The Michigan Daily-Friday, October 24, 1980-Page 9 A stormy, successful 'Spring' By JOSHUA PECK The road from sexual innocence to wisdom is an ugly and tortuous one. It looms with false friends, with sadists who would provide a qpick and painful education, with supposed allies who suddenly wheel and become vicious ad- versaries. The road teems with living things, both captivating and deadly. Every rosebush the traveler encounters is of two fragrances: The sweet scent of heady desire wars with its own under- .9 side-the fulsome stench of discovery that sexuality s no tool of ours, but rather is our uncompromising master. SPRING AWAKENING, now on proud' display at the Power Center, cynically chews up its audience's romantic myths about adolescence. In jarringly episodic fits and starts, it takes on sim- * ple, soothing understandings of -the human libido and dismisses them as the woefully imadequate panaceas they ;are. Unbridled faith in human goodness lakes a humiliating slap in the face, but so .does the equally naive supposition that the world and all its inhabitants Are utterly rotten. Virginity is seen as unbearably appealing, and as an in-. vitation to the most cynical mentors. Jim Martin, director of the Univer- sity production, extends the play's wide horizons to even greater frontiers. He takes the production boldly from its strictly sexual first stirrings to a finale. that battles with the very ambiguiities of existence. The (struggle between chasity and fornication becomes an. agreeably accessible metaphor for much larger questions of life and death. Spring Awakening, written by Frank Wedekind in 1891 in Germany and set in the same time and place, focuses on a pack of 14-year-old boys, students at a rigorous academy, and the girls who fill out their world. It is a wbrld apart from the one they have known for their first CHILD ABUSE SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP)-A new' computerized system for reporting child abuse has been put into practice here, reports a management infor- mation publication. MIS Week says the program, operating on the Illinois Department of Child and. Family Services computer configuration, solves a big problem by centralizing records from more than'70 field offices. The system makes it possible to update cases quickly and establish common denominators. And, if a child is in imminent danger'of a repeat attack an alert can be out on that case to prevent further abuse. A key function of the new system is to match names and clues to turn up possible leads in cases where the offen- der remains undetected, such cases as those where the abuser takes the child for injury treatment to different doctors to avoid revealing pattern. The telephone hotline system operates 24 hours daily and can handle 18 calls simultaneously. Officials ex- pect 10,000 calls per month this year. Information from all incoming calls is added to the data-base of cases going back 15 years. 12 or 1 years, for while their childhoods may have been paced by hidden carnal desires, here they are bursting with erotic energy. Their yearning for sexual freedom is the play's leitmotif, and ultimately its lifeblood. THE FIRST SCENE shows us Wen- dla Bergmann, perched on the threshhold between girlhood and the great beyond. As played by Elaine Devlin, Wendla's medium of com- munication is acidly at odds with her message. She talks and behaves like an innocent, but her principal motivation seems to be to free herself of the sexual restrictions her mother imposes, as symbolized by their argument over an excessively modest frock: "Would it be better if I was too hot?," Wendla demands. "You ought to thank God your precious doesn't rip the sleeves off, her dress early one morning ... The adolescents' rampant lust and their desire to act on it battles with the limitations of their parents' .tarchy Christian world throughout the drama. We meet two young friends, Melchior and Moritz, whose chatter ranges from child-rearing to homework, but whose thoughts are dominated by their in- sistent sexuality. Melchior, a burgeoning intellectual, proclaims shame "a product of man's education" and then proceeds to put his theory to work by nearly goading his friend into a homosexual encounter. I Moritz is at once desperate for sexual knowledge and terrified by its prospect. He begs his friend for a sexual education, only to. flee as Melchior begins his explanation of human biology. PLAYWRIGHT WEDEKIND and his translator Edward Bond toy with a theory that women's sexuality, at least in its incipient years, is ih part an exer- cise in masochism. Elaine Devlin brings that theory magically to life, and in so doing emerges as the most out- standing performer in the show. With delightfully childish eagerness she presses a companion for the details of her beatings at the hands of her father. She seeks out a torturer of her own in the person of Melchior, whom she cajoles into delivering a sound (but badly staged)-thrashing. Finally, their relationship takes the inevitable turn from violence to copulation in the most achingly bittersweet mbment of the performance. Scenic designer Alan Billings has done exciting work with the Power Cen- ter stage to'hammer home the themes of Wedekind's masterwork. Upstage is the world of parents and teachers, with all its attendant forebodings and men- dacity about sexuality. It is ap- propriately sterile; unadorned black and white surfaces pound at the senses in clean, stern lines, all vertical and horizontal. A crucifix on one wall hints at being the core of the lifelessness surrounding it. On the thrust, where the "children" play, a very different environment prevails. The stage juts asym- metrically into the audience. Leafy, vegetation protrudes from the stage's perimeter, but it is weighted by op- pressively heavy boulders and in spots seems to be on its way to decay. The thrust is coated with a thick layer Of soot that brings home the truth of the adolescent world: It is vivid and rebellious, but no paradise of earthly pleasures. There are pain and death in it too, and they make it even more hellish than the dignified universe of the chastising adults. ANDREW DIETZ plays Melchior unevenly, but comes off persuasively overall. His intellectual pontification has a false ring, but his conniving in pursuit of Wendla is properly Machiavellian. And at the play's end, caught up in a literal life-and-death struggle, Dietz' bewilderment is affec- ting indeed. Less moving is Nafe Alick in the role of Moritz, who carries his sexual agonizing to unsympathetic extremes. Understatement has always been direc- tor Jim Martin's strong point, so it is expecially surprising that he should have let Alick's panting, screaming catharsis get out of hand., Of the smaller roles, Hanschen Rilow is most ably handled by William Freimuth. In a prelude to Wendla's romantically managed defloration, Freimuth displays the ugly, stinging side of the very same drive. He abuses himself-to use an archaic but apropos term-while debasing an image of the goddess Venus. Freimuth's misogynistic vitriol, delivered in a ragged,angry tenor, makes for a most effective exposition of sex's seamier side. AN EXCELLENT script, clever design, and fairly good acting all play a part in Spring Awakening's success, but those qualities alone would not have made the effort nearly so brilliant. It is Jim Martin's fiery directing that gives, the production its greatest advantage. When Moritz is being tormented by some of his crueler peers, there is a moment where the boys, huddled together in their short-brimmed brown caps, bring the authoritarian monster to mind that Germany later spawned. The analogy is a good one; every bit as cruel as younger kids, adolescents do indeed possess the power and confiden- ce to make them small-scale fascists. In a few spots, Martin has wisely changed the play's script to modernize and intensify its imagery. When Melchoir and Moritz chuckle at one point abouta friend whose dreams are about eclair pastries (instead of about sex), the irony is readily apparent. The script makes reference instead to an apple tart, which would have been rather difficult to decipher. Martin's'crowning touch is the play's final scene. He has cast the very capable Martin Walsh as the mysterious Masked Man, an arrogant, unpleasant hedonist who represents nothing less than Life itself. The dialogue leading up to the denouement begins to document the harsh realities of life, yet clings to the conviction that existence still outmerits its alter- native. The unveiling of Life's truth is underscored by a brilliant and spec- tacular final moment, the details of which ought not be divulged. But the shock of that moment leaves us simultaneously laughing and discom- fited, a strikingly compelling com- bination. It should not be missed, and- nor should the hours of intriguing stageplay that precede it. Spring Awakening is the University's best student production in years. Tne nrsty of M 2 DEPARTMENT OF THEATRE AND DRAMA GUEST ARTIST SERIES presents. spring awakening by Frank Wedekind A* Ct. 2-25, 8pm Oct. 26, 2pm In the Power Center Tickets at P.T P. Call 764-0450 MasterCharge and Visa accepted Motor City Theatre Organ Society, Inc. presents "The Phantom of the Opera". STARRING LON CHANEY, SR. with Theatre Organist Extraordinaire Dennis James at the console of the Barton Organ I Tickets: $6, $5, $4,I Available at The Michigan Theatre # box office, and The Redford t Theatre box office, 17360 Lahser Rd., Detroit, 537-2560 a )on a z In Nm "o a Cinema I1 presents ? *M Mildred Pierce (Michael Curtiz, 1945) Classic screen adaptation of one of James M. Cain's darkest stories. Joan Crawford plays the suffering mother who rises from poverty to affluence as a pie tycoon only to suffer because of an ungrateful child. Joan Crawford won an Academy Award for her no-holds barred por-, trayal of,mother love. (111 min:) 7:00 ONLY Ki!Row . (Somod, 1941) Classic Warner Brothers drama about the corrupt and psychotic side of small town America. All-star cast includes Ann Sheridan, Charles Coburn, Robert Cummings, Claude Rains, and, in his greatest role,,I Ronald Reagan. When Ronald wakes up and finds to his horror that" his legs have been needlessly amputated, he asks the same question that even now plagues our entire country: "Where's the rest of me?"J 9:00 ONLY KingCreole (Mich l Curtiz, 1959) Just before Elvis, the King, joined the armed forces, he completed King Creole. He sings", he struts, he ACTS; it's Elvis at his best, strug-- gling to the top of the heap as a young drifter given a once in a life-4 time chance to star in a real fancy nightclub shoav. (116 min.) 7:00 ONLY' Jailhouse Rock (Richard Thrope, 1957) Elvis learns music from his cellmate while serving a prison term forj manslaughter. Once loose, he quickly rises to fame as a recording' artist. One of the earliest and best Elvis films, made at the height of his sexual stardom. With Judy Tyler and Mickey Shaughnessy. (96 min.) 9:00 'U La Salamandre (Alain Thinner, 1971) The story of Rosamonde (Bulle Ogier), a complex, endlessly fascinating!: modern woman. Like the salamander, she can endure fire-of re- pressive work-and survive. Two men become enchanted with her, and the fun begins. Influenced by Godard and Truffaut, Tanner pro- $ sents a many-sided vision of a complicated woman and the issues which surround her. (124 min.) 7:00 and 9:15 All shows in Angell Hall Single show admission $2.00. Double feature $3.00 Series tickets still available 10 shows/i 5 dollars Next week: Hiroshima, MON AMOUR GOLDFINGER THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLE$ I MARRIED A WITCH F ---- NOW OPEN , 18 E. WASHINGTON ,(NEXT TO BIMBO'S) intimate Atmosphere LIVE ENTERTAINMENT Wednesday thru Saturday-NO COVER HAPPY HOURS Monday thru Friday, 4 pm to 8 pm Hors D'oeuvres are on us! Fish n' Chips and sandwiches available English ale on tap 118-E.-Washington 663-9757 i BOOKSTORES INC 1216 SOUTH UNIVERSITY ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN 48104 (313) 663-9333 TELEX 23-0720 Join Uhte 19flQ Arts Staff . L. GOII Bus' *GOUTOF lESS SAL E i The Gargoyle Punk Edition Soon to be Sold Wher- ever Skinny Ties and Dark Glasses Are Found. Took For It Starting October 27th is preserved on Fm. n FC) ncOn M All Stock Must Go 1. BOOKS 20 % Off List T-SHIRTS 50% Off List SCHOOL SUPPLIES 40% Off List MEDICAL EQUIPMENT 40% Off List Above Does Not Apply To Special Orders I i