w - 9 ~ j'kv*-~' t- *.< I ':tW .CC~Z a 2 FREE TOKENS WITH THIS COUPON 1 (U of M Students-Expires Thurs., Nov. 25)' I I j MICKEY RAT'S S* NOW 7TTOKENS FOR $1.00* -Brand New Pinball Room- , ' E. William-1 Block from State' me= =su a mem m ism please to m present a m J I; J f- is plasedtopreen ia the interaction between story, charac- ters, and actors is Pirandello's most important way of dealing with questions of reality. Speaking with the Producer, the Father and his Stepdaughter explain what has happened so far in their "Story." Infidelity, a close brush with incest, and inability to communicate ef- fectively have tortured the Characters. As they fill in details of the story, the Producer, an ambitious young hot-shot played by freshman Jeff Casper, finds the Story intriguing; he decides to turn it into a play. The attempt to produce the story as a play confuses the Characters. They cannot understand theatrical conven- of the Story-with each actor assuming the role of one of the Characters, the Characters object. The Stepdaughter insists that only she can play herself on stage; the actress who attempts to play her has it all wrong. To the actors and the Producer, the Story is only a script, a plot to use to "realistically" act out an imaginary story. But to the Characters, the Story is real; it has happened, and is hap- pening to them. Which is real, the ac- tors acting out the story to create an illusion of reality to the audience, or the fictional Characters sprung to life, and living out their fictional story? When the audience then considers its own role in the matter, and that the whole play is part of a larger story, the multiplication of levels of reality and their intersection leaves the audience confused and frustrated. Even Pirandello himself was unsure which was real. The six Characters, the. family, in Six Characters in Search of an Author were six characters from an unfinished Pirandello short story. He wrote of them once, "Without having made any effort to seek them out, I found them before me, alive-the six characters now seen on stage. . . Born alive, they wished to live." Pirandello's daughter Lietta remem- bers how her father was "a blazing fur- nace, as if an entire secret world existed within him.. . He would discuss his characters with us as if they were real people." One drama critic, after a long inter- view with Pirandello, concluded that the hallucinatory characters dictated to Pirandello, making him write out their story. Parallel to Pirandello's theme of theatre and reality is the theme of psychological masking. Pirandello's Characters cannot express their inner reality to others. We know each other, Pirandello argues, only by our actions; our true inner world remains hidden. And whatever we try to communicate is filtered through the subjective viewpoint of the person to whom we are communicating. The Father, for example, is a philosophical intellectual. Yet the other Characters see him as a sexual libertine, obsessed with lust. The others see the Father as sensual because of a , single, isolated incident of mistaken identity, when he almost committed in- cest with his Stepdaughter. Pirandello faced a similar problem in his own life. His menatlly ill wife An- tonietta convinced herself that he had had incestuous relations with his daughter Lietta. Professor Peter Ferren plays the Father. A University drama teacher for the past fifteen years, Prof. Ferren has returned to acting after several years of absence from the stage. Director Dan Gordon feels that Professor Ferren's por depth and m talented youi the role of an Despite ti Characters, production of perience for Gordon's pla debate, but t characters to cia Guest APPearc yRI JC4s a. T (FA~c For fur FRIDA A mug with pa Subs Mid 7, F(EAI0INMG IT' - Tickets: 611.50,10.50,e.50, Reserved Seating. Available at SCHOOLKIDS' RECORDS, PJ.'s USED RECORDS, RPM RECORDS (Belleville), ALL CTC OUTLETS (Hudsons- Briarwood,Where House Records), and at the Michigan Theatre box office, M-F, 9-5. For more info. call: 662-6289 2nd Show- Dec.4- Detroit- Madison Theatre i I ADAM ANT FRIEND OR FOE including: Hello, I Love You Desperate But Not Serious Friend Or Foe Goody Two Shoes Something Girls LUTHER VANDROSS FOREVER, FOR ALWAYS, FOR LOVE including: Bad Boy/Having A Party You're The Sweetest One Since I Lost My Baby/Better Love She Loves Me Back iA~ANT4I,\ ....w." "_ WHERE HOUSE RECORDS YOUR LOCAL CTC TICKET OUTLET $5.99 each LP's and cassettes are always the same price 2137 W. Stadium Ann Arbor 668-1985 c'WORE THANJUST A RECORD SOR NE 1202 (next d OPEN TDAYS A WEEK FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE , . LOCATION south university Ann Arbor 665-3065 oor to Brown Jug) Check out our import department 19 Wee