Paae SiX THE MICHIGAN DAILY .turday, August 6, 19?77 PaoeSixTHE ICHGANDAIL itrdo ,,ugust6, 197 Medieva merriment By SUSAN BARRY "HOW COUDE I DAUNCE to an harpe smale, and singe, ywis, as any nightingale whan I had dronke a draught of swete wyn." These are the words of the Wife of Bath from Chaucer's Canterbury Tales. And were the merry Wife to visit the Ann Arbor campus this week- end she would surely have a chance to indulge her passions in the true fourteenth century tradition. This Saturday and Sunday from 10 a.m. to dusk on the rolling lawns of the Music School on North Cam- pus, the Ann Arbor Medieval Festi- val will be bringing the Middle Ages back to life. Craftsmen, sing- ers, dancers, pupeteers, actors, clowns, and many others will be on hand for this weekend full of art, S The the creation of special classes,. within the music school offered in the summer, for the preparation of performances in the Festival. DENIS STEVENS AND Matthew Steel are the coordinators of the music portion of the program. Steel explained that the Collegium Musi- cum sought to provide the flavor of early music rather than striving for the authentic sound. He described the repetoire as a series of "bit hits, of the Middle Ages and Renais- sance, as edited by Denis Stevens.' Although the courses are offered through the Music School, half of the people involved in the Colle- gium are non-music majors. And it is emphasized that half of the peo- ple involved in the Festival itself are not enrolled in the University. According to Heidi Gottfried, the Festival has become "something ev- eryone feels is a permanent part of Ann Arbor culture." Several community organizations have actually evolved as a result of the interest of the participants in the successive years. One addition, the Morris dancers, are now a soci- ety that formed as the result of last year's festival. And many new performers are culled from the au- diences of previous years. There is also room, within the re- petoire for original expression. Two of the plays to be performed were contributed by local writers Ed Grinnan and Dennis Foon. ONE OF THEM, entitled "Hoo- pert the Profane," is about parsim- onious landlords and has a distinc- tive Ann Arbor influence. This play was described as "an original sa- tire cast in a medieval mold." The costumes and style of the play are from the Middle Ages but the theme is purposely timely. Another play is adapted from Bocaccio's Decameron. The other two plays to be per- formed are The Creation from the Wakefield Mystery Cycle and a fourteentn ce ntury French Moral- ity play entitled The Expectant Ab- bess. In addition to the drama there are two dance companies. One is the Morris Dance Company and the other performs Court dances. music, magic, and general merry- making.- THE ANN ARBOR Medieval Fes-} tival began in 1969 when a group of Medieval scholars, some involved with the University and othersy from the community, gathered with the intention of recreating the spi- rit of the Middle Ages. Performers of music and drama toured the lo-. cal parks and an interest was kind- led in continuing and expanding the project for the following year. The Music School decided to join the society and soon the craftsmen, became involved. As interest con- tinues, according to Heidi Gott- fried, "each year we add something else," The additions this year in- elude a Punch and Judy show and an itinerant monk, who wanders> through the crowd delivering ser- mons. The t r a d i t i o n established through the years has even led to vLov ro DV CHRIS DINA CNEIDEL THE COLLEGIUM Musicum pro- vides early chamber music for sing- ers and instrumentalists as well as Medieval and Renaissance music, An ensemble billing themselves as "The Broken Consort" will also perform. An art fair is planned for the area surrounding the stage where craftsmen will be at work and, ac- cording to Gottfried, people can walk through and talk to different artists." Between and during the various performances an Intermezzi troupe wil. be in attendance. The troupe consists of jugglers, fools, wizards, knights, fencers, and P.D.Q. Bach singers. The lawn of the music school, ex- plains Gottfried, "is a perfect set- ting for drama. It's a natural audi- torium with a stage in the valley and room on the hill for an audi- ence." Banners will decorate the site and a general atmosphere of medieval festivity w i11 be main- tained. For this reason those who attend are welcome to dress for the occasion. It promises to be a merry time for all. Susan Barry frequently re- views .concerts and stage plays for the Daily's Arts Page. Daily Photo by CHRISTINA SCHNEIDER Friedan & By MARNIE HEYN It Changed My Life by Betty Friedan, Random House (New York, 1976), 388 pages, $10 (recently remaindered) Going Too Far by Robin Morgan. Random House (New York, 1977), 333 pages, $10 , OLD FRIENDS. Random douse has pulled a coup of sorts (or a cuckoo, or per- haps a counter-coup). They contracted with.. both Bet- ty Friedan and Robin Mor- gan to produce books with ioentical formats and, it may be argued, identical contents, during the same fiscal year. I suspect that these two books are part of the mar- keting serif cindes memt raphies (gh( wise) of sile scnnel. Ran tying tc ca they considi the Women's za,. As the goodbye to a But these friends. Morj an have beep mind 2nd sense of self the people tcothbrush during the x so. Severalt in these vol sponsible fc me I had a and then ga Morgan: 20-20 hindsight es which . in- portunity to hone my mind mat for these books is due i m p e d e getting anything aires and biog- wnile all about me were a mild post facto scolding. done. osted or other- saying "Women can't write in general the articles de- FRIEDAN h a s collected nt movies per- REAL literature" and "So- serve to be anthologized her writings of the last 13 dom House is cialism must come first" along with some selective years in five sections with sh in on what and "But WHY don't you c o m m e n t a r y (al- rather stuffy subtitles. In er the end of want to get married and though Morgan's diary en- t he first, "Consciousness," s Book Bonan- teach nursery school?" tries and sillier leaflets she recaps the social myths saying goes, I OWE THESE PEOPLE and Friedan's s 1 e e p y about women during the era ll that. ' a lo't. And, since most of speeches and more repeti- ,of McCarthy the First, and are really old my original copies of the tive McCall's columns de- responds to letters she re- gan and Fried- articles got lost being serve merciful oblivion In- ceived after the publication n closer to my passed around the grape- oead)f The Feminine Mystique. feelings anld vine back in the Golden And~ I, for one, would be ipressive; t is disquaeting than most of Dacade (back .when most gad to have both hard- that Friedan orders them to I've shared boks about women had headed historical accounts prove that what all women holders with nervous ladies in long ruf- of the feminist renais- want (in a d d i t #o n to a past decade or fled dresses on paperback sance and cleareyed per- "normal" family, of cpurse) of the articles covers), I am glad to have sonal recollections f r o m Is a graduate degree and a umes were re- copies again. But .I wish it Friedan and Morgan. When professional career. She ig- or convincing were some way other than any of t h a t happens, it nores the insistent sugges- mind, after all, this. happens in flashes; multi- tions from r e a d e r s and ve me the op- Whoever devised the for- plicity of function seems to See FEMINIST, Page 7