ARTS The Michigan Daily Saturday, November 20, 1982 Page 5 'Runaways': Musket rolls By Julie Winokur L AST NIGHT'S opening for Musket's production of Runaways at the Power Center proved to be a rollercoaster ride over the peaks of ironic humor and into the depths of self- destruction and rejection. Through a series of monologues and musical in- terludes performed by the twenty-eight member cast, the play exposes the troubled world of adolescents. The monologues maintain no obvious continuity except for the underlying themes of parent-child conflicts and the pain of a child's survival in an adult world. The characters are not all runaways, as the title would lead us to believe. They range from young children playing in the front yard to a fifteen- year-old child prostitute 'playing' in the city streets. In addition, the set of cir- cumstances covered involved a huge range of severity, from the common problems of communication gaps and broken homes to the horrifying realities of child abuse, teenage prostitution, and adolescent drug abuse. The success of the production deser- ves dual recognition. The first praise goes to Elizabeth Swados, who in writing Runaways chose a subject which is contemporary as well as direc- tly related to every member of the audience. No one can watch Runaways without seeing a part of himself. As far as the Musket crew is concer- ned, Runaways provides an excellent showcase for individual talent, which compensates for weak links in the group effort. The creativity in staging, costumes, and lighting makes Runaways visually interesting and multi-dimensional. The weakest areas of production lie in choreography and enunciation in the group musical numbers. The choreography fails to take advantage of numerous opportunities, resulting in many awkward and unfulfilling scenes. Vocally, Runaways is a true pleasure. Many of the actors have strong voices with much talent and training. Katy Cavanaugh and Muriel Joseph, in particular, sing with resonant clarity and self-confidence. Cavanaugh's performance as a whole exhibits excellent stage presence. Michael Kaufman's painfully convin- cing acting provides some of the musical's most dramatic moment~s. The drug overdose scene, wherein the entire cast attempts to revive hinm, silences the audience in shock and horror. Their pounding feet and clenj ched fists strike like lethal spears at tbe audience. On the lighter side, Gayle Cohen anid' Alan Fox present a humorous discourse with dolls. Cohen's impersonations are; hysterical-she has an excellent talent for imitation and comedy. Todd Ed= ward also provides a humorous flair -to" his solo on comic strip heroes. Runaways continues tonight at 8 p.m.' and Sunday at 2 p.m. Call 763-1107. ; Invasion of the Ant man 'S.; ;V. By Mellissia Bryan I DO NOT have a handle on this Ant music stuff. I've attempted every- thing Adam Ant suggested. I tried to get Bob Dylan off the jukebox, dressed as fashionable as Ann Arbor could take, and I even got into this zealous music reformation bit. But somehow the real meaning of "Antmusic for Sexpeople/Sexmusic for Antpeople" has eluded me. Before giving up the ghost, I have the long awaited opportunity to see Adam Ant at the Royal Oak Music Theater on Mon- day, Nov. 22 at 8 p.m. I suppose if I pay close attention I will finally understand what Britain has been making all the fuss about for the past few years. Adam is at the forefront of British pop music. Adam Ant records have sold over 4.5 million copies in Great Britain, and last year he had six singles in the British top 10-two number ones in- cluded. (You're supposed to be im- pressed at this point.) Considering that Adam gets no airplay in the cultural wasteland of America, it would be easy to think that Adam Ant's tour would go unnoticed. That is a good deduction, but no, chilluns, Adam Ant is selling out concert halls all across the U.S.A. Even here-HERE in Detroit. So, to whom it may concern, that just goes to show you that this stuff has commercial possibilities (snicker, snicker). Sermonettes aside, Adam Ant and his entourage (not the Ants, mind you) will make their first Detroit area perfor- mance. Adam has stripped down (both musically, and well, cosmetically) from his excesses in order to promote his fourth album, Friend or Foe. To clear up one point of controversy here and now, Adam Ant has not "gone solo." Three members of the band are no longer with Adam, thus the term "The Ants" is both cumbersome and inefficient, but the most important member of the band, Marco Pirroni is still jammin' along with Adam. Marco co-wrote the album, Kings of the Wild Frontier, Prince Charming, and Friend or Foe. He is responsible for the Ven- ture type guitar lines; he also produced Friend or Foe with Adam. Marco's stabilizing effect has made the tran- sition from Kings to Friend or Foe suc- cinct and progressive. You can't separate Adam's music from Adam's fashion. His flair in- dicates where his music is going and from whence it cometh. From his pirate wear on Kings (a rough and tumble version of Mutiny on the Bounty) he personified the Antmusic warrior that he sang about. Adam then moved along from one storybook character to another. Unfor- tunately, Prince Charming was a bit out of his range. I mean really, all that make up and lip gloss and ruffles, it g tiresome quickly, and that's providigg; you like that sort of thing. Adam surer med up that period: "The PrincV Charming Revue was a cameo-very visual but, in terms of clothes, very hindering to my movements, and I felt I" had to stop heading in that direction. 11- gone as far as I could with that makei up." For whatever reason, Adam cut. out that illusionary side show, and now. prances around attired in what my mother would describe as "logical limits"-leather pants, sashes, tall boots, and the like. Adam's present togs take from the era of Kings with a little bit of PrinceCharming frills. Similar to Friend or Foe they reveal that Adam uses his resources and draws from them, yet combines them with new in4 fluences in order to keep progressing and changing. LSAT, Helping hand Photo Saturday Night Live comedian Tim Kawurinsky lends a helping hand to Drew Barrymore, star of the blockbusterE.T. Barrymore, granddaughter of actor John Barrymore, will be the only guest host in the show's history who is younger than the show itself. Energy and co nfiden ce "highlight R.C. play By Dave Kopel THE RESIDENTIAL College's production of Six Characters in Search of an Author, continuing this weekend at the R.C. Theatre, carries off a difficult play with energy and con- fidence. As the play opens, an acting company is rehearsing a play. In from the streets walk six strangely-dressed people. The six are a family, Characters so they say, from an unfinished play-created by an author, but not completed. The Characters ask the Director to put them on stage, to let them live out their story. At first skeptical, the Director listens to their story, and eventually agrees to produce it as a play. The efforts at production result in a hopeless confusion of reality and illusion, that neither the Acting Company, the Characters, or the audien- ce can fully understand. What is real? The Actor who pretends he is a Character? The fictional Character sprung to life? The way the Character sees himself, or the way others see him? In the end, we never know, for we are left in the dark, listening to mad laughter. Luigi Pirandello, the author, never knew which was real. The family he put in the play were literally living people to him, hallucinatory beings who spoke to him, and commanded him to write down their story. Given such an intellectual, bizarre plot, the play might drag. But thanks especially to three engaging leading actors, the audience is drawn into the game on stage, and caught up in the ac- tion and tension. Theatre Prof. Peter Ferran is the Father, head of the family of characters. He gives his role a sense of Greek tragedy and nobility, and leads the audience through the web of ideas with an easy grace. Jeff Casper, the Director, darts around stage, propelled by his shallow ambition. But the real spark of the show is Katayoun Amini as the Stepdaughter. Her confidently sim- ple movement, her dancing eyes, and her bold- ness ,make the Character's story come alive. Although sometimes hesitant to give full emotional commitment to moments of passion, she and Ferran create a powerful scene of quiet intensity, when they relive an incident of near incest. Dan Stulberg's set, dominated by a faded tapestry, conveys a fine sense of drab reality, waiting to be interrupted by the vitality of fan- tasy. Mark Liebeskind, the Son, announces that he was "never fully developed dramatically." And so he is not, partly by Pirandello's design, and partly by an unvarying pose of sullen indif- ference. The Residential College aimed to choose a play that would make the audience think. Six Charac- ters in Search of an Author challenges its audience to see new realities. And it's still fun to watch. Performances continue through Sunday at 8 p.m. in the R.C. Theatre, with an additional matinee at 2:30 p.m. Sunday. Tickets are $3. Records Bill Summers and Summers ,Heat-'Seventeen' (MCA) The title of this one warns you that it's not really wise to buy it. That num- ber must mean something. It can't be the price of the album-seventeen dollars is a bit high. It can't be Sum- mer's seventeenth album-he is strictly a one-hypercommercial-album-a-year ,man. It can't be a 17 R.P.M. record, there's no such thing. It can only indicate the age or the IQ of the demographic segment for which it is intended. One comes to the conclusion that this can only be intended as a dance record by a subtractive process, i.e., it simply can't be anything else. However, it fails miserably at this task. Dance music, contrary to what the snobs say repeatedly, and with self satisfied superiority, is not easy to write. Ask Bill. Just pounding away at bass guitar, drum, and synthesizer won't do it. It takes a sense of style, a certain wit- tiness, spirited delivery, and talent. Bill should have woken up his band long enough to tell them all of this. Skip the stupid, cliched lyrics which sound like they were written by a welder. The music is totally worthless. Nobody bothered to think of anything new. This stuff sounds like every bad dance lick you've ever heard, but wor- se. The rhythms are lethargic and poin- tless, with absolutely no hooks to get you moving. I guess Bill figured kids and dancers are stupid and won't notice the lack of any merit in this album. Let's hope he's wrong. By Phillip Lawes Everyone Runs From Something... Runaways Book, Music and Lyrics by Elizabeth Swados I rANN A RBOR INDIVIDUAL THEATRES IK h Ae of Lber 7610700 "'NOT A LOVE STORY' STRIPS BARE THE PORN WORLD" -NEW YORK POST A MOTION PICTURE ABOUT... PORNOGRAPHY WARNING: THE GRAPHIC SUBJECT MATTER IN THIS FILM MAY BE OFFENSIVE TO SOME VIEWERS! FRI. MON.-6:40, 8:30, 10:20 SAT. SUN.-1:10, 3:00, 4:50, 6:40, 8:30, 10:20 SAT " SUN shows before 600pm. THE MOST PRAISED AND LOVED ROMANTIC FILM OF THE SEASONI RICHARD GERE DEBRA WINGER .MN FRI & SAT t12:00/ all seats $~ The Most Fun ''t You'll Ever Have BEING SCARED ~gKGM