Wed. esday, June 1, 1977 'ROYAL FAMILY' OPENS: THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page FIve m Troupers By RICHARD LEWIS p)EOPLE looking for a play about the everyday problems of ordinary folks should not look for it tonight at Power Center, for Kaufman and Ferber's The Royal Family will be opening there, and it is a comedy which deals with a most ex- traordinary race: actors. The University Department of Theater viil present this 1927 play through Sunday afternoon. Its story centers around the es- capades of a famous theatrical family nam- ed Cavendish - a family which bears a striking resemblince to the Barrymores. DIRECTOR JACK McLAUGHLIN first suested that the play be produced be- cats e so many "naturals" were available to perform in the key roles. "People have accused me." said McLaughlin, "of type- casting this play. Well, they're right." In casting the role of Fanny, the indom- itable matriarch of the Cavendish dynasty, Mctaughlin's choice of Claribel Baird seems particularly appropriate. Ms. Baird has been a prominent figure in local thea- ter since her arrival at the University in the mid-thirties. After receiving her M. A. from the Department of Theater in the forties, she began a teaching career that spanned nearly three decades. AS AN ACTRESS, MS. BAIRD most re- centi appeared in The Importance of Be- in" Earnest, taking the role of Lady Brack- nell. Her performance as the Grand DuctBess Olga Katrina in the APA-Phoenix production of You Can't Take It With You earned her a Tony Award nomination. When asked how she thought The Royal Fs'mily might be received, Ms. Baird was e'timistic. "You know, I was so afraid the script would be dated," she confessed. stage schi "But at the first read-through, the young people in the cast were delighted." "I sense, among the young, a revival of interest in things past," the actress con- tinued. "Especially now that the experi- mental theater has stopped being experi- mental." Though now retired, Ms. Baird consent- ed to appear in The Royal Family because all proceeds from the production's ticket sales witl be used to fund scholarships in the theater arts. "It is urgent that the Uni- persits rovide more scholarships in the arts " she said. "Top people want to come to Michigan, but we can't compete with otrr schools financially," Both University and community talent hsi been recruited for this benefit pro- d'sc'ion Among others, the cast includes Richard as Bert Cavendish, an aging Shakespearean actor; Irene Connors as Julie Cavendish, the darling of Broadway; and Jlohn McCollum as the Cavendishes' togh-as-nails producer. HOT TEMPERED movie idol Tony Cav- endish will be played by the director him- self. "Ideally, of course, I don't believe in acting and directing simultaneously," McLaughlin said, "but if you're well-or- gnnized it pays off." The Royal Family has delighted audi- ences for fifty years, most recently in Ellis Rabb's acclaimed production at Lin- coln Center. A plav this durable, perform- ed by the distingnished cast Mr. McLaugh- lin has assembled, should certainly be well woth seeing. Performances are schediiled tonight through Satirday at 9:00 p.m., and Sun- dIi afternoon at 3:00 p.m. Tickets are available at the Power Center box office, For further information, call 763-3333. olarship benefit Talking Heads' patter: Paranoid pop platter By DAVID KEEPS 1W~i YOIRK has hecopmne faint- . s, of late, for spawning scores of startling conceptual rc k hands. And among them, ntone is more burdensomely hi- - ..c- zarre than Sire recording art- ists, Talking Heads. The Heads offer a peculiar x brand of prettified pop psychosis. on their debut single, "Love Goes To A Building On Fire," w h i c h packs an enormously catchy beat despite the simple instrumental arrangement. Onstage, they create a tableau depicting the degeneration of ap- parently sophisticated minds, as lead vocalist David Byrne am- ply illustrates in a never-ending ; series of twitches and jerks. Coupled with the implied and impending insanity, T a 1k i n g heads effectively ransack tra- ditional pop melodics, replacing conventional structures with in- strumental innovations that are both intriguing and occasionally annoying, Martina Weymouth plays a sulking and resonant electric bass, while Byrne adds stoccato acoustic g u i t a r chords that sound like an electric organ in the opening phrases of "Lover Goes . . ." Drummer Chris Frantz's restrained hyperactiv- ity on drums adds the needed punch, while a rousing horn sec- tion adds backbone to Byrne's brittle, near-falsetto delivery. The flip side, with far less commercial appeal, comes clos- NOT your everyday art student turned rock er, perhaps, to the Heads' true musical direction - highlighted star, head 'Head' David Byrne, a RISD grad, by a stark rhytm track and ob- brings a dazed, Tony Perkins-styled delivery scurely schizophrenic 1 y r i c s, into the fray of this trio's Intriguing and en- "New Feeling" amply justifies gaging musical selections, which includes a the contention that psychosis is. debut single, "Love Goes To A Building On an art form on the move. Fire," on Sire, The cast of The Royal Family which opens this evening at Power Center. Curtain time is 8 p.m 'islands' s*inIks midstreamn By GERARD PAPE Islands in the Stream, based on Hem- ingway's novel, suffers from being too faithful to its source. The film, playing at the Michigan theater, deals with a potentially interesting subject, but the uninteresting treatment leads only to a ggood soporific. The potentially interesting subject is the midlife crisis of the main character Tom, artfully played by George C. Scott. Tom, an aging Hemingwayesque artist, is in the very throes of deciding whether he will become an isolated, emasculat- ed artist, or accept his larger responsi- bilities as a human. The problem of the aging artist was of central importance in Hemingway's life., Hemingway, always torn between the more active life of the soldier and hunt- er versus the more sedentary life of the artist, always had his characters die in a heroic fashion but he commit- ted suicide rather than face the paraly- sis of old age. UNFORTUNATELY, the movie does not do justice to the difficulty of such a struggle. No sooner is Tom in his crisis than the crisis begins to be resolved. Tom was going to send his vOsiting children away; he hasn't seen them in four years. He was going to cut his beard, thus symbolically emasculating himself. He changes his mind; Tom hears the sound of the plane that is landing his children and does not shave. He does not isolate himself from his children as he had planned. TOM'S LIFE CRISIS has mostly passed before a quarter of the film does. From this point on, we see Tom, the good, loving, understanding father, and Tom, the hero who loses his life in rescuing persecuted war refugees. The only remnants of Tom, the man in crisis, are some regrets. Tom, Jr., the oldest son, is predictably, killed in World War II just after Tom Sr. has just gotten to know -and appreciate him. Tom's first wife, the only woman he really loved and foolishly lost, comes to visit, not to reconciliate but to bring news of Tom jr.'s death and of her mar- riage to a military man. The most disappointing feature of the film is that Tom does not have to live with his regrets as might realistically be expected. Instead, in melodramatic fashion, he dies heroically after success- fully helping the refugees escape. This film's-treatment of life crisis is too easy, too uninformative; and un- fortunately and unavoidably the solu- tion is too Hemingwayesque. In being true to Hemingway's cop out "heroic"' death ending, cheap sentimentality reigns aupreme and re=l problems are glossed over,