The Michigan Daily-Thursday, November 20, 1980-Page 7 WILL YOU SURVIVE ...? ! ? R. C. company shines~1 iply -mmmmms r The truth about.Sunday Funnies By ANNE GADON Local theatre buffs are spreading rumors about Residential College (RC) dfana productions-such as "It's some of the best theatre in town." The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui by the RC/Brecht Co. played to sold -out audiences for a much-too-short two weekends this summer while the Extra lCiunchy Theatre's (mostly RC/Brecht folks) political comedy, We Can't Pay, We Won't Pay was lamentably overlooked. With the RC Players evening of one acts, Moliere's The Imaginary Cukold and Chekhov's The Proposal, the group shows every in- dication of keeping the RC's growing dramatic reputation intact. What the dozen or so mostly freshperson actors lack in polish, they make up in vitality and perspiration. And at the end of an hour they leave an audience panting for more. A major reason for the evening's suc- cess is the company's choice of plays. Moliere's farce, with its running sight gags and clever rhyming, is a perfect vehicle for them. The characters are so stock and so serious about themselves that they are outrageously laughable.. They swoon a bit, hold street signs in . front of their faces to escape detection, land wildly brandish foils and broad swords which they drop at the slightest growl of animosity. The storyline is sheer puffery-you see Gorgibus wants his daughter Celie to marry a wealthy man but Celie wants to wed Lelie who thinks Celie has left him for Sganarelle who is really married to Martine, -but she has the hots for Lelie .. . You get the picture. It's a seventeenth century cartoon. The moral's as heavy and in- strictive as "never believe what you hear." DIRECTOR HILARY Cohen has staged the comedy in the style of Moliere's day. A short dance sequence precedes, the dialogue-the characters pirouette across the stage, halting to acknowledge their future partners in a manner suggestive of the action to follow. In the scene change between The Imaginary Cuckold and The Proposal the cast shifts a few pieces of scenery, gives a vest here and a coat there to the Chekov players, and the seventeenth century French street is transformed into a Russian drawing room. Anton Chekhov's comic one-act play, The Proposal, was the weaker of the two productions, but not by much. The Moliere play had the advantage of a large cast and visual humor to keep the snappy pacing up, while the Chekhovian drawing-room comedy relied more on deftness with dialogue. But it's a howler. Ivan Lomaff asks his neighbor Stepen Chabukov if he may ask Stepen's daughter Natalya to marry him. He's a hypochondrical nebish. One wonders what Natalya could possibly see in this twit of a man whose nildest oddity is a problem with his left side-when he gets upset it sud- denly stiffens and whatever is in his hands goes flying scross the room. Before he can even propose to Natalya, they engage in a hilarious catfight over a piece of property which both of their families claim to own. This is all too much for Ivan. Stepen and Natalya even think he's dead for a while. But of course everything ends on a joyful note. Even Ivan admits it. "Hey, I'm hap- py," he says. And then he grabs his ankle and exclaims "Ow, my foot's asleep." BUT IF The Proposal occasionally misses a beat, the presence of Grace Morand as Natalya makes up for it. Morand has a face as mobile as silly "putty. In repose her face wears a sunny smile. When aroused she summons up a number of hilariously fearsome looks. She has a certain depth and poise that her fellow performers lack. She runs through a whirlwind of emotions in fif- teen minutes, twisting a guffaw out of the audience at every step. Jenny Shikes' set is a marvelous piece . of invention. With the rearrangement of a few simple set pieces, the "Street of Fools" becomes a set of couches, chairs and bookcases. And costumer Beth Balousec has cleaned out the RC closets to outfit the cast in sausage curls and lace. The RC Players are an exuberant if unpolished group. But if their adolescence is this proficient just wait until they have a term of two more of experience. By ANNE SHARP My editor eyed me acorss the desk then hit me with it: "Okay, there's this student comedy troupe in town. Call themselves the Sunday Funnies. Ren- ted out the Union ballroom for Thur- sday and Friday nights at 8; they're selling tickets to unsuspecting people, claim they're gonna do a show, humor sketches and music. I want you to meet with them. Find out what the scam is. Now, before they pull any more funny stuff." So, I contacted the two kingpins-writer-directors, they like to call themselves-of the Funnies, and arranged a little tete-a tete at the Brown Jug. As we munched our salads and sandwiches, I sized them up. Steve Kurtz-a stocky, tow-headed character with a Groucho-esque non-stop patter style. Tony Lempke-a tall, willowy engineering student, behind whose demure gold wire rims lay a wit of tem- pered steel. I set fire to a Marlboro, switched on the tape recorder and broached my first question. DAILY: So. This is your operation. How long has it been going on? TONY: With this cast, just since Sep- tember. STEVE: The Sunday Funnies've been around before that. DAILY: How long? Was it always your show? TONY: No. (To Steve) You want to tell the story of the Sunday Funnies? STEVE: You want to hear the whole story? Oh boy, are you in for a treat! Should I start? Who should we insult that we don't like? TONY: Now wait a second, this is going to the media, so we won't insult anyone. Not even anyone's intelligence. Tom Drotai started the group. It was a year ago, at this time in November, when he put out an ad for writers. To make along story short, we started out with a group of people, and eventually split. Steve and myself continued to work with Tom, and the three of us worked on the show that we eventually put on in April. It was the same kind of format at this one-sketches, a little bit of music- STEVE: Funny music- TONY: And so, after that show, the group that was doing "Nightlife" at Public Access TV saw the show, and they said, well, we love you, will you go to bed with us, and I said yes, but first you have to get me on your show. STEVE: That was our first big break. TONY: So we went on "Nightlife," and we were interviewed, we showed a few of our sketches, and they liked us, and decided they wanted to have us write up some material for a Sunday Funnies TV show, and they'd provide technicalassistance. Well, "Nightlife" went defunct, but we went ahead with it anyway. DAILY: That was aired on cable channel 9 last spring, I recall-they still play it from time to time. TONY: Tom went on to other things-he's into mime and dance-and he just sort of left it to us. STEVE: We recruited mostly new ac- tors- TONY: And one super guy who's in New York now-Peter Slutsker. He's in one of the acting schools there. STEVE: Did you see him in In the Dark? He was the star of that-great-and in Godspell and Guys and Dolls. TONY: So, after the summer, we went on hiatus-in other words, everyone split on me-I started contac- ting UAC, writing proposals, and using all my technical writing skills. We had a meeting in-early September, and we, as a part of UAC, were born. STEVE: And the rest is history. TONY: But the kind of comedy we do-the show has a real variety. We use stuff all the way from vaudevillian snappy one-line type patter all the way to off-the-wall stuff, to what we call "human comedy," stuff that people can relate to. If you go to the show and don't laugh, you're probably a vegetable, autistic or something. STEVE: Not that we have anything against vegetables- TONY: And not that we don't like autistic people. DAILY: Did you write all the music for the show yourself? TONY: Steve did. Although your songs are good, Steve, I think your lyrics are still your strongest point. Wait till you see it-You got to put a lot of energy into stuff like this, there's no doubt about it. It doesn't happy by it- self. TONY: We are not club comedy. We stress theatrical comedy, and good stage technique. (The waitress arrives; Tony requests more catsup.) STEVE: Well, I think Samuel Beckett said it best when he wrote, "We are born astride a grave." That's pretty heavy, y'know. TONY: That is pretty heavy. I was sad, till I saw a man with no legs- STEVE: And boy, did I laugh ... TONY: I'm giving him all the straight lines tonight. STEVE: He throws 'em up, I hit 'em down. DAILY: Let's get back to work here. You've got 10 actors-I need names and distinguishing characteristics. TONY: I have their audition forms right here. Linda Gross. What do you want to know about her? Her major is psychology. Some of her past plays were Peter Pan, Anne Frank, Ann Frank Meets Peter Pan- STEVE: Godzilla Meets Peter Pan- TONY:-Gidget, and Arsenic and Old Lace. She can sing, she speaks Spanish-Who's next? David Saling-snappier, wittier kind of ac- tor- Christy Scott, she's our Southern belle, did a lot of musicals. . . Mike Mueller. 1979 state champion in foren- sics. Great singing voice. In fact, he played Freddy in My Fair Lady. At the auditions, we had him sing a capella, and we joined in. Couldn't help it. (Sings) "I have often walked.. . down this street before . . . " Dramatic roles-he's good at emoting- WAITRESS: What are you guys talking about? STEVE: Sunday Funnies. TONY: Comedy group on campus. STEVE: Want to join us? Can you write? We got a show this weekend-you're not working then, are you? WAITRESS: No, but I have rehear- sals. STEVE: Rehearsals? What are.you in? WAITRESS: My Fair Lady. The Ann Arbor Civic Theatre. STEVE: Oh, my God! Right! Which one are you? WAITRESS: Eliza Doolittle. TONY: I don't believe it! STEVE: Oh, we really hit it now. Come on, do a little scene for us. Oh, my goodness. This is like Hollywood. TONY: Okay, where are we at now? Stacy Ross . . . Dave Mat- check.. . and John Wasylyshyn. He's a Ukranian folk dancer. . . Mark Ren- ner. He's our token Flexie. STEVE: We have to have one in each show, to keep them off the clock tower. TONY: The Gargoyle already took care of that one. Mark does the robot character. See, we do a parody of Star Wars called "Store Wars" about two shoplifters, Play-Frisbee-Oh and Obi- Klepto-Maniac. Audrey Levin and Rich Slack are two of our recent additions. Richard's interested in writing. STEVE: Not interested in shaving off his beard, though. TONY: Well, He's going to trim it. STEVE: See, after this term, we might do a few little things here and there, but next term we'll have another show, a bigger and better show hopefully in the Mendelssohn. TONY: In my acting experience, which isn't super-extensive, between comedy and drama, comedy is always a much better feeling. When you have people laughing, you're the king of the world. You're the top. STEVE: You're the Coliseum. TONY: You're the top. STEVE: You're the Louvre museum. TONY: Although we have influences, and although you could probably, inevitably, compare us to Saturday Night Live- STEVE: James Joyce- TONY: Ionesco- STEVE: And Tolstoy-Joseph Heller of course- TONY: I've never read Ionesco, but I'm told that one of my sketches was heavily influenced by him. STEVE: Yeah, he knows how to get those punch lines in. People always compare us to Saturday Night Live, and Second City, and we say, yes, but, like- TONY: Better. (They both nod resolutely; Steve picks up his guitar and the check, and they both talk off in to the night.) Now through January 4 Admission $2; Students/Seniors $1 Children under 12 with Adults Free. Hours: 9:30 a. in.-5:30 p. n. luesay through Sunday. OSA Every Monday (ON thru Friday announces dditions! rr2 new menu a .. nAf- YOUR CHOICE VALUE MEALS Chopped Beef SDinner Another Feld evenin (Continued from Page 6) 1978 Half Time, yet another mass- cultural pie. On a stark stage lit red, white and blue, with a single glowing star at its center, the company inter- breted the archtypical Americana themes of Morton Gould's Formations with generous marching steps, broken 'y sudden twists and quirky gestures. 'he men took over for the "Varsity Drill" section, forming clean, angular, ,athletic lines-even human pyramids at one point-in a sublimely funny poke At swaggering playing-field machismo. IWith pumped-up chests and ex- :pressions of pompous joke concen- trations, they leaped and paused solemnly for recognition like gangling -but lithe boys at a track meet. Megan Murphey whirled onto the .scene to a slinky big-city musical theme, tossing around her pom-poms like a stripper's fans, with a coy >Playboy 'baby-doll's sensuality. The -dance lost its satirical energy in a bland :'sorority Waltz" of shifting group pat- 'ternsnd more pom-pom foolery, and in a bolder but still unexceptional series of leaps and lifts among a trio; but it regained strength in its final moments. "A baton-twirling Statue of Liberty ",posed majestically center stage while, behind her, a chorus of facelessly 'manipulated pom-poms waggled in a ENDS TONIGHT: "COUP D succession of amusingly and inten- tionally distracting gaffes. The ballet concluded with more grandstanding ensemble Americana, finally ending with the corps frozen in a farewell salute. Half time is singularly uninspired in all but its most pungently parodistic moments, elsewhere landlocked bet- ween humorour exploitation and straight-ahead, relatively unimaginative strutting patriotism. It's a smoothly crafted work, but hardly one of Feld's most memorable. 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