7 PUT EA IIUSTFO VI AWAY if you wn (Xv ithoi~itf 01 VO4'r I (J'Yo'Us for one,\ 'i i,* you r it lifind 'you Tuesday, September 15, 1981 Page. 6 The Michigan.DaI The horses are clean in Camelot F RA DAY. - I___________ ANN ARBOR GOLD AND SILVER EXCHANGE 216 S. Fourth Ave. 996-9059 WE BUYy coWANTED P 0EUBOY PLATINUM IWPOCKET Any Item Marked t l4kf -8k1 WATCHES DENTAL GOLD FOREIGN GOLD GOLD METALS CLASS RINGS WEDDING BANDS EYEGLASS FRAMES GOLD COINS GOLD PINS GOLD CUFF LINKS BROKEN JEWELRY DIAMONDS GOLD WATCHES Y SILVER We purchase any cut, any shape GOLD CHAINS corn + sterlng Flotware any color stone TeoaSets * Jewelry 'Industial We pay by weight Hours: Mon. thru Sat. 9:00 AM - 5:00 PM State certified scales Dance Theatre Studio 711 N. University (near State St,) Ann Arbor separate classes for: children: ballet, creative movement adults: ballet, modern jazz new classes beginning September 14 for durrent class schedule and more information: 995-4242 By PAMELA KRAMER The current production of Camelot, playing at the Masonic Temple in Detroit through Sept. 27, has everything it takes for a truly great fairy tale-almost. It has dashing knights and lovely maidens colorfully attired in. rich costumes and dancing about the lavish sets of Camelot and its surroun- ding mystical forest. It has an enchanter to guide the kingdom through turbulent time. It' even has a beautiful queen] torn by lave, who sings as Guenevere of Camelot ought to. THE VIEW OF Arthur's reign provided by the Lerner and Loewe musical is quite a contrast to that in the recent John Boorman film, Ex- calibur. Boorman's vision was mired in mud and gore and crammed with storyline. Camelot neatly streamlines the Ar- thurian legend down to a standard Broadway romance-gone are the filth and brutality; the horses just don't shit. The result is a magical fairy tale of love laced with heartbreak, vengeance, and a hopeful vision for the future. Romantic dreams, rather than lives, are what's at stake here-and that's what makes it such an appealing story. The problem is King Arthur's singing-undeniably an important feature of the musical-which is un- speakably bad. This is not to say that Richard Harris' Arthur is a complete failure. At the beginning of the story he is a young king, scared to death of meeting his bride-to-be. He bounds about the stage like a frisky little puppy, im- ploring Merlin to give him advice on the matters of love and kingship. HE IS A king who wishes he could hold any position in the world other Finally, he truth about women, the rut women don't want ;guys to know. 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IL 60647. than the one he holds. And his boyish at- titude is fine, except for the fact that when he sings-which he does of- ten-his voice holds anything but a youthful zest or strength. Harris is not only incapable of holding notes, he is incapable of hitting most of them. This becomes more ac- ceptable as Arthur moves from what should be youthful hope to weary pain as his round table splinters and collap- ses. But the young Arthur needs to be portrayed as a young Arthur. Even Richard Burton, who was Ar- thur for the first part of tthis produc- tion's tour last' year, could accomplish that. And god knows, Burton can't sing. But he has a certain magic, and a speaking voice that can carry him through virtually any role with more force than Harris will ever have. Aside from his inability to sing, Harris' Arthur is really quite a "kingly" king. In fact, he is at his best when he is being either stern or (at times) woeful over the love between his best friendind his wife. THE OTHER MAJOR characters are nearly always at their best. Guenevere (Meg Bussert) is, first, a petulant maiden who grieves that she has had no wars fought over her. She grows nobly into position as queen, replete with grace and dignity. And this production is kind to Guenevere, by omitting a song (performed in the original run on Broadway) in which she ruthlessly and delightedly plots Lancelot's death. Yet Lancelot du Lac (Richard Muenz) who, by all rights, should be the most dignified and honorable charac- ter-he is,' after all, perfect-lightens the story up considerably with his lack of humility. Muenz pokes fun at the flawless creature he portrays. Singing of his endless virtue and skill, he gazes admiringly at his own reflection in the flat of his sword; just moments later he falls prostrate before Arthur, whom he has unknowingly wounded. "Forgive me, not because I deserve it, but because if you forgive me-I'll feel sooo guilty,,' Lancelot begs when he discovers the king's identity. But clearly, as soon as he falls in love with Guenevere, his self-obsession-and with it his "perfection"-disappears. This enables the queen to fall in love QUEEN GUENEVERE (Meg Bussert) steps back, startled at the lack of humility shown by Lancelot (Richard Muenz) as he offers his service to her and to King Arthur (Richard Harris). Camelot is showing at the Masonic Temple in Detroit through September 27. with him; he is no longer a pretentious knight, untouchable upon his pedestal. Muenz carries off the transformation with ease. LANCELOT MAY ham it up-a bit too much, at times-but King Pellinore, a friend from Arthur's youth, is Camelot's informal jester. He doesn't, have to beg for laughs, as Merlin does in his brief time on the stage. He's a "jolly-good-what-what" person, and his simplicity in the midst of the com- plexities of love and right versus wrong adds a levity necessary for the story to remain a fairy tale. And, of course, there is an outright "bad guy" to balance things. Arthur's bastard son, Mordred (Albert Insin- nia), is gleefully malicious as he sets out to ruin the dream of Camelot. Insin- nia spits out his distaste for virtue, frolicking about the throne after he's tried it on for size. But a good fairy tale needs to end on a hopeful note, and this one does-more so than Burton's Camelot. The dream of a p6rfect world will live, because it is good. But if everything from the weather to the humor of th land can be controlled by roya decree-as Arthur claims it can be-then certainly it should be possible to do something about the king's voice. 1 - 5 weekdays Eyes: Only one worth seeing By ADAM KNEE The State Street Theaters currently offer the Ann Arbor moviegoer two spy films dealing with similar thematic material from markedly different per- spectives: Eye of the Needle and For Your Eyes Only. Eye of the Needle is by far the more artistically successful of the two and is well worth catching before the end of its run at the State. DONALD SUTHERLAND stars as Faber, a ruthless, cruelly efficient German agent trying to flee World War, II Britain with information about the /'coming Allied invasion of Europe. In at- I y( l hi IA IliIII MILES DAVIS THE MAN WITH THE HORN including Shout/Back Seat Betty/Fat Time/A ida/Ursula I, .' ;. p& L: MILE F A I L NE OR C 5 i'" " ""' * " " 0 e * * 0 0 *.* * 0 - * 0 0 * 0 0 O .. O 0 0. . O 0 0 ;W LP . 0.** ASSETTE " --"-" r o~oooo" SG C' ~1 O 1,, aS 0 sO " 6s hoa. OV&S*10 t i "s0 0 0 0 0 \ V110 0 .p. COQ y, rtt " ;. * . * 0- . 0, & Itt * * e'elsOa t t'. .p. Give the0gift mek' 5u ,t ," , . " it''G , "" of musi . \O ,*. * *0 ' N EI* * 0 *' *0 «"i 50RR'..0 ". . 0 "0 * " ". "C " " . 0. 0 0000" \0 .00 "r 0 0 s -.. ss-* *.'. ** - * -ri. Qr 0 * .0 *o '* - * * - -0 0 0 0 Hill Aud* 8:00pm. ": Jp S C " ..r- tempting to rendezvous with a German U-boat during a storm, he becomes stranded on a remote coastal island, where he is taken in by a disabled British fighter pilot and his wife, Lucy (Kate Nelligan). The emotionally am- bigious relationship that ensues bet- ween the Nazi Faber and the Briton Lucy provides the major focus for the film.- What we have here, then, is not another action-packed espionage movie, but a moving, psychologically complex drama in which the character are forced to pit personal instint against patriotic duty. Ultimately, this drama serves to reveal the human side of war-or, more accurately, the lack of one. DIRECTOR RICHARD Marquand displays such precision and control in his treatment of Eye of the Needle that Follett's pacifist vision beams clearly." All of the technical work is at once unobtrusive and subliminally effectiv4 in drawing us into the film's world. For example, the camera's coverage is simple and concise-we see what we need to and n6thing more-yet at the same time the closeness and angles of shots are subtly varied to underscore the drama. The scripting is equally efficient; there is hardly a superfluous moment in the narrative. Settings and even war- drobes are chosen with the film's end in mind, yet still retain a naturalistic feel. This cleancut style allows the dram, to reach us without im- pediment-drama that is indeed striking. Sutherland and Nelligan give entirely convincing performances in challenging roles. They play characters See A PAIR, Page 7 I Tickets are $12.50, $11.00 and $9.50 reserved and are now on sale at the Michigan Union Box Office and all CTC *u Ftlets. r I' ec~pseI w I MILES DAVIS THE MAN WITH THE HORN, including: Shbut/Back Seat BettyFat Time/AidaiUrsula The Collaborative An Alternative Art Experience 00 .: x x . t : _ / J .,,", Cnange your evening routine. on : :"' > I Ii