HE PUZZLE RTS The Michigan Daily Sunday, January 31, 1982 Page 6 Sonata opens By Don Rubin Now Playing "ONCE IN A GENERATION A MOTION PICTURE EXPLODES INTO GREATNESS" Well, that was nearly a gen- eration ago. And since most of you have undoubtedly forgot- ten the explosion, we've arranged this special screen- ing. .Grab a box of popcorn and find yourself a seat. We'd like you to identify the movie, for starters, then give us the name of the reunited artists in the. audience (left to right). Movie 1 2 3. 4. 5. . 6 7. a By Jane Carl T HE CREATIVE mind knows no boundaries or deadlines, even though the rational mind often commits itself to them. Such was the case With Alberto Ginastera's second piano sonata, a work to have been premiered at the Ginastera Festival held last Oc- tober, but not completed in time for the performance. Apparently, Ginastera found it dif- ficult to compose a work that would be equal to, or eclipse, the highly suc- cessful "Sonata No. 1," written in 1952, although he did manage to compose two piano concertos in the interim. During the summer and autumn of 1981, in Mallorca and Geneva, Ginastera wrote his second piano sonata, a work composed for pianist Anthony di Bonaventure, and com- missioned and dedicated to Dorothy and Mario di Bonaventura, brother of the pianist. The work was premiered in a special free concert held on Friday,. January 29, under the auspices of the University Musical Society, and proved to be well worth the wait. In three movement- sonata form, the "Sonata No. 2, Op. 53," opened with an allegramente movement. Within its framework of dissonance .lay( the driving, relentless rhythms that have become a trademark of Ginastera's music, and arevery much a part of his Argentinean heritage. This movement introduced the rumbling bass line that would recur in varied form in the last movement, and also contained a con- trasting, jazz-like section. b The second movement was in three sections: adagio sereno, scorrevole, and ripressa dell' adagio. The first section was a harawi, or mejancholy, South Americah love song. It was marked by dramatic silences, and what Ginastera refers to as "the charac- teristic vocal inflections of primitive civilizations." The scorrevole section was scherzo- like, intending to depict night in the lonely Andean plateaus. Its rapid chromatic passages, which ran the gamut of the piano's range, were an- ticipatory and exciting. The ripressa dell' adagio brought back theltrag si ea~ces and ornamnited tQ~*e.'. After the performance, di Bonaven- tura said that the second movement was particularly meaningful to him because of a documentary he had once seen in which South American Indians played flute duets. One of the flutists in the documentarv had been distinctly The work ended with the Ostinato Aymara.In toccata form, it once again incorporated the fiery, impetuous rhythms and rumbling bass. Both chromaticism and range were again exploited with highly successhfl results. In a piece that is only twdNe minutes long, Ginastera has maI more significant statements than svriA composers manage to do in an hour. °f, Anthony di Bonaventura, a profes'6 at the School for the Arts of Bos' dh University and Founder-Director ofh't Piano Institute at Colby College, Mad, displayed an abundance of technigbe and musicality in his masterful infer- pretation of the sonata, two qualities that often do not coincide in the most rekriowned musicians. The baldiig, banker-ish figure of Ginastera was rot present for this premiere; but once again, his music proved that appearti- ces can be deceiving. Cockney star dead 's.' ~ L : " ... ". , a Fed up with these crazy puzzles? Would you like to get even with Don Rubin and win $10 to boot? Then send your original ideas for The Puzzle to The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, 48109. All entries will become the property of United Feature Syndicate, Inc. (You only win the big bucks if we use your puzzle idea.) Send your completed puzzle to the Michigan Daily, _420 Maynard, Ann Ar- bor, MI 48109 by Wednesday of next week. One person will be selected at random from the correct entries to win a free Michigan Daily T-shirt. ci .. .0 U- d ..~ LONDON (UPI) --Stanley HolloWa , the actor best known for his portraf4l of Mr. Doolittle in My Fair Lady, die"H in a nursing home today. He was 91. Holloway had been under treatmiint at the Nightingale Nursing home in LiI- tlehampton, Sussex for 10 $days, "a spokeswoman said. Holloway was 66 before the theme of his long career became unmistakabl.e It was enshrined in the title of one of th4 songs he sang as "Mr. Doolittle in thq legendary musical My Fair L.ady tha brought what he later described as "wonderful Indian summer" to hi professional life. When Fritz Lowe played his grea score to him, Holloway knew he had been given an opportunity to exceed alf the success'that had gone before: h4 had long since established himself as a songand-dance man, comedian straight actor and monologist on stage and screen and radio and television. t.,eCompicOI y present :fler.. .,y . Q. , i: if St LAST WEEK'S SOLUTION: "Mandrake the Magician,' "Terry and the Pirates," and "Krazy "Kat" generally accoun- ted for most of the errors. The correct solutions are: 1) Doonsbury. 2) Li'l Abner 3) The Katzenjammer Kids (al- though we accepted The Cap- tain and The Kids) 4) The Wizard of Id 5) Pogo 6) Beetle Bailey 7) Peanuts 8) Andy Capp 9) B.C. 10) Dick Tracy 11) Nancy 12)*Blondie 13) Terry and the Pirates 14) Garfield 15) Popeye (or Thimble Theatre) 16) Mandrake the Magician 17) Krazy Kat 18) Shoe The following people answered last wek s a rectly: Bruce Jaquays Richard DiPietro Christine Mather Erik Larsen A "F on, Ch yel p1 re LAC UUGULL AL~t. L1.t* J *t4A ' A 4AAI...s...j- IHIANTEAR Holocaust survivors reunited in England auntin secndoement eBox onale arrtineoe nt ove cmpn ofthe MicigneaeBoa'Officketsp . o.Sat Pbrother were accosted by soldiers I thought I was never to get here. I'm ters by saying she and Chaim, a builder wearing swastika armbands on a so excited. Now I have a big brother in this north England city, wanted to be NEWCASI'E-UPON-TYNE, bridge in their home town near the again - and a big new family." alone. For 39 years, I thought I was the only Russian border. And later, in heavily accented "After 39 years, there's a lot to talk," E 1 . 375 N. MAPLE e left," said Auschwitz survivor She recalled that she grabbed her English, she excused herself from repor- she said. A69 1300 haim Nagelsztayn as he was reunited young brother's arm and shouted: .LLAGE SHPG CTRARANSHOs.Bf mMnfroremst-t terday with Manya, the sister he "Run, it's the Gestapo." sheON THE STREET ai (ought diedI in the Nazi gas chambers. "I CAN'T RUN anymore, she 'E~ ~ nf E THE RAL TRICK I S k AMsk:05 "As soon as she stepped out of the remembered him saying. "They're PUT EM AW AY STAING ALIVE. i 0 ane, I knew it was 1sister. I going to kill me cognized her , straight away, Both were taken to Auschwitz. *..a. .y07:15-9:15111. 90 Nagelsztayn said. "Isn't she lovely. I'm over the moon. This is very hard to believe." Manya Kornblit, 57 and a resident of Ponca City, Okla.; stepped off a jumbo jet from Washington, bearhugged her 56-year-old brother, pinched his cheek and whispered, "We made it." tMANYA LAST saw her brother when they were captured in their native Poland by Nazi troops in the early years of World War II and sent to Auschwitz. Until four days ago, each thought the other had died in the Nazi concentration camp. But a recent visit to a cousin in Israel and alchance conversation about family victims of the Holocaust changed all C that. THE COUSIN told Manya he had received a Scotland-postmarked letter from Chaim after the war which men- tioned something about Newcastle. A fast check of the telephone directory quickly led to travel plans for London.. Kornblit was 17 when she and her But when the World War II drew to a close, Chaim was liberated by American troops - as was Majir Kor- nblit, Manya's husband, at a different camp. Manya at Auschwitz was freed by the Soviets. AFTER THE war, both Manya and Majir made their way back to Hubrieszo, where they were married a short time later. Thinking Chaim dead, they emigrated to the United States in 1950, and Majir opened a store in Ponca City. Chaim, thinking his sister dead, went to Britain, set up a building business and maried his English wife Cecilia. Manya called the trip from Washington "the longest trip of mylife. U tOes JUST FOR 0 r cliartIes for one y' yout 11j hfhill yoi Walt Disney's, =3I,1,3W 515 LIVE! 8:45 in concert 9:'30 A DAY. Aee Guest Artist Workshop Photography of Art Objects: m - o- INDIVIDUAL THEATRES 5* Aveo fLbey 761-4700 7 GOLDEN GLOBE NOMINATIONS p15 WED " SAT * SUN $1.50 TI 6:00 pm (Except "REDS") i RICHARD DREYFUSS JOHN CASSAVETES Whose life is it anyway? %wWww" RVN Making Slides for Your Portfolio mmmlqrmm ww"aVIVG BEST-PICUET N , RIIC WAb-NAIN . R O E E.AWR p. "The miracle of this movie is that it sends us home in a state bordering on elation. "-Cosmopolitan Mag . This intensive 2-day workshop is designed for artists, craftsmen, teachers, and selected University students. Maximum ot ten participants. A basic knowledge of your camera's operation will be a necessary prerequisite. Wednesday, February 3, 7-9 pm Iz Ffl):; I . t .. . "