Friday, June 8, 1973 THE SUMMER DAILY Page Five Rex Harrison memoirs to brim with chill and charm? By WILLIAM GLOVER. Rex Harrison makes it quite clear about those memoirs he is writing. "They will be published," he says, "if I get them ex- actly as I want them." For anyone familiar with Harrison's lifetime addictions to privacy and per- fection, that means the autobiography may brim with all the excitement of media- tions by Marcus Aurelius, and seethe with the emotion of an internal revenue audit. "There are two kinds of actors," Har- rison says, "those who exploit their pri- vate lives for advantage and those who prefer only to rely on talents." Harrison delivers such dicta in tones of carefully cultivated chill and charm, which are as familiar to millions as the imperial profile seen in uncounted stage- screen roles as the personification of kings, popes, scoundrels, rakes and the ineffable Henry Higgins of My Fair Lady, his most famous part. In the stardom process, the man born in a British village has remained more aloof than most of his peers while amas- sing a tidy fortune along with five wives. Just how much Harrison possesses is a royal secret, though an Italian villa. fashionable town house in London, Rolls Royces and post-performance libations of Isom Perignon champagne at S21 a bottle are hints of more than common comfort. Preparation of memoirs, upon which he has been at work for several years, is the immediate self-assignment this sum- mer during "long rest" at Portofino. An editor, representing waitiag publishers in New York and London, goes over the script, "naturally," says the author. He disclaims ghostly collaboration. The stint follows a recent "rigorous workout" of 16 weeks through Canada and the United States in Pirandello's Emper- or Henry IV. It was Harrison's first ap- pearance on stage this, side of the sea since 1960. In October, he plans to take William Glover is a drama writer for the Associated Press. the production to London, where he hasn't performed in three years. During the extended hiatus. from the theatre, there have been a number of films for Harrison. Just turned 65 and ready to mark next year his 50th anniversary of theatrical activity, the tall star, whose lank frame shows some signs of the thickening influ- ience of a gourmet diet, gives an impres- sion of a man bemused by time, left in exquisite loneliness by changing popular taste in entertainment. A recent magazine biographer said of Harrison, "He sometimes had the look of a man who has left the train at the wrong station." Another individual long associated with him professionally sums Harrison up with, "he's the strangest man I ever met." Many have remarked on the natural affinity between Harrison and Henry Higgins. The absorption of the man into the actor, noted by more than one of his four previous wives, continued perhaps sub- liminally in his decision to perform in Emperor Henry IV. It is the story of a latter-day Italian nobleman who for years persuades family and retainers into believing that a head injury has caused permanent delusion that he is an 11th century German ruler. When finally ready to admit deceit, he kills a man and to escape punishment must ever retreat into feigned hallucination. Harrison became so fascinated with the fantasy that he obtained performance rights after plans to do the play at the Spoleto Festival of Two Worlds ' fell through five years ago. He then had a fresh translation done. "I like to do things that have never been done," he says. Early in his career with the Liverpool Rep, Harrison had one joust with Shakespeare. He has since avoided that classic canon and the Res- toration comedies "which I'd like to do but would be a bit boring because every- one else has." Summer Daily A4 rit s Sexy Rexy Rex Harrison (right) in a scene with Linda Darnell and Kurt Kreuger from Preston Sturges' 1948 film "Unfaithfully Yours." Record Release !?amblings .. MEGAN McDONOUGH-Keep- sake (Wooden Nickel BWL1-0145) Gliding into the grooves of this album is a pleasureable experi- ence similar to breathing in the freshness of spring, remember- ing moments and questions that are yet deeply meaningful. "Megan's music," John Denver has written, "makes me think of sun showers in the afternoon and quiet days in the mountains-of whispering leaves and laughing streams and the sky deep with stars-all the times and all the places that make you want to lay back and think about things." Now, that gives her credentials. Throughout most of the album, Megan delivers a clear, soft sound that peaks high and flows gently downward. It is a soprano reminiscent of Joni Mitchell. And yet there are also times when she belts out a fairly deep bluesy sound, singing "there's going to be a revelation of love." (In "Chances 'R' "). Four cuts off the album are written by McDonough and re- flect the thoughts of a woman fulfilled by her music. She be- comes as the album's title sug- gests, at times nostalgic. Never the sort of nostalgia that dis- colors the present, but rather the soul-felt remembering that helps to shape the future. In "Hold On," she sings: Hold on to your memories Wherever they may lie Hold on to the things you know And never let them die Hold on to the love you have Abiding in your heart The old world's a-comin' to an end And the new one is about to start. There are moments, to be sure, in her profession, that are less than pleasant . . . lonely nights in strange motel rooms. The pic- ture is painted in "Texas Motel": And in between the clean sheets. And in between wrapped soap y Comes a silent mental wish You wish there were wrapped hope And all of those memories that slip by And out the door - Comes a quiet question Who and what for And you-.. . Don't have to be hungry to starve And ya don't have to be jailed to be barred. Reaching further into the mel- ancholy are her renditions of songs written by other artists songs like Paul Williams' "Where Do I Go From Here," Daniel Fogelberg's "Stars," and "Angry Eyes" by Ken Loggins and -Jim Messina. Backing Megan's rich voice and singular lyrics are lightly orches- trated instrumentals, featuring the gentle strains of violin and viola, and the pounding rhythms of piano and guitar, seasoned by heavy smog, wispy flute and the jingle of a tambourine. The album is a gem, sparkling with Megan's powerful soul-felt voice and the polished sounds of over a dozen musicians. Misted over lightly with nostalgia and colored with a personal honesty that rings clear with universal truisms, it is a keepsake t h a t should easily fit into any com- prehensive collection of mellow- ed-down music. . °E -GLORIA JANE SMITH Arts Editor Culture Cal LEMMINGS-A parody of the rock s culture heroes, containing all the ities that delight the readers of t Lampoon's Lemmings comes to P tre June 18. Tickets are availab and Pine Knob box offices. STEELEYE SPAN - Parcel of Rogues (Chrysalis 1046) Steeleye Span is one of those rare groups who are so good that you want to play their record for the world to hear . . . but you refrain, taking pride in- stead in being a member of the ever-growing cult of "Steeleye Spanners." Their latest album, Parcel of Rogues, contains, as does their previous album Below the Salt, traditional English, Scottish, and Irish material. An offshoot of the British gro'ip Fairport Conven- tion, Steeleye Span electrifies their songs-in both senses of the word. Lead singer Maddy Prior is the five- member group's crowning glory, belting out the multi-track- ed a cappella "The Weaver and the Factory Maid" or joining in Maddy Prior on the stirring a cappella har- mony of "Rogues In a Nation." "Alison Gross" is a rascinating piece about the "ugliest witch in a Nthe north country" who tries to seduce the song's hero and, fail- ing in the attempt, turns him into "an ugly worm !" Liner notes claim that "Cam Ye O'er Frae France" derides German scene and its counter- George I for whoremongering, but unfortunately-and this is the indescribable absurd- album's only flaw-the lyrics are the magazine, National not printed, and thus the brogue remains a mystery. mine Knob Music Thea- With bass, goitar, mandolin, ble at Fisher Theatre fiddle, and drums (for the first time), Steeleye Span has suc- ceeded in tapping the archives - - ,,,,, for material and arranging it themselves in an amazingly ex- citing up-tempo album, -DIANE LEVICK'