Saturday, April 10, 1976 All-Campus Orchestra THE MICh*IGAN DAILY Page Three By JEFFREY SELBST THE ALL-CAMPUS Orchestra bared all on the stage of Hill Auditorium last night, and the result was surpris- ing. It was surprising because the open- ing number, Overture to Prince Igor by Borodin, was of quite high quality; the following selection, Mozart's Symphony No. 14, was amazingly terrible; and the final piece, Tchaikovsky's Fifth Sym- phony, was of remarkably high caliber again. The Overture is one of those rich, stirring Romantic jobs. I'm certainly not going to pick bones-it isn't as if I thought just anyone could do this piece simply because it's Romantic- but the tone of this number is rich and dark, ideally suited for a group of this nature, whose strong points include a warm, clear wind section and a bell-like brass.- THE PIECE is alternately exciting and lulling, the more so for the marked contrast that appears in the rather ex- tended coda. It was here that the group shone, under guest conductor David Urguhart-Jones -the rapid transitions between modes in the coda were han- dled with care; at once driving and delicate, concise and sweeping, boom- ing and beautiful. An utter success. The next piece on the program was the Mozart Symphony No. 14, K. 114. The main faults here included a con- ductor who was more interested in show than unity (Jeremy Balmuth), a violin section which, with few ex- ceptions, considered any tone played within a twelfth of the written note adequate, and a viola section which more properly belongs in a washtub band. The Mozart is an early work, one of his abbreviated symphonies - fairly short, and the tone is like Viennese whipped cream. One is meant to tiptoe lightly through these tulips; the foot- ball cleats applied by the orchestra rendered the blossoms unfragrant. THE FAULT, I am told, lies with sitting in the first few rows of Hill, rather than a prudent ten rows back. "The acoustics," one orchestra mem- ber remarked, "favor the rear." Yet it seems to me than orchestra ought not to have to rely on distance to ob- literate the mistakes of the ments, or the players. The principal conductor, R ters, chose for the final wor memse, melancholy Tchaikov He conducted himself; this me an act of mercy. For Pe man who knows and, more im understands the music hec conduct. Moreover, he is bot and responsible enough to ch that he had the capacity to d The result was a sensitive times deliberate interpretati work. Certainly it has inher matic qualities-these are1 Tchaikovsky. I do not berat intent, for if anything had t done, Petters over did it just THE FIRST movement op. ly-too slowly, I think. Th dramatization of which I s the pace was almost immedia ed up, and the first stateme first theme came across b After the Introduction, the became amodel of restrainti The strings, too, picked u cues in much better fashion fluctuates eir instru- had; the lower strongs (cello, bass) did a fine job as their warm tones obert Pet- enriched the balance as a whole. rk the im- The only disappointment was in the 'sky Fifth. ending. Rather than dying in the close, seems to as this piece ought, the movement etters is a seemed to simply end. The orchestra nportantly, stopped playing; the conductor dropped chooses to his arms, and I was left wondering h sensible what was to follow. Dose works And then the French horn announced irect. the first theme of the second movement , if some- in a truly incredible bit of musician- on of the ship, with a subtheme immediately in- ently dra- truded by the oboe. There were no built into flaws in this respect-each did its serv- e him the ice for the symphony as a whole, en- o be over hancing the continuity as well as the a bit. individual notes. And as for the notes themselves, it seemed to me that nearly ened slow- everyone was playing Tchaikovsky's. Ms is the These two movements set the way poke. Yet for the last two; I can say of these ately pick- only that they were fine, with a par- ents of the ticularly rousing coda in the Finale beautifully. movement, done excellently. The whole movement orchestra seemed involved and respon itself. sive. And, of course, the unbelievable p on their music played no small part in this than they triumph. 310 v iis MAE WEST in 1933' SSHE DON HIM WRONG Cary Grant plays a Salvation Army captain who falls for Bawdy Bowery Queen Diamond Lil who is Mae West at her best. Her version of "Where Has My Easy Rider Gone" brings down the house-and brought on the production code. A social satire as much as a comedy, this film was the embodiment of the 20's morality in depression America-and, as such, was popular as well as condemned. SUN.: BLOOD OF THE CONDOR TONIGHT AT OLD ARCH. AUD. 7:00 & 9:00 Admission $1.25 .a ----- ---..___.__.._-_.--- _......__._.__..___ _ _._-__._. __-______.-.._ ___._.. __ ......1 I 14 p1 -iw f --JUS SELECT t MEDIEVA /' .ST COL of IN- LLECTION AND MODERN LITERATURE Y ~ tr4 i 4- e ll g so FRENCH LI . events and entertainment for the week of April 10th thru 16th This week's Happenings cal- endar was prepared by James Burns (bar listings) and Kim Potter (film reviews). a ll week long Robin and Marian - (State)- Sam Peckinpah's lost American frontier is transposed to me- dieval England in Richard Les- ter's new adaptation of the Robin Hood legend. This ver- sion presents us Robin (Sean Connery) as a middle-aged, world-weary warrior returned from 20 years of Crusading with the now-dead King Rich- ard. Re-united with his aging fellow thieves, he rescues his old love Marian (Audrey Hep- burn) from arrest by the Sher- iff of Nottingham, then returns to Sherwood Forest to rekindle his clandestine struggle for jus- tice (which, in Lester's -inter- pretation, he had engaged in prior to the Crusades). Director Lester rather blatantly lifts and employs the perennial Pec- kinpah theme of elderly rugged individualists slowly ground under by a monolithc society; Robin and the Sheriff (Robert Shaw) are presented as equal- ly noble, aging antagonists - mutually admiring of each other but pushed by sinister, unalterable forces toward a final Pyrrhic duel that neither can hope to win. The result is a mixed bag cinematically - the first hour or so of the film is brilliantly structured and crafted, but the latter half tends to lose its focus both motiva- tionally, artistically and histor- ically, casting a potentially great film into the entertaining near-miss category. Robin and Marian benefits from snlendid sinporting performances, but Connerv and Hepburn are only fair in the leads. ** Family Plot - (Campus) - Alfred Hitchcock's first film in four years - a reportedly tongue - in - cheek escanade involving a frantic search for the rightful heir to a fortune. The Magic Flute - (Fifth Forum) - Ingmar Bergman's film from the Mozart opera. Said to be essentially a photo- graphed stage production. but reportedly quite good - if Mo- zart's your bag (he's not mine). All the President's Men - (The Movies, Briarwood) - The film from the Bernstein-Wood- ward best seller proves less a chronicle of the downfall of Nixon than a day-to-day study of newspaper reporting. In this case, of course, it's the jour- nalistic story of the century. President's Men contains few thrills or surprises (we know already who won), and is per- haps a little hesitant to go ov- erboard on events and person- ages so recent to us. But it is a thorough, precise and re- markablyv compelling study of the painstaking detectivedwork that just mpv have nreserved as as a nation. Producer-star Nest - (The Movies, Briar- wood) - The first film in over 40 years to win all five major Oscars (Best Picture, Actor, Actress, Director, Screenplay),: but for all its accolades, still just not as good as it shouldt have been. No quarrels, though,f about Jack Nicholson or Louise Fletcher - they are both su-, perlative. ** The Duchess and the Dirt- water Fox - (The Movies,! Briarwood) - Standard - for- mula Western comedy, with Goldie Hawn and George Segal. L i p s t i c k - (Michigan) -Margaux Hemingway's screen debut as a model who under-E takes a murderous revenge af- ter she and her younger sister are raped by an erstwhile solid- citizen type. The film has been the recipient of almost unani- mous critical brickbats, and, judging from the plot line, prob- ably deserves everything it gets. saturday - APRIL 10 CINEMA! She Done Him Wrong. - (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 7 & 9:05) - 1933 Mae West - Cary I Grane vehicle which produced the immortal "Come on up andi see me sometime" invitationc by America's first sex queen.< Qunite raunchy for the times and pretty funny. ***t The Gambler - (Cinema II, Ang. Aud. A., 7 & 9:15) -J Study of a young college pro- fessor psychopathically de- stroying himself through com-J pulsive, non-stop betting -2 and at the same time thorough-i ly aware what he is doing to, himself. Another "good badf film" - its script is overly, melodramatic, Karl Reisz's di-1 rection is almost Wagnerian in its wrought - up floridity, and the performances by James Caan and supporting cast are uniformly overdrawn. Yet The Gambler emerges as richly en-f tertaining andsuspenseful -i don't ask me how they did it,t just go and enjoy yourselves.f The Life and Times of Judget Roy Bean - (Bursley Enter- nrises, Bursley W. Cafeteria, 8:30 only) - John Huston'si manciful re-creaton of the ex- nloits of the notorious hanging idge of the 1870s Southwest. There's not too much plot con-£ tinuity, as one episode leads hanhazardly into another, but the whole enterprise is carried out with such ingratiating good< humor that you're bound to be entertained. Paul Newman, out of his usual suave hearthrob role, is srnrisingl and won- derfully conic as the wily -mle.- ?001: A Snre odyssey - (New World, MLB 4) - Stanle Kubrick's outer snace Gene- sis IT stands as, among many1 other things, one of the most comnletelv personalized works1 in all of cinema. A maddening- lv crvtic film, the merits of which will nrobably be debated forever - perhans not even a good film, but nonetheless an incredible one. This is a movie which has to be seen more than once - although most Ann Arborites have doubtless seent it many more time than that. Gone With the Wind - (New World. MLB 3, 8 only), - The7 nne. the only. An utterly be- son, jazz, 9:30, $1. Mr. Flood's Party - Stoney Creek, country, 9:30, $1. Casa Nova - Michael & Jon- athan, soft rock, 9:30, no cover. Bimbo's - Gaslighters, rag- time singalong, 6-1:30, 50c after 8. Heidelberg Rathskeller - Mustard's Retreat, folk, 9:30. no cover. Ark - Michael Cooney, folk, 8:30, $2.50. EVENTS Residential College Players - "The Tempest", East Quad, 2 and 8. Professional Theater Pro- mous thriller film immortalized by its zither musical score, but not really very good. Always interesting to watch Welles, but' as in most of his films he's pretty much wasted here. ** Touch of Evil - (Cinema' Guild, Arch. Aud., 9:05 only) - A tyrannical police chief in a Texas border town goes one step too far in his attempts to solve a crime. The film's ba- sically routine story is turned by Orson Welles into a master- work of direction and acting (Welles himself plays the fa-' natical cop). Made on the direc- tor's usual shoestring budget, Touch of Evil emerges as one of the most memorable films of the 50's, thanks entirely to the efforts of our best and most Tragically neglected filmmak- er. part he plays here, and amaz- ingly versatile supporting heip make The Ruling Class both hi- larious and terrifying. **** BARS Blind Pig - Synergy, jazz, 9:30, $1. Chances Are - Whiz Kids, rock, 9, 50c with ID. Mr. Flood's Party - Stoney Creek, country, 9:30, 75c. Casa Nova - Michael & Jon- athan, soft rock, 9:30, no cover. Ark - Hoot night, folk, 9, 75c. EVENTS Gilbert and Sullivan Society- "Ruddigore", Mendelssohn, 8. Hopwood awards - Presenta- tion of 1976 Hopwood awards in creative writing, and lecture, "The Word on Film", by critic John Simon, Rackham Lecture Hall, 4. 516 S.State ARR Apbop,M.48108 fine. books bought and sold . _________. gram 8. - "Camino Rel", Power, sunday APRIL 11 CINEMA Blood of the Condor - (Cine- ma Guild, Arch, Aud., 7 & 9:05) -Drama 4f an Indian village in Bolivia, and its resistance to various American pressures and influences. Woman in the Dunes- (Cinema II, Aud. A, 7 & 9:30) - A Japanese school teacher on vacation is lured into a sand- pit where he is held prisoner with a young woman who al- ready resides there. Initially desperate with the need to es- cape, he gradually changes his attitude toward his living situa- tion and the value of his past existence.Ultimately he ad- justs to his new environment, and when finally offered the opportunity to escape, he re- jects it for the life in the pit. Aside from its rather obvious existentialist and behavorist overtones, Woman in the Dunes is an incredible visual achieve- ment. Director Hiroshi Teshiga- hara leads us into a subtly surreal extravaganza, hypnotic- ally blending sand and desert with human flesh into an erotic, dreamlike unity. There is no way to adequately verbalize the effect - you'll just have to see it. This is cinema of the fan- tastic - the best film to emerge from Japan,and arguably the most lyric and beautiful mo- tion picture ever made. BARS Chances Are - Masquerade, rock, 9, $1 with ID. Mr. Flood's Party - Fred Small, 9:30, no cover. Ark - Michael Cooney, folk," 8:30, $2.50.I EVENTS Musical Society - Vladimir Horowitz, piano recital (sold out). APRIL 12 CINEMA Nothing scheduled. BARS Gordon Falcon - Silvertones, blues, 9:30, $1. Mr. Flood's Party - Catfish Miller, jug blues band, 9:30, no cover. Blind Pig - Boogie Woogie Red, blues, 9:30, $1. Chances Are-Lightnin, rock, 9, $1 with ID. EVENTS Music School - Composers' Forum, School of Music Reci- tal Hall, 8. Music School - Symphony Band and Wind Ensemble, H. Robert Reynolds, conductor, Hill Aud., 8. Last Tango in Paris - (Ann Arbor Film Co-op, Aud. A, 7 & ):15) - The most controver- sial film of the '7fs, which hash a l il o t e '7 s, w h ch h perhaps suffered from a kind of critical backlash to Pauline APRIL 15 Kael's famous pre-release sup- CINEMA er-rave in 1972. The accepted Day For Night - (Ann Arbor "in" position today seems to be Film Co-op, Aud. A, 7, 9) - to categorize the film as a Francois Truffaut's tribute to good but decidedly overrated the art of moviemaking - a fic- effort. Well, I think Kael is tionalized account of the day- absolutely right: Last Tango is to-day tribulations and hilarities the most intimate and at the of the making of a film called same time most flamboyant "Meet Pamela" (a real pot- study of human relationships I boiler, judging from what we have seen in a motion picture. see). It's all very enjoyable, but One of the three or four most no more than that. Will the important films ever made, and master ever take risks again? also one of the best. **** ** (H e s t e r Street, originally Death Race 2000 - (New scheduled for tonight, has been World, Nat. Sci. Aud., 7 & 9) canceled.) - A science fiction film about + vawln o ytic cross - counry I SATURDAY, APR. 10th TON IGHT' Michigan Men's Glee Club 8 P.M. HILL AUDITORIUM Tickets Still Available $1.50-$2.50-$3.50 Featuring 20th Anniversary performance of Friars I BARS Mr. Flood's Party - Aging Children, 9:30, no cover. Chances Are - After Hours, rock, 9, $1 with ID. EVENTS Music School - Arts Chor- ale, Leonard Johnson, conduc- tor; Michigan Singers, Jack Jonker, conductor; Hill Aud., 8. Residential College - RC Singers and Orchestra, North Dining Room, East Quad, 8. wednesday APRIL 14 CINEMAj The Devil is a Woman - (Cinema Guild, 7 & 9:05) -The last of the Josef Von Sternberg- Marlene Dietrich collaborations of the early and mid-'30s, and probably for fans of the direc- tor and/or star only. The Ruling Class - (Ann Ar- bor Film Co-op, Ang. Aud. A, 7 & 9:45) - An elaborate, far- flung satire on the coming death of the British Isles, fea- turing Peter O'Toole as a mod- ern English lord convinced be- yond all doubt that he is Jesus Christ. Hammered away at by relatives interested in preserv- ing the family name, he is fin- ally cured of his delusion, only to have it replaced by - well, let's just say it's a very cynic-i al show. Director Peter Medak is workmanlike but not espe- cially inspired, staying almost totally within the confines of the original stage play, but the play itself is bizarre enough to captivate the viewer. O'Toole's sometimes overextended his- trionics are tailor-made for the an apoalyptc cross - counr race. A "sleeper" movie that is highly regarded by cultists, but unfortunately missed by this critic. New Orleans - (Cinema Guild, Arch. Aud., 7 & 9:05) - 1940's film about Basin Street musicians joining forces to keep their clubs open when authori- ties move to close them. Prob- ably worth seeing just for the cast, which includes Billie Hol- liday and Louis Armstrong among many other notables. BARS Casa Nova - Michael & Jon- athan, soft rock, 9:30, no cover. Mr. Flood's Party - Mike Smith and his Country Volun- teers, 9:30, 75c. Chances Are - Foxx, rock, 9, $1 with ID. EVENTS Gilbert and Sullivan Society- "Ruddigore", Mendelssohn, 8. Music School - Violin Pyro- technics from Bach to Paga- nini, Stearns Bldg., 8. UAC - Cecil Taylor, Power, 8 4 friday APRIL 16j CINEMA Milestones-(Ann Arbor Film Co-op, MLB 3 7:30 only) - A fictionalized look at members of the '60s protest generation as they are today. An almost unknown film, but sounds quite interesting. King of Hearts - (Ani Ar- bor Film Co-op, MLB 4, 7 on- ly) - Better hurry, folks - the next-to-last showing of the sea- son! *** See HAPPENINGS, Page 5 THE KITE SEASON IS HEREI Centicore Is Ann Arbor's Headquarter for All Kite E x p e r t s, Neophytes, Dilettantes, Aerodynamicians, Poets, Scientists, Freaks, Spies, Restauranteurs, Streak- ers & Beauticians. ~.OU R H UGE SE LECT ION of KIT ES: OSNEfrom All Over the World Has Just Arrived. Come See Them. FROM $3.00 TO $38.00 t THAI DRAGON AIRFOILS INDIAN FIGHTER MYLAR BOX GHOST CLIPPER SHIP SILK DRAGON DOUBLE BOX CENTI PEDE 4 SUPER BAT, BAT PEACOCK MYLAR DRAGON BIPLANES & TRIPLANES FORMOSA BUTTERFLY BULLET and Dozens More We Have a Fair Supply of Beautifully Painted Kites from Mainland China One of the first women ordained as an Episcopal priest Rev Dr. Jannnette Pienrrd ,I The I i