THE MICHIGAN DAILY rts Enterta inm ent Tuesday, November 25, 1975 Page Five " "":} *****. * {.:,:::: : .*: *.":"*.::..*:.....r."r-....:: .......".:::.".. . .r. ... ..... ;..... :" ::.- :, .. ,...-., ...;:.} ". Bly enraptures audience with poetry from psyche By RUSTY GREEN cept December and January, his best work- "In another 50 or 60 years it's possi- ing months. ble that you will hear a poetry reading Bly described himself in his youth as which will be danced," predicted Robert "a neurotic Mid Western Norwegian intel- Bly, the award-winning poet from Minne- lectual." He served in the Navy in World sota. War II, graduated from Harvard, then lived Bly recited poetry, talked, sang and in New York. There he first experienced played the dulcimer for an enraptured audi- solitude and began to work things out within ence in the Pendleton Arts Center last his head. : Tuesday afternoon. "I published my first book when I While reciting some poems he wore was 36, and had been writing since my animal masks. "We will have American twenties," says Bly, who has just pub- poetry return some of the ancient things," lished his tenth book of poems in addi- ? he said. tion to numerous volumes of translations. "I'm doing a study of the sound struc- "The process of learning to write is ture of Beowulf. The ancients had a sensi- not a process of getting published first- tivity to sound that we don't .have. The it's a slow learning process. Greeks had 24 meters. English has only t d one. It's about time that form will enter The idea that you have to be slick American poetry.,, or professional in order to be a writer Several hundred people crowded the is very destructive. Your poems in the Pendleton Room to see Bly. They filled all end have to be like your psyche. You tenetons Roomto see Bly.r They filed all have to have a friend to read them, to: n the chairs, sat on the floor, on table tops, criticize them, to say that a line doesn't .. and lined the walls. The atmosphere was sound like you. vibrant with emotion, energy and unity. ' you r Poetry which is true art will bring "When you first start writing most of NO feeling of unity to the listeners," says Bly. our work will be bd. You ust lo for wil the lines that are different, that havea "At certain times everyone in the room willi. ,,te. feel a sense of unity." weird kind of resonance inthem," "When I was a kid, poetry readings Bly feels that poetry gives him energy. were dull," Bly says. "You get excite- "I have two or three times the energy meet by bringing in things from the out- now that I had when I was in my twen- side world, like politics or community, Viet- ties. Part of the reason is that I started namese dying or blacks in the city. writing which stopped daydreaming. "That way the listeners can find new "Enegry is drained by daydreaming. harmonies in their relationships with the Daydreams pass through your unconscious outside world as the poetry brings change mind in the form of visual symbols. Your from within the listener." unconscious responds with emotions, and Bly lives with his wife and four chil- this drains your energy. dren on the farm he grew up on in west- "The opposite of daydreaming is con- S ern Minnesota. He rises at 5:30 every morn- centration. There is a world out there. r ing and meditates for two hours. The forms If you go out, it will take you out of of meditation may include chanting and your daydreaming. reading poetry. "The hard work of my day "The problem of the artist is to live 4 is done in the first two hours," he says. with exactly what we are and try to stop After eating breakfast he will work at daydreaming as much as we can. True his desk for six straight hours without get- art comes not from the head, but from ting out of his chair. He translates and the body and the psyche. writes poetry and writes letters. Every "Delayed reaction is a quality of a afternoon he takes a nap and then a work of art. Something about a good poem walk. He spends his evenings with his may strike you two weeks after you've family. read it. Poetry readings provide his main source 4 of income. He travels around the country Rusty Green writes about Poet ry and poe/- z to read for one week of every month ex- ry readings for The Daily. Folk melodies :; :s :i k ;7 i if t! t i 1 J 3 I ! I a 3 i E F i i I I t I i with 'As You merge Like It' i By JEAN FLYNN the entirely different idiom of I've done," he says. With a cap perched on his the American folk-song. For this "I think there is a natural production transfers the action progression for my scores to head, Michael Roth can be from the rolling English country- move from Lab to Showcase to found these days perpetually side to the rustic United States. Guest Artist productions. Writ- EBrunning back and forth from the That the traditional American ing for the theatre is a skill Friee Bildig t th Musc sngshave their origins in the that takes a while to assimi " School, assembling scores and traditional English ballads late he eain.H nti- onducting orchestra rehearsals made the new setting all the fies the ability to "create theat- fortducomingh ge artist more interesting and challeng- rical effects" as a major part You Like it. ing to the composer. of this skill. Without distorting the lyrical Two summers with the Michi- Its almost impossible to reach qualities of Shakespeare's text, gan Repertory Company adds Roth worked on giving it the Ito Michael's experience as a a hoe no as h sills this proper American "twist." Using composer and arranger. One multiple role of music director/ the Dorian mode and the banjo season he served as musical di- composer/arranger for the Pro-j as his major tools, that twistI rector/pianist for the Camelot! fessional Theatre Program pro- came to life. Roth chose the t Dinner Theatre in Midland duction, which opens this week Dorian mode since it best echoes at the Power Center. the tonality of the English bal- Michigan. Roth has been working on As lad. But including the banjo in. The Jug Band, a country/blue- You Like It since August, when! the instrumentation helps create grass group Roth belonged to production director Nicholas the transition to the American in high school, proved itself to Pennell initially chose him as setting. This transition is made be a source of inspiration dur- his music colleague. But it complete by throwing in snatch- ing the composing sessions for hasn't been an easy assignment. es of traditional American folk As You Like It. The band's in- Shakespeare is well-known for melodies, "along the line of fluence is present not only in his canny use of music in his Aaron Copland," as Roth de- the melodies and arrangements plays, using it not only for en- scribes it. of the musical score, but also tertainment, but for technical Roth's musical background in the person of Michael Fisch- and dramatic purposes as well. goes back several years. He has man, banjo/guitarist for the This comedy is no exception. worked his way through progres- original band. Fischman is com- Through the songs, the setting sive productions within the thea- ing in from New York to playE and mood are established, char- tre department. His first cone banjo specifically for this pro- 4 acters are developed, and events positions were for Student Lab duction.- are foreshadowed. It has been Theatre, leading to several . With the instrumentation alsoj lip to Roth to keep these things nieces for University Showcase including harmonica, piano, in mind while Putting music to plays. For Love A La Mode, bass, and assorted percussion, 4 Shakespeare's lyrics. loth wrote music of different Michael Roth's new-fangled folk! Yet the main problem in corn- historical periods, including music is a colorful backdrop for posing this music, Roth notes, Str~auss- and Chopin-influenced the frolicking action.! was to fit the rhythm and sound melodies and a madrigal. "It's of the Elizabethan language to really some of the best work *.PREPAAEFOR: ******** @******** -r ECEM G*-F LE X I NAT'L MED. & DENT. B'DS : FLEXIBLE PROGRAM and HOURS - 1945 PAULINE A ARBOR, MI. 48103 .,£ 662-3149 TEST PREPARATION SPECIALISTS SINCE 1935 *****gg RQAW tN 'AJOP u..(CITIES 9099 O-*- * Subscribe to The Daily-Phone 764-0558 VEL MICH. UNION 763-214 CHRISTMAS SPECIAL SKI PARK CITY, UTAH Dec. 30-Jan. 6th WE FEATURE: * Non-stop American Airlines jet deporting Metro Airport. * Ski lift tickets for 6 days at Park City Ski Resort. ! Accommodations at Alpine Prospector's Lodge in Park City. * $285/Quad, or ! $299/Double SIGN UP DEADLINE DEC. 5th FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 763-2147 or COME TO 2nd FLOOR-MICH. UNION PRI PI .. i I E({(4 t 1 i r "NMI 11'1114:1! i, FIFTH SMASH WEEK DINO Of.LAURENITVS PRESENTS ROBERT REDFORD FAYE DUNAWAY CLIFF ROBERTSON MAX VON SYDOW DAYS OF THE CONDOR R tESTRlICTEDs' SHOWS TONIGHT AT 7:00 & 9:05 OPEN 6:45 ~?tuswe_ P yy s:::;, .,... r. .": ^: r f,....}".'..!1. :; ".$r.:..^.^...'ri'l.'+: 'J rF:; i:'r,:;}f:': ?n:iyY."}: i:S:": ." n "k. r .5... r .". rr..... e.e.. .... :S i''fi.. ""':SSS ' 'i"}ii}::"::"+ :q4} .; .e.. S4{..... r......... ......L.....1:.".S ".Y.' :.d "I t"°.'?j 'f.RtiA.4':dt.1;y. N: At!){..yyr.} .L . ."p:".. ^>fr... rY.v. : ": ":??}r:::,t7:% :":.;?.. ..-_.... . . . _._.. .... .. _.me.. .... .... _ ....... ........_...__._. _ ._.. _.....___.. e_®._.. __._ _ _______.__..._. LAST CHANCE TONIGHT TO SEE MAHOGANY (PG) Civil Defense ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S 1946 crackers to g o NOTORIOUS CLEVELAND (JP) - Twenty (AT 7) tons of crackers stored more CARY GRANT convinces the daughter of a dead Nazi than a decade to feed survivors agent to accept a dangerous spy mission during World ! if World War III occurred are; War If. Claude Rains is the villian who loves the imposter destined for the hungry abroad. Ingrid Bergman in this suspenseful film. Packed in seven-pound tin - cans, the biscuits have been FRANK CAPRA'S 1938 staeke4 deep in the interior of.an a steel factory since the early! Tou Ca ' Take It TT itFh You 1960s when Civil Defense was on everyone's mind.(A9:) JAMES STEWART, JEAN ARTHUR, LIONEL BARRY- RECENTLY the steel com MORE, and EDWARD ARNOLD star in this wacky story pny asked to have the storage f a carefree American family that won Academy Awards ~anyaskd tohav thestoage for best picture, and director, area cleaned out, so the city be-) gan looking for a charity in Cinema Guild Both shows OLD ARCH. need of food, said Ina Keegin, for $2.00 AUD. a city official. "The local charities didn't - - seem attracted by the thought of 10-year-old crackers, "l\Mrs.0P NS TOM O Keegin said. . OPENS TOMORROW The relocation task fell to James Zingales, the city's pub- THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN lic property officer. The only PROFESSIONAL THEATRE PROGRAM response the city received to its offers came from CARE, the GUEST ARTST SERIES international aid agency. TSn C rt ""* 177:00 & 9:00 STARTS TOMORROW Open 6:45 WATDIS itYS n']jstnd I TE( ROBERTLOUISSTEVENSON'S AND J GREATEST ADVENTURE! TECHNICOLOR4 ' ;G ReveleasedbyBUENAVSTADSTRIBUTONCO.,N ARTISTS & CRAFTSMEN GUILD presents CHRISTMAS ART FAIR 80 Artists selling entirely handcrafted work SATURDAY, DECEMBER 6-10:00 a.m.-6 p.m. SUNDAY, DECEMBER 7-Noon-6:00 p.m. 2ND FLOOR MICHIGAN UNION-PENDLETON ROOM AND UNIVERSITY BALLROOM UAC MUSKET presents GODSPELL DEC. 4, 5, 6; also DEC. 6 MATINEE TICKETS NOW ON SALE AT UAC TICKET CENTRAL UAC CHILDREN'S THEATRE presents FREE TO BE YOU AND ME (based on the TV presentation with MarIo Thomas) WAt T DISNEY'S alias The Scarecrow .ICIHLOR ENDS TONIGHT DEC. 4-7:30 DEC. 5-7:30 $1.00--CHILDREN $1.50-ADULT DEC. 6-11:00 a.m./2:00 p.m./7:30 p.m. DEC. 7-11:00 a.m./2:00 p.m./7:30 p.m. ARENA THEATRE FRIEZE BUILDING S 0"The Iceman Cometh" 7:00 ONLY TOMORROW-The Film Event of the Season Sherlock Holmes-his limits: Knows nothing of common garden- ing; well up in belladonna, opium, and poisons generally. Plays the violin well.- "ONLY CARE had facilities to check the condition of the: crackers," Zingales noted. A sample was dispatched and a laboratory returned a report with high marks for the ship- ment's quality. CARE then launched a search cy. The Lions Club responded and put up about $1,000 to have the crackers trucked to Phila- delphia. They could end up in either of two parts of the world, Samia1 said. They may be sent to Haiti and the Dominican Republic, where; lack of rain has left about 600,. 000 persons suffering from hun- ger. 'T'he other possibility is the north African republics of Chad I and Niger, where CARE has' been fighting a five-year drought. NOVEMBER 26- WED -SAT 8PM SuNDAY 3PMf Directed by Nicholas Pennell Guest Artist-in-Residence with WILLIAM LEACf f (G;ucst Artist--In-R-esidence Tickets available through PTP Ticket Office-- Located in Mendelssohn Theatre Lobby Mon- day-Friday 10 a.m.-1 p.m., 2-5 p.m. FOR MORE INFORMATION, CALL (313) 764-0450 Tickets on sale NOW--at UAC Ticket Central Group Rates Available ! For more information call-763-1107 UAC SHAKESPEARE CINEMA presents George Tessler's MERRY WIVES OF WINDSOR NOV. 24 Time-7:00 p.m. and 9:00 p.m. Price-$1.00 Place-Nat. Science Auditorium FUTURE WORLDS is Coming!!!! THOT PRODUCTIONS ON SALE NOW .. Theseweeks arts magazine . . . 75c at the Union, UAC Ticket Central, UAC Office, Fishbowl, all over town"!! ARTISTS: We have an outlet for all literary genres and visual medias. Share in an artistic experience. Contact UAC/THOT at 763-1107 or come to the THOT PRODUCTIONS WEEKLY MEETING, 7:30 Wednesday evening, at the UAC office, 2nd floor Michigan Union. WANTED: A producer and an Engineer to produce a weekly literary show on WCBN during the Winter Term 1976. Responsibilities this term involve production of an hour long show. Please submit an audition taope. Want to have a class with David Brower, Julian Bond, John Koaol, Jerry O'Neill? FUTURE WORLDS is RETURNING!!!! WINTER TERM GEOGRAPHY 303, 4 credits UAC TICKET BOOTH TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE UAC TICKET BOOTH, First floor Michigan Union. Sorry, personal checks are not accepted. GODSPELL Dec. 4, 5, 6 FREE TO BE YOU AND ME Dec. 4, 5,6, 7 OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10:30 A.M.-5:30 P.M. TELEPHONE 763-2071 K- PRESENTS MARX BROTHERS DOUBLE FEATURE ! TUESDAY, NOV. 25 MONKEY BUSINESS (NORMAN Z. McLEOD, 1931) AUD. A-7 & 9:30 Marx Brothers. More nonsense from the world's most famous comedy team. The plot is ourelv incidental as usual. But see Groucho and Lucille in the closet! Thrill to the E