f ARTS The Michigan Daily Saturday, January 23, 1982 Page 5 'Hopscotch' skips flaws. By Tania Blanich [ W E ALL PLAYED hopscotch as kids. But how many of us realize that we continue to play the game, perhaps with even more vehemence, the rest of our lives? Certainly Isreal Horovitz realized this, as did Catrina Ganey, Van Dirk Fisher, and Elaine Devlin, the actors and director who presented Horovitz's one-act play, Hop- scotch, Thursday night at the Canter- bury Loft. Hopscotch- depicts the brief and im- passioned encounter of a man and woman;- the children's playground game becomes the battlefield as they unleash their pent-up emotions. Can- terbury Loft provided the perfect set- ting for this extremely riveting play. The intimacy of the Loft allowed the audience to become one with the ac- tors-we laughed, we cried, and we lusted with Elsa and Will as they deftly conquered each new wave of feelings. The lights came up on an empty park bench, while Paul Simon's "Sunny Day" played in the background, setting a melancholic mood. Elsa bounds on to the set, pushing a baby stroller. Full of childish enthusiasm and bubbling With laughter, she painstakingly draws out the squares of hopscotch, erasing a line here or there to make it perfect. She begins to play but hesitates, calling out to an unseen observer. Will then saun- ters on stage and with a violently passionate embrace, the play takes off. Horovit's writing is simple, yet the characters and their interaction amazingly complex. Elsa is a woman- child, playing hopscotch with joyous abandon in order to forget a stagnant life of bitter disappointments. Will, a bright, aggressive charmer, is tired of leading a meaningless life. Van Dirk Fisher plays the role of Will with strength and humor and just the right amount of brutal sensuality. He charms not only Elsa, but also the audience with his mischievous grin and boyish actions. Catrina Ganey plays the street-wise, yet naive, Elsa with in- credible agility. One moment she's giggling like a teenager, the next she is bristling with rage and hurt. Ganey and Fisher form a perfect team, exploring every nuance of emotion with grace and dexterity. If Fisher isn't always as comfortable hop- scotching from emotion to emotion as is Ganey, the raw energy emitted by the two more than makes up for it. Rarely do we have the occasion to see such electric performances in Ann Arbor. Chosen by the actors, Hopscotch proves a great showpiece for their talent. Elaine Devlin, a senior in Theater, has done an excellent job of directing, extracting from her cast a sensitive, stirring interpretation of the work. Hopscotch is a memorable play with nearly flawless performances by Catrina Ganey and Van Dirk Fishei'. It may well be the best play you'll sde this year. Performances continue through the weekend. Help Prevent Birth Defects - The Nation's Number One Child Health Problem. Support the March (of BIRTH DEFECT$ FOUNDATION This space contributed by the publisher. The University of Michigan Mime Troupe Unique mix of mime and music mark U Toupe By Carol Poneman TN SILENCE, a young man makes a 1 peanut butter and jelly sandwich. He works on, intent on finishing his task, oblivious to his surroundings. Af- ter reaching for the soft middle pieces in the loaf of bread, he struggles with the stuck lid of the peanut butter jar. Finally, he takes a triumphant bite out of the sandwich, and then looks up and smiles. The kitchen and the sandwich disolve and disappear; the pantomime is over. This elusive sandwich was created at a practice session of the University of Michigan Mime Troupe. In its second year 'of existence, the Troupe is working on a new pantomime play for their :April 3rd performance at the Michigan Theater. The members are iow working on the intermediate stages of the play. But soon emerging will be a completed four-act pantomime that uses techniques somewhat foreign to the art.. "Portraits of Artists" is the title for this new creation, written by Thomas 'Drotar. What is essentially' different about this pantomime is that it employs music, a medium not often utilized in conventional pantomime. The music to be used was written by Paul Hodcins, a University master's student at the School of Music. 'Portraits of Artists' is four dynamic pieces with music inter- twined," claimed Drotar. Besides adding sound add music to the four pieces that make up the play, Drotar and Perry Perrault, Artistic Director of the Troupe, use other un- conventional aspects in developing the mime. Instead of using the usual white face in every piece, along with the traditional mime costume of striped shirt and dark unitard, one of the pieces will find the mimes dressed in street clothes and without makeup. Some of the pieces do use the conventional white face, but it is important that this pat- tern is broken. As its title suggests, "Portraits of Ar- tists" centers on experiences of four different artists: a dancer, a sculptor, a writer and a musician. The four dif- ferent works cover myriad feelings. "We cover different moods-from frivolity and fantasy in "The Dancer" to find something very tragic in "The Writer" 'and something quasi-Twilight Zone in "The Sculptor," said Perrault. The 'founders of the Troupe are Drotar, a student here, and Perrault, a professional mime who has worked in the medium for the last eight years. Drotar is not only the writerof "Por- traits of Artists," he is also its producer. For him, preparing this production has been a new experience and a sometime struggle. "This is not an ordinary mime . . . we are doing something never done before," ex- plained Drotar. Perrault has worked across the United States as well as in Europe. Watching him interact with the mem- bers of the Troupe, his ease and talent with pantomime is obvious. Speaking of Perrault's role in working with Drotar to make "Portraits of Artists" a finished work, he says that Perrault ... "will run with it (the pantomime) and he'll add his own to it. He brings out everything that can be brought out." This year the Troupe consists of veterans from the previous year and newcomers selected through auditions. Out of the many who tried out, these seven men and three wormen were chosen for various attributes ranging from a great deal of experience in pan- tomime to facial mobility and ex- pressiveness. Watching the Troupe practice is never dull. In quiet concentration they work out practice pantomimes, gesturing, mugging, and moving about the empty space. After their practices, members critique each other's perfor- mances to help themselves work toward the perfect mime. Right now the Troupe, with the help of Drotar and Perrault, is concentrating on developing the members within the roles that they will play in April's per- formance. Before the performance t- self, the pieces will have become a reality for the performers in the Troupe. The Troupe is a new and developing artistic entity. Creating roles for the first time, and performing premier works, they are unique in the Univer- sity community. The April performan- ce of Drotar's "Portraits of Artists" will be important to observe because it merges two mediums that have rarely ever merged. I only wonder what happened to that peanut butter sandwich; I could almost taste it. Ballet at Po wer Cen ter The Oakland Ballet Company will appear under the auspices of the University Musical Society at 8 p.m. Jan. 25-27 in The University of Michigan's Power Center for the Per- forming Arts. The program for opening night, titled "Diaghilev Tribute," "Scheherazade," choreography by Fokine and Beriosoff, music by Rimsky-Korsakov; "La Boutique Fantasque" (excerpts), choreography by Massine, music by Rossini and Respighi; "Spectre de la Rose," choreography by Fokine and Vilsal, music by Weber; and "Rite of Spring," choreography by Pasqualetti, music by Stravinsky.-' On Jan. 26, the ballet will present "A Mostly Copland Evening," including "Seascape," choreography by Guidi, music by Copland; "Bolero," choreography by Wilde, music by Ravel; "Billy The Kid," by Loring, music by Copland; and "Gallops and Kisses," by Guidi, music by Schubert, Lanner and Strauss. The closing night program, an. "All Guidi Evening" featuring choreography by Ronn Guidi, artistic director of the Oakland Ballet Com- pany, is: "In Autumn," music by Tchaikovsky; "Fantasia Para' un Gen- tilhombre," mulsic by Rodrigo; and "Carnival D'Aix, music by Milhaud. The Oakland Ballet evolved from the Ballet Players Guild of Oakland, foun- ded in 1954 by Raoul Pause, which seven years later became the Civic .Ballet with Co-Director Guidi. Under Guidi's influence, a small group from the larger company was formed in 1965 as the Oakland Ballet. Fear of boredom spurs mime artist An derson Ire..*on Although he continuallyrworks revus1111Evening with olePrter By Adam Knee O J. ANDERSON is anything but an everyday mime, and his per- formance tonight at the Ark promises to be anything but an everyday mime show. He freely strays from the technique-oriented European mime tradition. "So many mimes today are just boring," Anderson comments. "It's more fun to create stuff that's en- tirely new. Most of my work is definitely un-mime." Indeed, if your'concept of a mime ar- tist is one of a grease-painted mute blindly groping for walls, this imp- faced, wildly-energetic, young perfor- mer will make you sit up and take note. His work involves all kinds of unusual props and effects-not to mention pup- petry and plenty -of audience par- ticipation. He relies heavily on his own vocalizations for sound effects and sings in l4is shows as well. Anderson gets ideas fornhis zany skits from things he sees in the world around him; nothing and no one is safe from ridicule. He deals with everything from advertising to speed reading, from video games to hisorical heroes. Now he even has a piece in the works about God. nationwide, appearing with such well- known performers as Robert Fripp and; John Astin, Anderson remains based in Ann Arbor. "I didn't want to go the New York route," he explains. "I think an actor can work in his own state if he wants to. I'm successfully living and supporting myself on performances here in Michigan." His current local work includes direc- ting and performing with the Easy Street Touring Company in the musical and By George. Among future plans are a stint with the Cleveland Opera this spring and an appearance in a segment of the nationally-televised children's show "Nickelodeon." Anderson does not see limiting him- self in the future to any one performing art. "I would get bored if I were just in- volved in one," he insists. "I get bored very easily, so I just keep going and try all sorts of things." 'It is this artistic restlessness that gives his shows their unique energy. m I 1. 150 INDIVIDUAL THEATRES 5th t Ae a bery 761-9700 WED " SAT * SUN TiL 6:00 PM (except "REDS") Richard Dreyfuss "The miracle of the movie is that it sends us home bordering on elation!" -Cosmopolitan Warren Beatty " Diane Keaton REDS 7 GOLDEN GLOBE AWARDS! On more 10 best lists than anf other FRI, MON-7:00, 9:15 A . T ....1 n. v i A UnI _/ f d. 1 C f/ FRI, MON-8:30 ($2.50 til 1:30) E 1 1