f RTS Page 6 Tuesday, April 13, 1982 The Michigan Daily RC Players show .originality IRW "b..o By Elliot Jackson T HE RESIDENTIAL -College Players, that time-honored and eminently respectable group of East Quad residents, Residential College drama concentrators, and general busybodies, once again has something in the works. In conjunction with the RC drama concentration, it is presenting a new play, Against Katie Bloom, written and directed by the RC's own Scott Cummings, a lecturer in the drama program. "Ordinarily, there is no formal link between the players and the drama department," said Cummings. "However, many students are involved with both; the faculty serve on the board of Players as advisors, and the productions often reflect curricular concerns (of the drama department)." Cummings explained the current cooperation between the two bodies: "There's a course in the RC drama concentration called Performance Workshop, which we try to offer every two years. It aims to combine student efforts in acting, directing, and script writing, in order to make a new play, with two purposes in mind: 'to find out things about making new plays and to produce new plays of some value. "This year, there wasn't enough in- terest in the project to do it the way we do normally (with about 10-15 actors, 4 directors, and 2 or more playwrights), so I decided to recast the project in a slightly different form, and just work with a bunch of actors, myself being the only playwright and director, and to of- fer the result to the RC Players to produce, if they wanted to." That result is Against Katie Bloom, a play loosely based on Heinrich Boll's "The Lost Honor of Katherine Blum." It is an account of a woman's per- secution by the sensationalist press, af- ter it is discovered that she has helped her lover, a colorful, notorious fugitive, escape from the law. The police, indignant that they have been robbed of their rightful spoils, arrest Katie as an accomplice. Mean- while, a reporter picks up on the story, deems it just right for his readers' early morning consumption, and gleefully proceeds to find out or make up the most sullying possible details about Katie's life and loves. Katie arranges a meeting with this reporter, ostensibly to grant him an exclusive interview, and shoots him dead. End of story. This admittedly terse little tale is enlivened by the intervention in, and control of, the proceedings by a narrator figure, who presents the story as a factual report, and whose tone is characterized by an ironic, -dispassionate commentary and a deliberately non-chronological fashion of presentation. "In the movie made several years ago from the book," said Cummings, "there was no narrator-the story was told straight. "But to me one of the most in- teresting aspects of the book was the narrator, who presented the story as a report. He gives us an objective recreation, but does so in such a way that we wonder who he is, and why he has the point of view that he does. "The element of the narrator was a challenge to transfer to the stage,'' Cummings contended, whilst ex- plaining the attraction the book had for 'It's a story about the role that the public media play in the lives of private citizens ... and about the origins of violent behavior.' --Scott Cummings, RC Players director.' of private citizens, which is never an irrelevant topic to people today, and about the origins of violent behavior, also an endlessly fascinating subject. Katie is a person one would never think would commit a murder. Why is she, driven to it? The audience is constantly asking questions about what it has just seen." As to how the people in Performanc' Workshop handled the task set before them: "We did things first," said Cum- mings, "the bearing of which may not have seemed relevant to the play For example, since having a narrator necessarily implies an element of nari tive, we played around with stor$ telling. We also did a bit of iris provisations, without defining the in povisations as something in the play-say, we'd have a scene in a pawn- shop, or where someone receives an ob- scene telephone call." This process of play-making con tinued for a little over a month, until March 9th, when the company received the first half of the script, and parts. which had not been decided previously, were assigned upon the arrival of the second half. Cummings is enthusiastic about the present arrangement and confident that it will work out well. He hopes that the innovative use of movable flats and lighting will effectively and memorably recreate the tattered history of Katie Bloom. Performances run April 15-18, at 8:00 p.m. in the East Quad Auditorium. For more information, let the intrigued masses contact the RC Offices at 763-0176. Tonight, Richard Moore, director of photography for the soon-to-be-released film Annie, will be present at a free screening of thirty minutes of pre-release footage at Aud. A, Angell Hall. After the preview, Moore will answer, questions from the audience. PLAY UNIVERSITY PASSWORD I him. "Every actor playing a character, needs to approach that character from his point of view. A play looks at the coming-together of points of view of dif- ferent characters. "We think a play is inferior if we feel too evidently the hand of the playwright," he continued. "But what happens when there is a character in the play whose job it is to tell the story? We wonder, is the character speaking on his own, or is he expressing the playwright's point of view? It's an in- triguing problem, which is part of the reason that I chose this particular work. "Also, it's a story about the role that the public health media play in the lives Last week's UNIVERSITY PASSWORD was THE MICHIGAN DAILY f ' i t r I, Lost week's winners were: Doug Holmes Laura Dunbar Ffl. & AT SOLD or Bunthorne's Bride SOLD Utj presented by The University of Michigan Gilbert and Sullivan Society April 14, 15, 16, 17 1982 '' Lvdia Mendelssohn Theater Look for clues hidden in the Daily Classifieds page Tuesday through Friday. r A real royal show 'I For ticket information call 763-1085 f I. I wit ISavings I '4 Use Coupons ---yAppearing in the 11.0Michigan Dail I PEPSI WHEN YOU PURr' 1 ,,+. ~OF 1/-LITER P P R. - P E P S I L U G 1 I-j I A Great Way to Have Fun and Save * Eat - *.e.Drink f * Have Fun and ,V. I SDress ... For Less! k a . Advertisers Call 764-0554 * 4 - for information Iq 0i~~~~ w~ t n- A IPa-4'- LONDON (AP) - Prince Andrew, the second son of Queen Elizabeth II, and a helicopter pilot aboard the HMS Invincible, will emcee a talk show on the aircraft carrier's closed-circuit TV station as the vessel steams toward FREE John Huston Night 7:00 p.m.: ANNIE clips and special appearance of ANNIE cinematographer, Richard Moore Ponavision inventor. 8:30 p.m.: TREASURE OF SIERRA MADRE Tues. Apr. 13, Aud A Ann Arbor Film Cooperative the Falkland Islands, press reports said Monday. The show, complete with studio guests and phone-in questions, has been given the working title of "A Dose of Andrew," according to reports in The Guardian and The Sun. "It is his own idea," said Lt. Nick Bradshaw ' head of Invincible Television. "He's areally good sport." Bradshaw said the idea for the show followed an appearance by the prince as a "mystery --guest" on an earlier program. "As soon as the crew realized who it was, the phone never stopped ringing,"' Bradshaw said. "Andrew answered all the questions quite frankly, unless they were too sensitive. "He's a very understanding bloke with a great sense of humor-just one of' the lads." hiflhIIIII I" Need a ride out of town? Check the i tIlp classifieds under transportation