affects. Altman's visi n is slightly more disturbing than Doctorow's because it .s seem- ingly concluded without warn- ing. What -happens when the world of country music is shot down is not a part of the film. Metaphorically, the assassina- tion is an end in itself. On the other hand, we know that the world, and America survived WWI, which by comparison makes Ragtime seem inconclu- sy e. Yet considered sequentially in time the inconclusiveness sf the one evolves to the shocking and unexpected conclusi :n of the other. At the close of tie first chapter, Doctorow has a little boy saying to Houdini: "Warn the Duke," which we later find to refer to the Archduke Fran- cis Ferdinand, assassinated at Saraievo. In Doctorow's terms. v iii P.. TTHE CENTER FOR RUSSIAN AND EAST EUROPEAN SERIES and THE WOMEN'S STUDIES PROGRAM are co-sponsoring a lecture by ROSE GL ICKMAN ON 'The Russian Factory Women" Wednesday, October 8 ! Room 200-Lane Hall 4:00 p.m.{ migrant slums: Pillows were placed onI sidewalks. Families slept on stoops and in doorways. Horses collapsed and died in the' streets. The Department of Sanitation sent drays hround to drag away horses that had died. But it was not an effi cient service. Horses exploded in the heat.' Their exposed in- testines heaved with rats. And up through the slum alleys, through the grey clothes hang- ing listlessly on lines strung across air shafts, rose the smell of fried fish. Passages such as this speak of such research so careful that we have enough coniidence in the narrator to believe him when he mentions something as im- possible to ascertain as the3 smell of fried fish. SECONDLY, Ragtime asks us to imagine historically real characters as they speak fic- tively, often to characters who are themselves fictitious. This also turns out to be OK with the reader, but for a different rea- son. We need the mix of fact' and fiction precisely to make this book a working fictien. For in the end, the well known names lenddtheir reputations to the novel, but it is the novelist who must create a zha.'acter from the reputation.'In a sim- ilar fashion, the successful biog- sense of history, the sense of the end of all this hypocrisy is American values and their i telegraphed by the innocent. justice, the sense of immediate T h e assassin in Nashville, place-and that all the faces in though, is completely unsus- this book are subservient to the pected. One character says of plot. Doctorow asks no more him. 'He looks like Howdy than we believe his characters. Doo 'H By the time seventy It is a reasonable request. Rag- years have gone by the Nash- time is a prime example of ville's world has rolled around, what I should call "suitable" the innocent are no longer tele- writing. That is, it is engineered graphing anything. They are the to succeed in various ranges of promulgators of disaster. complexity, and nowhere does it overstep its self - imposed THE ILLS of this country have bounds.I h THOUGH Nashville is set in not changed in seventy years, if we are to believe Altman and £JTInnrn URL IIa nrp Am the present, the history it bedded in us now, and we a m- contains, that is, the present bedderuow, and Temy that it evokes is equally auid. not overcome them. The time srfor warning the duke is long It has been criticized as %iaving, shallow characters but this is gone. And having already tcld not without reason or advant- 's this, Altman need not return towhat things used to be Mie. age. There is a purpose in re- To make a film of Ragtime vealing only a hypocritical iide would be a step backward. 7 of a society if hypocrisy is the object of the study. Nashville is not concerned with country sing- ers, just as Ragtime is not con-: Br: e Weber is a senior ma- jorin, in English. I SUNDAY & MONDAY "All You Can Eat" PAN FRIED CHICKEN includes unlimited trips to our famous salad bar, choice of potato or vegetable and loaves of hot home baked bread. ADULTS . . . . . . .$3.25 CHILDREN (under 12) . $1.75 Served Sunday Noon 'Til 8 P.M.-Monday 5 P.M.-11 P.M. I Ea 4 ...r HELD OVER WITH LOVE in 1500 Theatres Nationwide. It was History's first 3 day standing ovation!.. the country's wild about "Harry"! L -i I I Biit ,4M ,presents 1 JAMESWHITMORE as Harry S. Truman in GIVE 'EM HELL, -f f.... = W Fo- .I .I I