AArTHE MICHIGAN DAILY Ac ts &E enmthienSioFriday, April 16, 1976 A cidity doesn 't I e Sirnon's highbr ow cha Page Five By JEFFREY SELBST ? brows themselves, are afraid to speak to him directly. I must HE IS TALL, erect and im- I confess that I was apprehensive peccable in appearance. His with Simon when expressing my words, his manner of speech, opinions, wondering whether or all substantiate his claim that not he thought me an imbecile. he is "a gentleman, damn it!" But set images are hard to But for many, that is open to break, though Simon doesn't de- question. serve such consideration. He is John Simon, controver- His general opinion of other sial film and drama critic, vis- critics is not high. "Those idiots, iting Ann Arbor at the request Walter Kerr and Clive Barnes, of the Hopwood Committee and are the worst, they're middle- its chairman, Prof. John Ald- brows. Lowbrows one can deal ridge of the English department. with, but middlebrows," and Simon delivered the 46th an- here he trails off into exple- nual Hopwood Lecture on Wed- tives. (Barnes and Kerr are nesday, "The Word on Film." drama critics for the New York Funny though never scurril- Times). ous, Simon's opinions on every- Robert Brustein and Gore Vi- thing - from fellow reviewers dal are two others whose sting and critics to actors whose work has been felt by Simon, in re- offends him - are lively and sponse to attacks they felt he biting, clever without being had mounted against them. bitchy, and immensely intimidat- ing to all those who may have VIDAL, PARTICULARLY, in encountered his displeasure at an essay called "Literary Gang- some point in his career. sters," singled out Brustein, Si- mon, Richard Gilman and John YET HE REMAINS essentially Aldridge as targets for his vitu- a gentle man - courteous, peration. I asked Simon what charming, polite, though a little had caused this, and he said. remote. One is never sure of "Well, of course, I reviewed Simon's opinions without asking, Vidal's plays unfavorably, and because he seems to prefer it Aldridge reviewed his books." that way. And many people are t t c K G C c t c f t 7 t }t t t 1 tion at first. One doesn't sit in 1 lumps together with such to the owners of the periodi- the theater and think, now things that he describes with cal. Even with the space limi- what would Heidegger say if he j the term "lowbrow." I asked tations of appearing in a week- were sitting right here now- him about uses of language on ly or a monthly as opposed to one has an immediate reaction, Tuesday, and why it seemed a daily publication, he manages and then goes home and thinks that he was more eloquent to squeeze a succinct mean- about why one likes or dislikes when panning a show rather ing into each review. it." than praising it. He denied this Uneasy Stages is filled with His lecture on Wednesday vigorously, stating "I don't see the kind of critical one-liners was filled with such allusions. why one has to become 'folk- that made reviewers such as Quoting from the screenplays sy' when one likes a show. Ei- Dorothy Parker or Robert of all manner of domestic and ther a negative rhapsody or a Benchley famous. Dorothy imported films, he drew vivid positive rhapsody - the em- ? Parker, one may remember, examples of his points. But to phasis is on the rhapsody." said that "Katharine Hep- the audience, this apparently Simon, too, has come under burn's performance (in Phila- didn't sit as well as Kael's attack for his much-talked- delphia Story) ran the gamut free-style talk the year before about opinions on physical of emotions from A to B." - beauty. "An actress has only Simon disagrees. "That was ONE REASON was perhaps 2112 hours, maybe, to engage Dorothy Parker's failing. Hep- that students felt intimidated you in the play. If she's beau- burn's strength was in taking by Simon, whereas with Kael tiful, she draws you in immedi- that kind , of narrow emotional they had been made to feel ately. In real life, I may like range and doing so much with as equals. He delivered a pre- you, I may not, but I have it." So his one-liners do not ap- pared speech, nothing off-the- the time to find your inner pear to be for their own sake, cuff, and she had fielded quer- values. An actress isn't given as were Parker's. ies from the audience, though that kind of time. All in all, I would have to only the ones she particularly "I may be the princess feel- agree with the remark made wanted to hear. ing the pea through eighteen by Alexis Aldridge, wife of Simon's question - and - ans- critical mattresses." Prof. Aldridge and an instruc- Simperiod was cut due to the tor in laterature herself. "Si- lateness of the hour. Scheduled Simon is clearly a valuable mon may say those things, but for 4 pm, the lecture didn't artistic resource in America. never just to be funny, always really get underway until a jHe is not afraid to say what he to make a wonderfully incisive quarter of an hour lateri thinks, and he is employed by 1 point. I think he is a responsi- Arte ref tianhourdlater. publications which do not re- ble critic." At the reception immediate- quire either that he talk And that may be just the best ly following, the bulk of stu- down to an audience or adopt k appraisal anyone has made of dents who did risk speaking to a critical viewpoint palatable I this truly admirable man. him (and the rewards of such a------ J 7 I intimidated by his image as Brustein, dean of Yale dra-;D the man with the tongue of ma school and erstwhile drama Joh n St'O razor-sharp steel, afraid that critic himself, attacked Simon they too might get in his way. in a malicious display which In interviews on Tuesday and I took the form of a review of he's treating this thing as if it In "Advice to the Hatelorn", Thursday, Simon came across two Simon theatrical essay col- were absolute rubbish. That as well as numerous other ar-; is all those things, but also as lections published at the end of really upset me!" By now he is ticles collected in Singularities,1 a man who sincerely wanted to last year, Uneasy Stages and laughing. he states the position that the1 know other's reactions. He elab- Singularities. Citing Simon's *- drama (or any other) critic beI orated on points in his speech,|"monstrous brutality" and "ir- Simon was born in Yugoslavia "an artist, a teacher, a philoso- yet wished to know my reac- responsibility," Brustein deliv- and came to the United States pher. He writes as well, orI tion, as well as other members ered quite a blow for a man as a young man. "At the time," nearly, as a novelist, play- of the audience I might have who, in Simon's words, "used he recalls, "I was writing poet- wright, or scriptwriter. He triess overheard, to consider himself my friend." ry and teaching, so naturally to teach his readers all that I thought that's what I'd do. they have not learned even in .:..:..f.::.i: :nE .;;.: :::.<:.;:.: .: As it turns out, I haven't writ- college, even in most of their ten any poetry and I've done reading, even in most of their, 'one is never sure o Simon's opinions very little teaching. Well, I did humdrum exposure to the art ofs na couple of oems the other sr dquestion" wit hout anao' hrnu,,e o 710 Q -e? to f r- v day- odIv Fhoto by PAULINE LUBENS ion of this basis leads to a kind risk are great) were foreign of misunderstanding of the in- students. One criticism of Si- tent behind his criticisms. One mon has been that he dislikes U n i v e r s i t y student at- American forms-the "wacky" tending the lecture said, "It comedy, the "musical," etc., seems that Simon invents a po- and this was expressed in the sition and then thinks up an ex- fact that these foreign students cuse for it." Yet, it seems to spoke with him almost exclu- me that he is one of the few sively about foreign films. Too, critics who does not. there may be a subtle xenopho- bia present - "How dare a But at times, it sounds as foreign-born critic review styles though Simon himself would which, being homegrown Amer- agree with this student. When ican, he cannot really under- asked how it was that he forms stand!" a critique, he replied, "Well, Simon despises folksiness and it's always an emotional reac- the "homegrown." This he The Magic of Bergman e The Magnificence of Mozart. v Carmen F. Zollo presents %~ Ingmar Bergman's Eric Ericson& Coiducting The Swedish State Broadcastinw Network SY-PI-nY SHOWTIMES: Mon.-Fri. 7:00 & 9:256-4W" Saturday & Sunday 4:40 - 7:00 - 9:25 ' Li fer it that way. And many people are in- timidated by his image as the man with the tongue of razor-sharp steel, afraid that they too might get in his way.' Emmmmeremmmmmasmesammaomsammeesc Simon taught at Harvard, the University of Washington. MIT and Bard College, where after two years, he "had alienated a sufficient number of the fac- ulty that I wasn't asked to re- turn." He then drifted into publish- ing, working with the Mid-Cen- tury League, editing their monthly magazine. But even there he encountered opposi- tion. "The vice-president was a dangerous man . . . he was madly jealous that they (the editors) liked my work better than his." SURELY A LACK of percep-' I ti TONIGHT i the MLB!! MIL His speech amounted to an analysis of dialogue and its ne- 1 cessity in the medium of film, I and was similar to an essay he'd I written, collected in his book l SigularitIes, discussing the sane topic as it applied to thea-l ter. Simon was puzzled because, This was perhaps the only time that this supremely self-' confident man looked a littlei bewildered. I asked him whatI he meant by "used to," and heI smiled. "Well, I still considerj him my friend," he said. (Robert Kramer, John Douglas, 1975) Concerns the radical generation of the 60's and where they documentary it uses fiction and actors to achieve a kind of cannot be innored. STONES MLB 3-7:30 only are today. While not a documentary truth which -- . t -, VG 14. Atli Cl , THE KING OF HEARTS MLB 4-7 only among other things, very few: SOME THREE or four years '" KNEW it wasn't something members of the audience came ago, his critical denunciationsI was tsywthifo up to speak with him at the of Sylvia Miles brought him a wsonggy he added. reception following the lecture. somewhat more instant response ' than he usually receives. She Then in 1962, he became the THIS SEEMED strange be- broke a plate of cold cuts over film critic for the New Leader. cause the year before, when his head in a Beverly Hills Around that time, he succeed- Pauline Kael spoke, or rather. restaurant. ed Robert Brustein as drama answered questions, she was "It's been reported as gou- critic for the Hudson Review. mobbed afterward by hordes of lash, spaghetti, cold cuts," he Since then, he has added the people asking every type of con- says, dismissing the entire epi- post of drama critic for New ceivable query - about her sode with an ironic wave of his York Magazine to his list of work, specific films, her atti- hand. "I would have thought credits, and contributes heav- tudes, etc. the whole affair amusing, ex- ily to the New York Times Book But her appeal may be based cept that I was wearing a new Review section, as well as on -exactly the same types of jacket that I'd just bought in pieces for that newspaper on htred Phaum line Kes. for art some wonderfully pretentious film and drama. hatred of Pauline Kael for arti is second only to Goebbels outique in Beverly Hills And if ever a man does not hatred of the Jews," he said "Closure to Beverly Hills, lack for credentials, it is John Wednesday, and went on Thurs- think it was called - and I'd Simon. Member of the New day to elucidate. only worn it two or three times. York Drama Critics' Circle, the "Pauline Kael is competent Of course. the jacket was re National Society of Film Cri- to do certain types of things,' stored. tics, he is also a Fulbright he said. "For example, she can "Some years later I was scholar (1949-50) and the re- tell a good Western from a bad watching a movie called Cali- cipientrof a Rockefeller founda- Western. But her brain is not fornia Split, a very bad movie. tion grant (1964). accustomed to using itself in a as it happens, and there's this manner suitable for judging worse-than-bad man in it nam- SO HE IS not ignored by his art." ed Elliott Gould, and what is profession, and is hardly steep- he wearing but my self-same ed oeion, at least by his HIS OWN IMMAGE is of less jacket! And wearing it as if it peein ignominy, accessibility than is hers. Peo- were a piece of shit, which on ple - perhaps fearing that they him I guess it would sort of auto- But in the world at large, Si- might be lowbrows or middle- matically become ... and he's mon has come back under at- - ---- wearing it through most of the tack largely from a lack of film - in the lavatory, where understanding of the philosophi- Interesting facts he gets it all bloody because cal base from which his criti- from they punch him in the nose, and cism derives. THE BAND WAGON (Vincent Minelli, 1953) MLB 4-9 only A washed-up movie idol, a prima ballerina and a busy producer put on a Broadway show which turns into a pompous musical version of the Faust legend. Rehearsal com- plications result in a general snipe at the rampant egos of theatrical people and their machinations. Highlv imaqinative choreoraphy by Michael Kidd, Starrinq Fred Astaire, Cvd Charisse, and Oscar Levant. $1.25 SINGLE SHOW; $2.00 DOUBLE FEATURE C!!?k the movie: AT BRIARWOOD ADJACENT TO J.C.PENNEY +769-8780a 1-94 & S.STATE. ANN ARBOR DAILY EARLY BIRD MATINEES - Adults $1.oo MON. THRU SAT. 10 A.M. TIL 1:30 P.M. SUN. & HOLS. 11 NOON TIL 1:30 P.M. UDENT & SENIOR CITIZENSDISC NT(Exc. Frt.&Sat. Eves.) UTAC CONCERT C0-OP C t t t J f --------------- THANK YOU TO EVERYONE WHO HELPED THE UAC CONCERT CO-OP WIN THE 1975 BILLBOARD MAGA- ZINE AWARD FOR THE BEST COLLEGE CONCERT SERIES IN THE NATION SECURITY FACILITATORS: PRODUCTION ASSISTANTS: ALAN BLUMOUIST DAVID BOYER ROY GREKIN LAURA MILITZER RICK NELSON KEITH WILKINSON MIKE BOSIO CHARLIE BROFF JIM DuPREY ANDYE FULTON BOB GRAVES MARGARET HAMILTON BILL HARTNETT CLAUDETTE HENNEBRY RICK LYNN BOB MORTON JUDY RYDER PAUL J. RYDER around the world California's shortest hunting season is allotted hunters of the sage grouse and only in Mono County. Hunters are allowed one grouse a season which runs for only two days in September. In warm weather when a driver keeps his gas tank full to the brim, he risks wasting his money by letting gas spill over at it warms and expands. Much of Calcutta, India, was razed by a cyclone, Oct. 5, 1864, that killed 70,000 persons. Chinese rebels destroyed the Kaifeng seawall in 1624 and 300,000 drowned. --w- - - - -- - -000" First Time in the History of Ann Arbor Grand Opening Eastert Sunday d'- 1 1 :00to 2:30 ~~ 5: 00 to 8:.30 Authentic Indian Cuisine and Decor and especially Security Coordinator SHARON WILLIAMS, and ALL THE 170 MEN AND WOMEN OF THE CONCERT USHER TEAM Also JEANINE BASHOUR * CORRINE BOWDEN " RALPH BEEBE " BEN COPE JERRY HUELLER " JOAN KELLY f MARY JO MATHER OFFICE OF STUDENT ORGANIZATIONAL SERVICES SCHEDULING OFFICE STAGEHANDS UNION UNIVERSITY TELEPHONE OPERATORS -0- BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN " CHICK COREA LOGGINS & MESSINA ! BONNIE RAITT FRANK ZAPPA 0 CAROL KING 0 SHAWN PHILLIPS " STEVE GOODMAN @ BOB SEGEF FOGHATS* JONI MITCHELL 0 MARIA MULDAUR 0 JESSE COLIN YOUNG Free Gifts from India Will Be Distributed Samosas Exotic Chutneys Rogan Josh Tandori Chicken Chicken Japuri VEGETARIAN CORNER SPECIALTIES Messina, Sicily, was pletely destroyed by an com-' earth- cc ana Malal Kofta Rice Pullao