Saturday, July 30, 977 THE MICHIG SUSpense falls fati 'ark' AN DAILY Page Seven the surefire quality of Knott's story should already be apparent - a vulnerable heroine, a murder, a for- tune in illicit drugs, a conspiracy between three un- derworld types - everything is there, but it doesn't work. The fault lies in the way this story is presented to the audience. Knott devotes the first scene of his play to a conversation between the three hoods, thereby revealing too much too soon. The audience, already knowing about the con taking place, must sit patiently for almost an act and a half before the heroine fully realizes what is happening to her. JACK VAN NATTER'S leisurely staging does little to conceal the defects in Knott's script. Van Natter's actors saunter through the play without making any particular attempts to accelerate towards the life-and- death struggle that concludes it. This production is also plagued by technical prob- lems. Like many thrillers, Wait Until Dark relies heavily on sound and light cues, and requires an alert technical taff. Nothing destroys tension quite so ef- fectively as a telephone that continues to ring after it has been picked up, or a lamn that goes out before the switch has been turned. Sadly, such blunders abounded in Wednesday night's opening performance. The cast is not strong. While Dlana Barton, as Suzy, manages to convince us that she is blind, she fails to develop much intensity until the final scene of act two. CHARLES McGRAW is miscast as Roat, the mean- est of the three hoods. His quiet delivery, which is no doubt meant to give the impression of barely-sup- pressed insanity, gives instead an impression of meek- ness. David Alan Grier fares far better in the role of Mike Talman, the con artist who cannot bring him- self to go through with Roat's scheme. Talman's com- passion for (and grudging admiration of) Suzy comes through clearly in Grier's performance. Also in the cast are Leo Brockway, Charles Suther- land, Jane C. Siegel, John V. McCarthy and Benedict Stallone. Michael D. Sniderman's gloomy set, featur- ing two large windows which overlook the action like a pair of baleful eyes, is one of the most effective things about the production. Ln rm s vim ya w. , .- u m n m ier . n "M, mort.i .p licl .. a- - 1i-{li- -i -= -- ,y- ..a, - ~----- ... Until Dark, playing evenings tonight, and on August 2 and S. By RICHARD LEWIS every device necessary to concoct a suspense-filled evening. IF YOU TEND to avoid thrillers for fear they'll cause ITS PLOT INVOLVES a blifid heroine named Suzy you to have nightmares, go see Wait Until Dark who is conned by three villains into believing that her at Power Center-it poses no such threat. husband-now conveniently out of town-is guilty of The Frederick Knott play is the third production to murder.t be offered by the Michigan Rep this summer, and They convince her that a musical doll in her posses- although it contains a few unsettling moments, it is sion is the only evidence connecting her husband with hardly an edge-of-the-seat affair. the murdered woman, while actually it contains $250,- This failure is slightly puzzling. Knott is certainly 000 worth of heroin. Of course, the husband is totally a talented mystery writer (he also wrote Dial 'M' ignorant of this last fact. for Murder) and Wait Until Dark seems to include To reveal any more details would be unethical, but Sex Pistols: Aim and fire! By DAVID KEEPS j E may look like he needs a UNICEF parcel, but this British teen is proving to be a rock star with more stamina than all of the contrived slimey British beat groups that have invaded America's shores in the past decade. He is Johnny Rotten. As lead singer of the Sex Pistols, he commands a sub- culture of British youth - creating pop- ular attitudes as easily as he dictates a mutated lifestyle and fashion that has been labeled and hyped with the mon- niker "punk." He and the other Pistols, Steve Jones, guitar; Sid Vicious, bass; and Paul- Cook, drums, have also been branded, at various times, and by various people as: fascists, communists, anarchists (due to the title of their aborted first hit single, "Anarchy in the U.K.," now a collector's item) nazis, and devils' ad- vocates, THEY have become the whipping-boys of a scandal-thirsty national press, and the recent victims of a broadcast- ing media mass banning of their secondt release, "God Save The Queen", their contribution to an otherwise uneventful Jubilee year in London. And despite it all, the censored sin- gle rose to number one in the New Mu- sical Express Charts of the last weeks in June., Jt would also have gone to the top of BBC's fetid pop charts, except for the fact that the record had also been banned from a large percentage of the stores whose sales are recorded in de- ciding the ranks of these chafts. For nearly a year now the bulk of England's conservative Establishment has tried to snuff out the arrogant Pis- tols, who have given the music industry and its unwilling teenage slaves a well- deserved jab in the arm similar to Rot- ten's onstage habit of dousing lit ciga- rettes on his arm.' I-' n n L -, Johnny Rotten, Sex Pistol Sure it burns, and the Pistols have taken their lumps for being honest enough to give people only what they deserve. Until now, no record company has supported them - their first, the conglomerate EMI, dropped them in the midst of a furor created by a TV inter- view in which the words "fuck" and "bastard" and some common deriva- tions outraged the sensibilities of Eng- lish tea-timers. Throughout their careers, the Pistols have maintained a marked genius for acting naturally outrageous while simul- taneously inflaming the nation's vitriol. Nearly bankrupted by a massive tour that dwindled to a mere handful of dates, as local councils, one by one, banned their appearances, and strand- ed by their record company while tour- ing to support a single that had already entered the charts, the Pistols soon signed with A&M Records only to be let off the hook seven days later, with a handsome financial settlement. Mostly, however, it seemed that they would have been satisfied just to play, but by that time they had been effec- tively banned from performing publicly in London and most of the U.K. Finally, though, Virgin Records inked the Pistols and released the controver- sial "God Save The Queen", which pre- cipitated the most frightening turn of events yet for the/ group. Both vocalist Rotten and drummer Cook, and a number of their^ associates have been attacked with knives and lead pipes, once again making them pigeons for a press that colors the reports that finally reach America in a livid shade of yellow. Peel away what has been said about them and done to them, and the Pistols emerge as survivors and creators. Don't rely on an image, as their imitators and detractors do, just listen and find out why.