v w ,w w w w wAir ................ . . :..... **... * .*... . . . Good times Old Times Michigan Ensemble Theater New Trueblood Arena 8 p.m. January 26-30, February 16- 19, 2 p.m., February 20 By Jeff Manning NOW THAT January nears an end, the hectic confusion of university life subsides and bookstores once again become safe places and some of us can find that precious stuff called leisure time. So what does that mean for Joe Theatergoer? Surely, the first wave of independent drama productions! One of the year's first is Old Times by Harold Pinter, whose plays haven't seen an- Ann Arbor audience in quite a while. The show is produced by the Michigan Ensemble Theater, the University's residential professional theater company, who are also respon- sible for Diary of a Madman. The direc- tor, a faculty member in the Theater Department, is Richard Burgwin, who directed The Tempest last month. The cast, composed of a mere three characters, consists of Marie Cham- bers as Anna, Wanda Brimson as Kate, and Chris Curry ds Deeley. Chambers, presently on the University faculty, has been working for the ACT Company in San Francisco. Wanda Brimson, a Michigan alumnus, worked in New York recently. She has acted in many of the major regional theaters and alongside some big name people such as (gasp!) Katherine Hepburn. Chris Curry, another alumnus, has just returned from Broadway where he played in Krucifur. This play promises to be a',polished professional produc- tion. The playwright, Harold Pinter, one of the great authors of modern drama, wrote Old Times in 1971 and the Royal Shakespeare Company first produced the show the same year. The -script vaguely resembles the works of Samuel Beckett, who was one of Pinter's major influences, among Chekhov and a score of others. But the play is uniquely Pinterian, drawing on his characteristic themes of dominance and possession. Pinter gained popularity for writing about people being attacked by the terrifying forces that surround them. True to his style, Pinter blends humor with stark dialogue in Old Times to produce a mounting tension verging on action. But the lack of words is equally essential to Pinter's show. The man himself once said, "So often below the words spoken is the thing known, but unspoken. I think we communicate all too well in our silences." Thus, Old Times requires extremely delicate execution. Director Burgwin said the production involves "patient attention to detail and textual analysis." If Oscar Wilde is correct in saying that art is the act of creating a mood, then Old Times ranks among the best of modern drama. As in Canterbury Loft's recent production of Equus, Old Times' foundation rests largely upon tension and rivalry between characters. There are Deeley and Kate, a couple in their early forties, who are visited at their secluded farmhouse by Kate's old roommate, Anna. They talk (as expec- ted) of "old times" in post-war London when the two women lived together and Deeley had just met Kate. But what en- sues is not a happy reminiscence bet- ween friends. The memories of Anna and Deeley are not coincident - each competes to assert their own remembrance, regar- dless of the truth. The prize in this bat- tle of mental assault is possession over Kate. The result is a 'mysterious, in- triguing, and provocative play, leaving much open to audience interpretation" says Burgwin. So if any of that leisure time happens to blow your way, mosey your way on over to the Trueblood Theater in the Frieze Building and watch Anna, Kate, and Deeley recount their memories. They'll help you get by for a while. i T . Old Times: Old friends 12 Weekend/January 21, 1983