Aim ePage Six Arts & Entertainent ° Thursday, August 12, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PTP finishes season with two final thuds (EDITOR'S NOTE: Due to the in- transigence of the Professional The- arcProgram and TherDaily's fi- nancial situation, we were not able to cover most of the Michigan Rep- ertory's summer program. And as the tickets for both of the plays reviewed below were purchased out of the reviewer's pocket, we would like to state that the running of this piece in no way constitutes a compliance with the PTP's self- serving policies.) By JOANNE KAUFMAN 'Hedda Gabler' [N THE HANDS of the Uni- versity's Repertory Com- pany last weekend, Hedda Gab- ler - the story of a complex, highly neurotic woman caught in a stultifying atmosphere with a clod of a husband - became more of a Norwegian Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman than the dark Naturalistic drama Henrik Ibsen intended it to be. The settings, designed by David Ziolko, were appropriately stark and heavy; Stuart Sacks' light- ing was appropriately ominous; but the characters who sat on the brocade and moved through the shade turned in, for the most part, unconvincing and shallow performances. Ibsen, like O'Neill, is not a wise choice for a young com- pany. The varying gray tones with which Ibsen drawsthis characters become simple black and white portraits in the hands of amateurs or semi-profession- als. In this production at Pow- er Center, characters were eith- er victims or victimizers, and there was no evidence of any depth or growth in them from one act to the next. One of the difficulties with Hedda Gabler is that it is a play about people caught up in an unbelievably cloying world, and it is a hit of a trick for a character to convey boredom without turning in a boring per- formance. Director Diane Kamp Daverman apparently tried to avoid the problem entirely by having her cast play for laughs, laughs often coming at inappro- priate moments; and by relega- ting the play to something of a soap opera with everything and everyone neatly marked out for the audience - good characters on one side, bad ones on the other, and all about as substantial as cardboard. FIRST FOR THE white char- acters: Henry Van Kuiken as the well-meaning but doltish husband of Hedda was fine. Since the character of George Tesman is essentially, a flat one, the audience should expect little change from him as the play progresses. Kathryn Ness as George's Aunt Julia was arch, too arch for my taste, and her characterization seem- ed built for gathering as many guffaws as possible. But let me reserve my carping for the rest of the performances - Sally Bublitz's Thea Elvsted, John Wojda's Eilert Lovborg and Carol Ann Skimin's Hedda. A reading of the play would lead us to believe that Thea is a woman with at least the capacity for strength. But Bub- litz was more reminiscent of the poor waif who lives* only to be tied to railroad tracks than of a woman who flouts convention for what she believes in and who inspires the artist in an apathetic man like Lov- borg. And what about John Wojda as Lovborg? His portrayal gave no sense of a man who would be worth inspiring or worth the attentions of the young, spirited Hedda. That he could be cap-, able of writing a world-shatter- ing book was put beyond credi- bility. HEDDA GABLER is a deep- ly troubled, deeply unhappy woman. But she is not anything like a female Iago or a Wicked Witch of the West, and that is rather how Skimin played her. Admittedly, she was not especi- ally helped by her supporting cast, but the Michigan Rep's Hedda came out as unmitigat- ingly black as the dress she wore in her final scene. The final line of the play be- longs to Judge Brack, who gasps that "people don't do things like that." Let me amend that slightly: the Michigan Repertory Company shouldn't have done a thing like Hedda Gabler. I don't think it fair to an audience to see Ibsen done.poor- ly. Neither do I think it fair for an obviously talented com- pany to let itself be shown to such poor advantage. 'Once in a Lifetime' WHILE THE REP was busy with Hedda last week, they were also putting on a production of Kaufman and Hart's Once in a Lifetime - and not doing much of a better job of that. Lunacy was the order of the ovening. The play is about three small-time vaudevillians who scrap their old act and take up a new one - a speech and elocution school - and hightail it to Hollywood to help movie- land ease into the talkies. And what they findcis a Hollywood that's just as crazy as we al- ways thought it would be. The cigarette girls look like star- lets, the bellboys are dead ring- ers for John Gilbert, and every- one but everyone, dahling, is trying to get his or her face on the silver, no longer silent screen and a name written in klieg lights. And that is what the vaude- villians, May (Kathy Bade- grow), George (John Wojda) and Jerry (Mark Forth) plan to help everyone do. A lot goes See PTP, Page 7 Jeffrey Selbst 'nep Presidents, edeification, and crossword puzzles INDEPENDENCE, Mo. - This is the city where Bess Truman lives out her remaining years, a place now gone to fast food joints, charming old houses, and lots of road signs. Right off Highway 24, in an imposing stone structure, reposes the Harry S Truman Memorial Library and Museum, which includes, among other things, HST's gravesite. Tourists make their various pilgrimages from everywhere- Nebraska, Ohio, Kansas. There is a register that they sign, inside the room that contains Margaret Truman's wedding dress. The museum includes such delightful items as this: the china from the Presidential yacht, a mural by Thomas Hart Benton, and the "convention room," including memorabilia from the 1948 Re- publican and Democratic shindigs. Somewhere in the recesses of this edifice lies the Harry S Truman Library, which contains, or so the slide show tells us, over 10 million papers collected during the Truman administra- tions, 1945-53. HST wanted the public to be able to study the inner workings of his presidency, and so this for posterity. The town is Truman-happy, much as Grand Rapids is Ford- happy. Though one suspects that Independence has rather more reason, the reverence with which people approach the gravesite forces one to wonder whether it is correct to make a god of a mere government executive. If indeed it is true that one aspect of the American myth includes the foolish notion that any child may grow up to be President, isn't this in fact a glorification of the ordinary, perhaps even a celebration of the mediocre? The slide show in the museum's auditorium also tells us, and rather gratuitously, that we may visit the Eisenhower Memorial Library in Abilene, Kansas. But by any account, Dwight D. Eisen- hower was a smiling, popular, ultimately do-nothing president and one of the worst we've had. Certainly his papers are worth an historical and possibly a voyeuristic peek, yet if the same exposition of all the minutiae of his career are concomitant, where do we draw the line between a proper reverence and the worship of manufactured idols? America loves celebrities; I guess that ex- plains Charo's appeal. God knows she can't do anything. I JUST RECEIVED, the day before I left, the most incredible book. Entitled The World's Most Difficult Crossword Puzzles, it is a compendium of puzzles by and submitted to the London Observer's Crossword Editor, Azed (Jonathan Crowley). The English like their crossword puzzles somewhat different than what we are used to. Instead of the definition variety, as we have in the U. S., they have cryptic puzzles, where all words do not necessarily cross-check, where each clue is a tiny word- puzzle in itself: and they are absolutely diabolical. The English version, however, seems more experimental. The puzzles are more free-form, substituting on occasion groups of let- ters rather than merely one, or taking gross liberties in style, puzzle shape, and direction. The closest thing America has to offer in this area is the diagramless, and though a puzzle fana- tic myself, I'd never try one of those. Well, perhaps in a couple of decades. We are also at a disadvantage, seeing as how we don't even speak the same language as our English cousins, when it comes to blinkin' idioms. Good luck. Cellist Piatigorsky dead LOS ANGELES (P) - Gregor Piatigorsky, who became well known as one of the world's greatest cellists, died last Friday at age 73. Cause of death has not been disclosed, but a spokesman for the University of Southern Californsa (USC), where Piatigorsky had taught since 1962, said the Russian-born musician had been ill for a long time. Piatigorsky learned to play the cello during his teen years in Russia. During his accomplished 45-year career, the cellist performed throughout the world, gaining honor- ary musical degrees and top posts at many universities, especially in the U. S. - where he immigrated in 1929 and lived the larger part of his life. LAST FEBRUARY, the musician gave one of his last performances on his 261-year-old Stradivarius cello for the opening of the USC School of Gerontology. During his later years, Piatigorsky became interested in the plight of senior citizens. "Old fiddles sound the best, old wine tastes the best," was a popular saying of the elderly musician. He is survived by his widow, Jacqueline de Rothschild; a daughter, Mrs. Jephta Drachman of Baltimore, and a son, Dr. Joram Piatigorsky, of Bethesda, Md. The mellow tones of his careful bow wil be sorely missed by musical audiences across the world. Gretry on By TOM GODELL WHEN THE average music- lover is asked to name composers of the classical per- iod, two come to mind imme- diately - Haydn and Mozart. There were others, forgotten for the best of reasons. But an exception among these lesser- knowns is Andre Gretry, whose music is noteworthy for a col- orful use of the orchestra far in advance of its time, and an- ticipating Berlioz. Now, some of Gretry's most delightful scores can be heard as performed by Paul Strauss and the Orchestra de Liege, on Seraphim S-60268. On this re- cording, one delight follows an- other. There are three over- tures: L'Epreuve villageoise, Les Mariages samnites, and Richard Coeur de Lion. Each is characterized by Gretry's amazing melodic gift, which in some areas is almost as rich as Mozart's. MAKE NO mistake, this mu- sic is never overly-sweetened, like so much French operatic Seraphim: music from the pens of Auber, Thomas or Meyerbeer. The lovely tunes are always offset by dramatic interludes and contrasting episodes; and not one bar of music lacks inspira- tion. Gretry has often been criticiz- ed for his lack of solid theoreti- cal training. This, the pundits claim, results in thin instru- mentation (often with nothing at all between the soprano and bass voices in his arias) and strange harmonies. But to look at this composer's music sole- ly from a theoretical standpoint is to miss the magic of his creations. Auber. commenting on a por- tion of Gretry's work, once re- marked, "This harmony is cer- tainly not correct, and would never have entered the mind of what is called a musical savant. And yet, if you try to change it, you may make it more ac- curate, bit it will be wanting in relief and expression." THIS PROMTPTED 19th cen- tlrv critic Oscar Commetant to say, "That is because the awk- Delightful wardness of Gretry is the awk- wardness of an artistic genius, and that is a thousand times better than the accuracy of a cold and unimaginative musi- cian." However, Gretry's ability to develop material symphonically never rivals Haydn or Mozart, and indeed he is far better in less ambitious musical forms such as arias and dances. The ballet music on this disc in- cludes a suite, entitled Danses Villageoisis, compiled by Gev- aert and drawn from various operas; as well as containing dances from Cephale et Procris. Gretry's tones can be spright- ly and brilliant as in the "Tam- borin" from Cephale, or tender and majestically proportioned as in the "Minuet" which fol- lows it. Either way the result is a pure joy for the listener, ftll of beautiful melody and dramatic power. The perform- ance by the Orchestre de Liege is wonderful, and while this is the first time I have heard its forces in action, I sincerely hope it will not be the last.