As"THE MICHIGAN DAILY rts Entertcinm ent Wednesday, February 4, 1976 Page Five AER PERFRaAnntE:ry . . . . . .d y w , .S h . .r crc t 5 Y ยข ' w .i xn.z G y IAR K P E R F O R MA C E : Tom Paxton By STEPHEN SELBST man with a thatch of dark hair and a lean look. PAXTON, strode to the the microphone Monday HE IS NO longer either of night at the Ark and faced the these; 15 years on the folk club packed house. "I think it's only circuit have left him mostly fair to mention that my alma bald and thicker. But in place mater is Oklahoma," he an- of the kid with the hot guitar nounced, to which some heckler whose strings echoed the pro- quickly rejoined, "Well, walk test of his lyrics, the Ark audi- on back." ence got a poised, matured pro- fessional. That's not the recommended way to make friends in a town Paxton has aged gracefully where football is taken serious- and joined the subterranean ly-especially for a first-time class of American troubadors visit. But by 'the end of the who never metamorphasize into evening Paxton had made so superstars, but who stay close many friends he would have with pure folk music, and like drawn applause if he had an- wine, mellow with the passing nounced he was changing his of time. name to Woody Hayes. He was He was at his professional that charming. best Monday night mixing his Older and better and "Whose Garden was This?" Because his act is so light- treated to a panopoly of new his haunting hymn to the earth. hearted, the tone is quite loose, material because Paxton has And like the seasoned trouper which is just how he likes things. been writing heavily recently. he is, he dutifully paid homage His song selection, he said after "I've written 27 songs since mid- to a folk music deity, Missis- the show, is always spontaneous, November," he allowed, with sippi John Hurt,, before playing and varies from night to night. the professional pride creasing his ode to the legendary mu- ? j his face with a smile. sician. Paxton came to play a bene- fit for Sing Out magazine, and' he told the crowd "it was cer- tainly my Bible when I was growing up," and urged the audience to peruse the periodi- cal at the end of his perform- ance. The old folky's style has al- ways leaned heavily on satirical material, and he kept the crowd amused with his pungent, clever rhymes. "Bring Back the Chair" is a typical example, whose re- frain, in part, goes like this: Bring back the chair zap someone there medium rare Bring back the chair His aim is to make the act as unstructured as possible. "It's "My goal is to write five songs something less than a musical a week, but when you travel; act, it's kind of a living room like I did today, that just can't thing," he explained. It was that be done," he noted wryly. desire for intimacy, he explain- ed, which prompted him to fore- Paxton plans to polish his new go backup players and just use songs and "record a live album his guitar for accompaniment. as soon as possible." Then he Paxton said he thinks it givesI wants to take some time off to him a freer rein. go home and write some more." The troubador's work is 1O 0 N D A Y'S audience was never done. _ dia presents UAC Ars Come Paxton looks different now than he did in the early sixties; when he first emerged as a major folk singer. The posters! around town which heralded his appearance portrayed a young, raconteurs stories with topical humor, and alternately pleasing the crowd with old favorites and new tunes. FOR HIS old fans he played "The Last Thing on My Mind," Daily Photo by STEVE KAGAN Tom Paxton, a little balder and thicker, performed Monday night at the Ark. His songs of gentle protest made him one of the folk leader s of the 60's. THE TIME OF YOUR LIFE An original adaptation of four one-act comedies. Feb. 19 thru 22-Mendelssohn Tickets on sale Feb. 5, Hill Aud. FOR MORE INFO: 763-1107 Improe 'your game BRIDGE: avoidance play By MARK FRIEDLANDER --3 North small club, there was a g r e a t 4 62 4 risk that - East would win the V 5 3 trick and rattle off three more f A K 10 i heart tricks. So South led a 4. K 10 9 6 4 2 rdiamond to dummy's ten and West East led the ten of clubs. W h e n, I4 9 5 4 3 A K Q 10 East correctly refused to cover, r 8 2 V K Q J 10 4 declarer let it ride. 4 98 65 2 f 7 3 West won an unexpected trick 4. J 7 4 Q 8 5 with his jack of clubs, but the South defense did not relish the gift. A A J 8 7 Trying to put partner in, he led 1A 9 7 6 a spade, but South won and took f Q 4 ten tricks-five clubs, three dia- EsA 3 monds, and the two major suit East South West North aces. 1 r 1 No trp. pass 3 No trp. It is equally vital that the All Pass defense realize the imporrar ce Opening lead: 8 of V of the avoidance play so tnat Normally a bridge player does they may frustrate it. -Even as- not care who wins a given trick tounding plays become under- as long as it is his partner or standable in this light. himself, for tricks are accumu- North lated by partnerships, not by in- A S 8 6 3 dividual players. Sometimes, V A K 10 however, it is dangerous to put * K 7 4 one defender on lead and safe 4 Q 10 9 6 to let the other. In such a case, West East declarer has to be careful not A 10 A A K 7 5 4 2 only to avoid losing too many V 9 8 6 5 2 V 7 3 tricks, but also to lose them to 4 10 8 5 3 4 9 6 2 the right person. This is called 4 A K 3 4 J 8 an avoidance play. South West opened the e i g h t Q J 9 of hearts, his partner's suit. South ducked the first round but ; A Q J won the second. This cut off .7 5 4 2 West from the long hearts and North East South West made East the danger hand. Any 1 4 2 Spades 3 NT All pass tricks lost by declarer would Opening lead: 10 of 4 have to be lost to West, who When this hand was actually could do no harm. played, East overtook partner's lead of the ten of spades, cash- DECLARER set about his task. ed another spade, and led a He had seven top tricks a n d third one, clearing the suit. On would have to develop any oth- the last two spades, West dis- ers from the club suit. B u t j carded two hearts. South wen, there were hidden dangers. If and needing two club tricks, led he led out the ace, king, and a See BRIDGE, Page 8 INGMAR BERGMAN NIGHT 1957 WILD STRAWBERRIES (AT 7) Old silent movie director, Victor Seastrom, plays a doctor who has just won an important award and, on his way to receive the honor, he takes a psychic journey through his past. 1949 TO JOY (AT 9:05) In the midst of performing Beethoven's 9th Symphony ("Hymn to Joy") Stia Eridsson is. informed by phone that his kerosene stove has exploded and killed his wife. CINEMA GUILD Both Shows OLD ARCH. AU. Campus Flicks Elite'-Peckinpah's last gasp - by James Valk r r n w wr ri UST A FEW weeks ago, dur- Lucien Ballard, he probed anI ing the mad December era long lost with a precision rush, United Artists released the and feeling since missing from latest chapter in the story of his work.r Sam Peckinpah's demise, The Killer Elite. Word leaked out Not long after Peckinpah' that UA wasn't overly enthusias- abandoned the early 1900'sI tic with the initial cut and had movies, his weaknesses becamer the film trimmed from an R rat- apparent. He is a director of thec ing to the more lucrative PG. West; his roots reach back tof scriptwriting for Gunsmoke. His Unfortunately, the final prod- talents are best exploited when uct has confirmed some of my paired with his keen eye for thet darkest fears about Peckinpah; visual changes of the West, and' fears that began to rumble in so his attempts to trace Ameri- early 1972 upon release of The can culture through the Seven-: Getaway, pretentiously labelled ties have proved futile. "a film by Sam Peckinpah." JUNIOR BONNER, basicallyt Coming after a hot streak of, the same tale Peckinpah has! success and notoriety generated told in his earlier films, arises by The Wild Bunch and Straw as a fable of the contemporary Dogs, Peckinpah gambled with West, undermined by the wash-I his newly - acquired acclaim, ed-out metaphors of rodeos and! reeling off two hours of com- bulldozers. Gone was the old mercial claptrap starring Steve Peckinpah, and like the rene-f McQueen and Ali McGraw. To gade protagonists of his films,t label The Getaway a disappoint- the feisty director was frustrat- ment would suggest wrong- ed by his inflexibility toward- tv that it' even resembled some- the changing times. thing expected.1 It was in the interim between WHATEVER happened to the Junior Bonner and The Killer Sam Peckinpah of the pre-Get- " Elite that Peckinpah suffered away period? That is the ques- his worst setback. Pat Garret tion to be reckoned with. As and Billy the Kid, a film un- early as 1962 he had proved him- mercifully mauled by MGM self an artist of merit with a housecleaner James Aubrey, is rarely seen film entitled Ride a twisted mess that is virtually the High Country. pointless, exploiting the names of Bob Dylan and Kris Kristof- But Peckinpah knew his mi- ferson as its major attractions. lieu then-that transitional pe-' reiod of the American West It was then, with the mangled around the turn of the century copy of Pat Garret and Billy that was so exquisitely captured the Kid under his belt, that in his only great film, The Wild Peckinpah chose to thumb his Bunch. W i t h cinematographer: nose at the movie industry. THUS ARISES the mysteryI surrounding Peckinpah in 1976. There are three possible theo- ries-the first dismisses him as. a commercial pimp, the second describes him as a "maverick dissident," who expresses his rage at the motion picture in- dustry by m a k i n g "private films" whose purpose is so in- comprehensible t h a t mortals can only gape in awe-possibly: the silliest excuse for shoddy filmmaking yet. Sadly this leaves only one viable alternative: Sam Peckin- pah is burned out. I can't help but think that his greatness is derived from his ability to per- ceive the American Frontier. But his talents were removed from their natural domain in order to create the great Ameri- can chronicle, and thus his films became sermons, lacking thrust and showing Peckinpah out of step with the times. Straw Dogs was his only film1 that even hinted at an untapped I genius independent of the dying West. But just as the modern era overcame the unchanging h e r o e s of Peckinpah's best works, so has Peckinpah fallen prey to his inability to adapt- a filmmaker who has ceased to function in the Seventies. Study in Guadalajara, Mexico The GUADALAJARA SUM- MER SCHOOL, a fully accredited UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA program, will of- fer July 5-Auqust 13, on- thropolomy, a r t, education, folklore, history, political science, Ianciuace and litera- ture. Tuition and fees, $195; board and room with Mexi- can family $280. Write to GUADALAJARA SUMMER SCHOOL, Office of Interna- tional Proqrams, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721. THE COMIC OPERA GUILD OFFENDACH s 'RFSENTS H ELENE OPERETTA IN ENGLISH FEBRUARY 4,5,6,7 LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE EVENINGS $3.50 MATINEE: $2.50 TICKET INFORMATION: 763-1085 l5 I , _, THE MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE COLLEGIUM Announces a NEW MINI COURSE University Course 320, 1 credit hour, pass/fail FEBRUARY 9th-MARCH 3rd, 1976 Title: COURTLY LOVE SONG IN FRANCE AND GERMANY IN THE MIDDLE AGES Four hours per week, Monday and Wednesday Evenings from 7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m., in the Cook Room of the MARC House (N-Entryway, Law Quad)I. Students will be required to write one paper and attend all the lectures. Course will be taught by Professor Duncan Robertson (French) and Dr. Martha Hinman (German); guest lecturers will include Professors Gwynn McPeek (Music History) and ChristineuBornstein (History of Airt). Students may register for the course in the MARC Office (N-12, N-Entryway, Law Quad: tel. 763-2066) until February 9th or at the first class meeting. I E r s I I i f i the " ar 3b' 811m coopertive TONIGHT-Wednesday, Feb. 4 EAST OF EDEN (Elia Kazan, 1955) AUD. A-7 only Set in California's Monterey Peninsula durin the First World War, this adaptation of Steinbeck's novel. has JAMES DEAN as Caleb Trask, a teenager envious of his brother Aaron, the favored son of a well'-meaning but overly pious father. Jo Van Fleet's exceptional perform- ance as the mother who left the family earned her an Academy Award. Kazan also received an Oscar for riis direction. RAYMOND MASSEY, BURL IVES. ELMER GANTRY (Richard Brooks, 1960) AUD. A-9 only Traveling salesman BURT LANCASTER, teams up with evangelist JEAN SIMMONS, in this Sinclair Lewis story. Their rapid rise to prominence leads Gantry to search for the real truth in this film that won both Shirley Jones and Lancaster, Oscars. AUD. A, ANGELL HALL $1.25 SINGLE SHOW-$2.00 DOUBLE FEATURE THURSDAY: BLOW UP mommons ENDS SOON! Shows Today at 1:35, 3:15, 5:10, 7:10, 9:10 Open at 1:15 All seats $1.00 till 5:00 I COMEDY PREMIERES! THE PROFESSIONAL THEATRE COMPANY THE ACTING COMPANY premieres in their repertoire CONGREVE'S 'The Way 0 the World Feb. 6 and 7 at 8 p.m. Feb. 8 at 3 p.m. & 8 p.m. Directed by NORMAN AYRTON is 1! i a E i E 4 POWER CENTER Tickets at the PTP Ticket Office, Mendelssohn Lobby, Mon.-Fri.. 10 a.m.-1 p.m., 2-5 p.m. and all Hudson Stores. Call (313) 764-0450 for info. t Texas Instrument SALE !! SR-50A -$6200 SR-51A $9200 Gene Wilder, Madeline Kahn and Marty Feldman OE M, tv Last Day Today! Shows at 1:30, 4 :00, 6:30 & 9:05 Open at -1:15 Today-ail seats $1 till 5:00 THIS MAY BE YOUR LAST CHANCE TO SEE IT ON THE WIDE SCREEN Paramount Pictures presents the return of the greatest love story of all time. PARAMOONT PiCTURES pernt. A B FI ILM FRANCO ZEFFIRELLI Prodution of ROMEO JULIET l / DIRECT FROM NEW YORK CITY 1 ff Ui~i -KM tW OR Il IUrAwil