Uncannyfestival begins By MARK ALAN FARBER ' " see the film that opened the fes- special to The Daily tival. It was a French film en- CANNES - I hitchhiked from / titled Lefeu Sacre, directed by Paris to Niems, and then took a the new Frenth diretor Vladimar train to Cannes. Hitchhiking or / Forgency. It was a whimsical little auto-stop, as the Europeans call piece about a teenage girl who it, is very difficult in Franc must make a choice of lifestyles; Don't ask me why, but that's what either of the physical gaity of pop everyone says, and I found it to be culture and dance or the physical true while patiently waiting for rigor of classical ballet. The di- rides. The best time to hitch is rector was competent, but the on weekends when French freaks ' .' camera was always in the wrong are on holiday. " place during the ballet sequences. I arrived in Cannes only to find The star, Sonia Petrova, w a s a modified Miami Beach/Fort stunning in both appearance and Lauderdale type town. The city is dance. expensive, modern, and packed The film, however, did cause a with resorts. If you dig Miami in minor scandal, as many of the Season this is the place for you. well-known directors in attend- Bring money, clothes, money, ance were offended that such an more clothes, and more money, insignificant film would be t h e The average age seems to be between 45 and death, but they opener. They were right, for For- say the crowd gets younger in gency's film, while nice, is not JTune. Charlie Chaplin a masterpiece. On to the festival. This year marks the 25th The second day of the festival I took in four anniversary of the Cannes International F i 1 m movies. The most exciting was City Lights. It Festival. On opening day there was a film was not my first exposure to the Chaplin master- clip tribute to such previous award winners as piece, but it was the first time I saw it under Fellini, Antonini, Bessan, Bunuel, Wyler, Welles, ideal conditions and with Chaplin in attendance. and Lindsay Anderson, all of whom were present: (The last screening of City Lights I saw was in There was also a special award presentation to the Architecture Auditorium where the print was everyone's master of cinema, Charlie Chaplin, minus the musical score which Chaplin h a d who was also present. composed. Here in Cannes I had the music, a Unfortunately, first year reviewers are n o t cushioned seat, and room for my legs. However, permitted entrance into the opening soiree. How- the festival charges $5.00 admission compared ever, it really didn't matter too much as it was to the Guild $.75.) It was a memorable exper- a black tie-or-else affair - or else they throw ience to actually applaud the tramp himself, 30 you out on your blue-jeaned ass. I did, however, See REVIEWING, Page 9 Howd Doody Howdy Doody makes Detroit benefit revival It's Howdy Doody time in De- troit again, as Buffalo Bob re- turns for a benefit to save Or- chestra Hall. The popular children's show of the 1940's and 50's is being re- vived, and wherever it goes, it's breaking attendance records. HowdyDoody is acconparied by Buffalo Bob, Phineas T. Blus- ter, Dilly Dally, Flubadub, Clara- bell and the other characters that were with the original show. In- cluded in the Detroit perform- ance will be a peanut gallery, just like on the television show. The peanut gallery occupants will have lollypops and balloons, and Buffalo Bob will lead them in the show theme: "It's Howdy Doody Time." The Howdy Doody revival start- ed when a University of Peru- sylvania student contacted Buf- falo Bob, suggesting that a re- staging of the Howdy Doody show might go over big with the col- lege students who were shs chil- dren at whom Howdy Doody was aimed. In April, the Buffalo Bob How- dy Doody show made its off campus debut at the Filmore Eastand played four perform- ances to standing-room-only au- diences. The original Howdy Doody show made its television debut in 1947 and was on the air until 1960. The Howdy Doody show will be in Detroit June 11 and 12. All proceeds from ticket sales, and from sales of related items, sich as Howdy Doody T-Shirts, will be turned over to Save Orchesira Hall, Inc., thesNon-profit organi- zation that has been spearhead- ing the drive to save the storiedl musical concert hall on Wood- ward Ave. from demolition. music Nigt at the opera:* Met flops By JOHN HARVITH R e a r d o n, whom she mar- centered about its two stars, Once upon a time (at the turn vied out of a sense of duty to rellia and Elias, and the stage of the century) American opera her deceased mother. The frus- rector who seemed to regard 1 houses had a flourishing French trated Werther eventually com- mellifluous Massenet oeu Romantic repertoire featuring mits suicide with a pistol he bor- with its flowing melodies works of Meyerbeer, Gounod and rows from Albert, but not before transparent orchestration (adi Massenet. With the diseappear- Charlotte confesses her love to tedly marred by moments ance of singers like Mary Gar- him as he dies, secure in the empty rhetorical bombast) a den the de Reszke brothers and knowledge that she is saved from sort of Italian verismo gut-f Marcel Journet, the French oper- the threat of adulterous sin-a ping vehicle. As a result, E atic repertory has so atrophied comforting denouement for a emerged looking more like in the U.S. that about the only Victorian audience. moody forty-ish weight-wat' ::;::::::.:; . : : : than a 19-year bride, with her ...............:.....................c...ssive....vibrato......and...vocal . Co- di- this xvre and ait- of ts a lop- lhas a 'her ex- his- TONIGHT ONLY To a Gypsy Moth... jumping isn't only a way to live... but a way to die, too! "It is a . . . tragedy that the production as a whole failed because it is one of the too few unstandard repertory items the Met has has staged in recent years . ." representative works gracing ma- jor houses today are Faust, Car- men and an occasional Manon. The Metropolitan Opera House is currently trying to resuscitate this all-but expired art genre to active service, beginning its campaign three years ago with a revival of Gounod's Romeo et Juliette, and continuing it this season with a new production of Massenet's Werther (1892) which has been absent from the Met's boards since the memorable 1909 staging featuring Geraldine Farrar and Edmond Clement. Monday the Met offered Wer- ther in a stellar cast as the open- ing night presentation of its week- long Spring Tour engagement at Detroit's Masonic Temple Audi- torium. Franco Corelli took the role of Werther, a young, melan- & choly Romantic, passionately in love with the teen-aged newly- wed Charlotte (Rosalind Elias) who is intent on staying faithful to her husband, Albert (John Next Tuesday-June 1 A' Marion Brando-Eva Marie Saint n Elio Kazan's ON-THE WATERFRONT Winner of 8 Academy Awards including Best Pictare, Director, Actor aud. a-7:00 & 9:30 p.m. the ann arbor film cooperative From the cynical moral view- point of today's audiences, how ever, this plot, adapted from a Goethe novel, seems hopelessly dated. The only way to make it work is through understatement: a true feel for the inflections of the French libretto matched by silken sustained vocalism and sensitive acting, as well as en- semble rapport between the or- chestra and singers. Sadly enough, all these essential ele- ments were missing Monday night, The production's major flaws trionics contributing to the gen- erally wrong-headed characteri- zation. She only became touch- iag and believable in her final duet with the dying Werther. There is no doubt Corelli pro- duces one of the mast glorious stentorian tenor sounds around when he sings full throttle, but sustained piano and pianissimo shading a la McCormack or Schi- pa are unfortunately beyond his command. Where the score calls for tenderness or reflection, Corelli's vocal line degenerated into a tasteless croon or strained falsetto-ish tone. Moreover, while he was clearly capable of beau- tiful, sustained cantabile lines above piano, Corelli was seldom content to sing simply, but con- stantly broke up melodic phrases with gasps, sobs and chokes- See REPERTORY, Page 9 TONIGHT! G 4ALLER Y is playing at A 9 P.M. to 1 A.M, uditrium A-Angel Hall SHOWN AT 7:00 AND 9:30