The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, May 9, 1979-Page 7 GILBERTO GIL AT MENDELSSOHN Guitarist's concert short but sweet By ANNE SHARP A sedate, thirtyish crowd wedged into tiny Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre Monday night to see Brazilian guitarist Gilberto Gil at work. Gil and his backup band-two percussionists, electric bass and lead, and synthesizer-play a pleasing fusion of jazz, rock and those old Brazilian standbys, calypso and samba. The Brazilian sound produced by Gil reminds one of his popular forebears' such as Antonio Carlos Jobim and Joao Gilberto (composers of the film Black Orpheus score), who caught the American jazz buffs' fancy during the fifties. The sound is sultry, tranquil, yet thrilling with its deep, slow basses and rattling cowbells. Unlike much rock and reggae, it favors no political cause; its rhythms express pleasure, not anger. Gil played adequately, though with none of the ostentatious pyrotechnics some other musicians employ. He also sang, and not badly, but his high notes either have a naturally grating effect on the human ear, or there were too many horns in the Mendelssohn speaker system. The lyrics Gil sings are in a mixture of English and Por- tugese. "CHUCK BERRY Fields Forever" is a neo-reggae tour of the evolution of rock and roll. A rather naive ballad at- tempted a statement on discrimination against Brazilian mulattoes, which the audience all but ignored. It was the music, not the message, they were af- ter. Gil is on a concert tour to promote his newest album ("and what else is new?" you ask), which features in addition to Gil's guitar and vocals, music of his own composition. Gil ended his astonishingly brief set (the entire show barely lasted seventy- five minutes) with a rowdy, fast num- ber. Up until then, the rather lackadaisical audience, perhaps exhausted by the comparatively blistering seventy-degree heat which had hit Ann Arbor Monday, could har- dly be coaxed into an audience partic- pation sing-along bit with Gil. The star, in a last-ditch effort to assure himself that the crowd hadn't fallen asleep, had its members clap their hands in time to the music. For the last selection in the show, however, people leaped from their seats and danced about, arms en- thusiastically waving in the air, to Gil's wild strumming of his six-string. With a terrible sene of timing, Gil ended the show, just as the audience had finally warmed to his music, leaving masses of people awkwardly wandering about the aisles and lobby, asking ushers, "Was that it?" A frustrating ending to what might have been a fairly satisfying concert, but, who knows? Perhaps that is the Brazilian way. A high- kickin' musical By JOSHUA PECK The touring company now hoofing its way through A Chorus Line at the Fisher Theatre in Detroit has been greeted with a singularly lukewarm set of notices by the local critics. Lawrence Devine of the Free Press came down especially hard on the troupe, citing half a dozen ways in which their treat- ment of the show is inferior to that of the bunch that brought the show in last year (before Annie's five-month run). There certainly are difficulties with the current production, and they do in- deed hurt the show's effectiveness and impact (I'll get to them in a moment). But I think that much of this harsh critical treatment ignores the fact that, problems or not, Chorus Line remains A Chorus Line Marvin Hamlsch, James Kirkwood, NicholasDante, and Edward Kleban Fisher Theatre, etroi, through ?lfni Diana .........................Denise DiRenzo Val ................................Niki Harris Cassie ........................Deborah Henry Paul .............................Sam viverito Michael Bennett, chareagrapher. director; Don Pippin, anir director. reetarrangement; TharonMusser, lighting designer one of Broadway's best musical of- ferings for years. Its sharply witty music and lyrics, painstakingly rehear- sed dancing, and occasional dips into poignance and, yes, sentiment, are by and large, unimpeded by the bits that are second-rate. Chorus Line's premise is a wee bit contrived, but it really doesn't matter. Some twenty would-be chorus line gyp- sies are on a theatre stage for a new show's audition. They must sing and dance their ways through hours of try- out, as only four performers of each sex are needed. A particularly artificial element is the director's request that each actor step forward to talk about himself for a few minutes, ostensibly because there will be speaking roles for one or two of the eight (Broadway shows scarcely ever work that way). MOST OUTSTANDING of the large cast is unquestionably Niki Harris, who dynamically makes the role of Val her own. The show's book is riddled with sexual allusions, but most lasciviously piquant is Val's "Dance: Ten; Looks: Three," wherein she extolls the virtues of store-bought beauty. She belts out: "Tits and ass; bought myself a fancy pair," and then, at song's end, impishly asks the other auditioners, "you're looking at in, tits, aren't you?" They are. The significant weaknesses are two in number, and each is brought about by inadequacies in individual performers, out of range of the director's ability to amend. Sam Viverito takes the part of Paul, conceived as Chorus Line's Tragic Figure, and makes him an un- sympathetic annoyance. A long speech in which he details the length and breadth of his misery could conceivably make for a worthwhile character ex- position (I hear that it did on Broad- way), but Viverito retreats into a repetitive series of intonations somewhat akin to the dullest Gregorian chant. The only big name that's ever emerged from Chorus Line is Donna MacKechnie's, whose portrayal on Broadway of the aging, former starlet Cassie, won her bravos from critics and audiences alike. Cassie's big moment, of course, is a protracted dance number in front of the mirrored set, her acrobatic grace multiply reflected into the eager audience's collective eyes. Deborah Henry of the current company is an inadequate dancer, visibly faltering a couple of times on opening night, and actually making the choreography look bad. Still and all, these two pitfalls look considerably less grievous when they comprise a tenth of a show whose other 90 per cent consists of material as magnetically vital as Chorus Line's umpteen perfect dances, dozen forceful tunes, and myriad charms. DAILY EARLY BIRD MATINEES-Adults $1.50 ,>DISCOUNT IS FOR SHOWS STARTING BEFORE 1:30 MON. thru SAT. 10 A.M. tl 1:30 P.M. SUN. A HOLS. Noon 1l 1:30 P.M. EVENING ADMISSIONS AFTER 5:00, $3.50 ADULTS Monday-Saturday 1:30-5:00, Admission $2.50 Adult and Students Sundays and Holidays 1:30 to Close, $3.50 Adults, $2.50 Students Sunday-Thursday Evenings Student & Senior Citizen Discounts Children 12 And Under, Admissions $1.25 WOODY ALLEN DIANE KEATON 10:5 12:30 MERYL STREEPM;; ANNEDBYRNE Mflu 10:00 - Fri & Sat MICHAEL MURPHY midnght MARIEL HEMINGWAY 100 3:30 2:45 6:45 9:30 Fri & Sat * sM"~dm otoh.x12:00 xa ,:w midnight 10:15 1:00 3:45 A 6:45 FRANCO ZEFFIRELL930 THEM 115 fr. 9:45 r$$$ The Ann Arbor Film Cooperative presents at Aud A ss WEDNESDAY, MAY 9 JASON AND THE ARGONAUTS (Don Chaffey, 1963) 7 & 10:20-AUD A Unbelievable special effects in this brilliant retelling of the Jason myth. See the harpies, hydra, the bronze giant, and the skeleton army! Animation by Roy Harryhousen, "the world's foremost purveyor of fantasy on the screen. . ."-CINEFANTASTIQUE. With NIGEL GREEN, NANCY KOVAKS, Music by Bernard Herrmann. THE SEVENTH VOYAGE OF SINBAD (Nothan Juran, 1958) 8:40 only-AUD A Sinbod's seventh vogge was, according to sheherezde. his most fabulous. Ry Harryhousen, master of dynamation magic, goes all out to live up to the legend by bringing to life a tasty assortment of dragon, two-headed bird, cyclops, and Incredible shrinking princess. Yet another clastic scne by Bernard (PYSCHO) Herrmann. Tomorrow; IDI AMIN DADA & CALIFORNIA REICH