ARTS The Michigan Daily Wedndsday, February 16, 1983 Page 5 World 'S largest party The other side of W( The films included Interiors, Manhatt Memories-mark from his more absui Sleeper and Love an on the comedy< everyday life. The fear of being knownj more importantly, a Woody Allen - 'Four Films of Woody Allen' (Random House, 387 pp.) $y Tom Bowden T HOUGH ANNIE Hall won an Oscar comedy cannot hone for best picture in 1977, it barely basic human probler managed to break even at the. box of- As such, these fi fice. So you might wonder how Random pivotal of his care( house plans to make money publishing more recent and c the screenplays for Annie Hall and Midsummer Night', three other Woody Allen movies. not been included. Maybe they won't make much To make these sc money-but it's a book that deserves to own, to translate be published. Less cerebral fans can without the bene use Four Films of Woody Allen as a cinematography, useful compendium for glossing over dication of Allen's favorite lines. More serious students of strate his writing at film, though, will find that the book of- new interpretation fers the material for detailed structural (especially the misu analysis of these films: the collection Memories). 0marks the sharpest changes in Allen's The most imme attitudes toward film making from his feature of the script "early funny movies." proximation to cor Many filmgoers overlook how scripts turing all its inflect fare out of their screen element and pauses, mid-senten( what they reveal of the author's use of and overlapping die language. As an aid to maintain the ce, this exchange f balance between the films themselves Ike quits his televisi and their translations into print, the publisher of this volume has kindly ad- IKE : ... You kn( ded "passages that describe the ac- in front of their 0 tion." gamma rays eat Records- 'Peter Csaba-Violin 'In the style of .. . Fritz Kreisler' (Hungaraton SPLX) 'In too many a listener's opinion the music of Fritz Kreisler has the meager calling of an after dinner mint: to refresh, but by no means to be taken seriously. So here's a complete disc of Kreisler and, for shame, to be sampled in one sitting. "Isn't that like gobbling down a box of cloned sweets ad nauseum?" (I can hear Twelfth Night's Orsino crying, "Play on, play on!) Some clarification: Kreisler wrote original compositions (and their transcriptions), stylistic studies (in the manners of other composers), paraphrases (transpositions), and transcriptions (adaptations), the variety of which is astoun- ding. There is no doubt that every violinist has a reserved place in both his-heart and repertoire for the music of Fritz 'Kreisler. Admittedly, much of his music has been seen oozing from D Violin f-holes like sap from a sugar maple. But the burden of such mistreatment lies on the violinist, not Kreisler. On this recording of original compostitions, transcriptions, and stylistic studies, violinist Peter Csaba (with pianist 'Zoltan Kocsis) handles Kreisler's music with care and respect. The portamento-to-harmonic finishes resound with Kreislerian grace but Csaba takes relatively few liberties in tempo and occasionally is not loose enough for Vienese licen- se. Nevertheless the liberty he does allow is comparatively more meaningful and does not run the risk of distasteful ~repe tition. rIn "Variations on a theme of Corelli" Csaba well portrays 0 the conflation of Corelli's bent for melody, Tartini's crisp and 16olorful scoring, and Kreisler's collaborative insight. The transcription of Gluck's "Melody," from the Dance of the :Blessed Spirits, is played sensitively with controlled passion d here-Annie Hall, :tan, and Stardust Allen's departure rdist films-such as d Death-to a focus and neuroses of change relects his just as a comic and, afear that somehow estly deal with real, !ms. ilms are the most per. Note that the onventional film, A s Sex Comedy has ripts stand on their them into print fit of sound and is surely an in- ;sdesire to demon- bilities and to allow ns of these films understood Stardust ediately noticeable s are their close ap- mmon speech, cap- ions: the uhs, ums, ce subject changes, ilogue. For instan- from Manhattan as on writing job: ow, these guys sit sets and the-the the white cells of rAllen their brains out. Uh, you know, um, ya, I'm-I quit. DICK: All right. Just relax. Take a 'lude. Take a 'lude. IKE (Overlapping): No, no, no, no, no, I quit. I can't write this anymore. I can't . ..I don't want a 'lude. . . . All you guys do is-is, uh, drop 'ludes and then-then take Percodans and angel dust. Naturally, it seems funny. DICK: You know, just relax, relax. IKE (Gesturing): Anything would if you're-if you're ... You know, we, y-y-you should abandon the show and open a pharmeceutical house. Film dialogue allows Allen to replicate conversation better than in his short stories. Moviescript format allows for this, but in story writing having intrusive notations every few lines-"their dialogue overlapped"-is awkward and the reader would question its value. In print this slows the story down; acting speeds it up. Scripts without film are still scripts without film, and about the only advan- tages they gain by themselves, other than allowing furtherbstructural analysis as noted above, are clarifications and illuminations of bits of conversations and jokes that were otherwise lost to background noises, overlapping conversations, and visual distractions. A trivial but interesting example is that throughout Annie Hall both Alvy and Rob always call each other "Max". Lost, however, are the parallel sequences in Annie Hall: the two times we see Annie singing in a bar, and when Alvy boils lobster once with and once without Annie. These little sequences gain much power at the film's end when Alvy reminisces over his and Annie' s love affair. Lost are the tense, brooding photography of Interiors that invoke, create, and reinforce the ugly, hurtful relationship of the family members toward each other. Lost are the.Gershwin and the beautifully photographed montages of Manhattan that reinforce for Ike the town's many moods and qualities, manifested through the people, stores, and restaurants. The inherent nature of Stardust Memories, this film of a film of a film- maker who sees the world filmically, cannot be effectively separated from the script, so closely does it interplay with the visuals. Nonetheless, Four Films is a valuable volume for both current ad- mirers of his work and for those who would like to become more familiar with it. The book is a showcase for his subtle, artful, and insightful views on what it means to be human. NEW ORLEANS (UPI)-More than a million Mardi Gras revelers dressed in gaily colored costumes and painted faces thronged parade routes yester- day, scrambling for cheap trinkets and enjoying a final day of celebration before Lent. Fat Tuesday festivities began with an odd assortment of walking musicians, led by jazz clarinetist Pete Fountain's "Half-Fast Marching Club." Police said more than a million people crowded into a few square r ARMY SURPLUS 201 E. Washington at Fourth NOW OPEN SUNDAY! 11-4 OPEN M-SAT, 9-6 OPEN FRI. 9-8 994-3572 -M- - . blocks of the city for this year's Mardi Gras, billed the World's Largest Pary. "I've lived all over the United States, but this is the wildest party I've ever been to," said Fred Novak, 43, of Ann Arbor. "I might just have to move here. I don't even mind this," he said, pointing to a cast on his arm. He said his wrist was broken when he reached for a traditional coin that was rolling on the ground and his hand was stomped by another anxious partyer. 15% OFF ALL MERCHANDISE (Except Sale Items) Expires Tuesday Feb. 22, 1983 U - OLD TIMES by Harold Pinter Directed by Richard Burgwin January 26-30 February 16-19 February 20 8 p.m. 8 p.m. 2 p.m. New Trueblood Arena Frieze building Ann Arbor Tickets: , PTP ticket office Michigan League 764-0450 Michigan Ensemble Theatre IIII~t IA . a b "WONDEI 'SMASH ENDS THURS. WED - 12:50, 2:40, 4:30,! THURS - 6:25, 8:1 TUESDAY All Shows RFUL" N.Y. TIMES PALACE' 6:25, 8:10, 9:55 0, 9:55 Tonight there's something special brewing OLYMPIA S/s/ PITCHER AFTER 9 P.M.' PIZZA BY THE SLICE- $1 .00 '?ItiEAIA DAILY 11:30-2 a.m. FROZEN AND CARRY- 1321 S. UNIVERSITY OUT AVAILABLE ANN ARBOR 769-1894 restaurant and bar that tells a definitive, plaintive story. The list of eightcen tunes (if I dare term them so) ends appropriately with "The Old Refrain." Though played as a rather formal adieu, without the bittersweet touch it needs, it is indicative of Csaba's general reserve. From Rameau to Grainger, Kreisler shows his extraor- dinary ability to assimilate, understand, and convey; and this recording provides a good sampling of his shorter works (none exceed four minutes). There is something elusive in Kreisler's art, where the sweet never leaves the sorrowful. It is as if he kept seriousness at a bow's length. Though some of his original music is sentimental it is not maudlin, and there is a time for sentimentality. There is a place for Kreisler's often subtle beauty; all we need do is recognize, appreciate, and enjoy it. -Lauris Kaldjian GOLDEN GLOBE WINNER MERYL STREEP - BEST ACTRESS KEVIN KLINE SOPH IE'S CHOICE (R) WED - 1:00, 3:50, 6:45, 9:30 THURS - 6:45, 9:30 Internationalfestival given for youths By Julie Winokur STTNGA KLARA, the Swedish Children's Theater Ensemble, will make a special appearance tomorrow night with two Ann Arbor children's theater groups at East Quad. The three ensembles will perform as part of the Festival of Youth Theater, beginning with a series of lectures and -demonstrations by Unga Klara concer- ning the world of children in relation to adults. Scandinavian playwright Per Lysander and Ronny Ambjornsson will open the festival with a seminar on the changing conditions of modern childhood. "The first part of the festival is almost a university type thing," said Blake Radcliffe, "It's geared more towards the study of children's theater by adults." Following Lysander and Ambjor- nsson will be the Young People's Theater Repertory Company. The company will perform Merlin, a slap- stick adaptation of the Arthurian legends. "Children's theater is truthfully quality theater," said Elise Bryant, Artistic Director of Common Ground theater. Bryant is enthusiastic about this weekend's festival she said because "I feel like its a good time for the univer- sity community and the children's theater community to come together." Common Ground will perform at 9 p.m., followed by Wild Swan Theater's 10-minute playlet for the hearing im- paired. The Good Time Players close the evening with a series of sketches for the deaf. Tickets available at East Quad half- hour before the show, $5-7. MAJOR EVENTS PRESENTS: PHOEBE SNOW 77 o( n *, .1 lCLU 4 iU lAI ..I1'IW Ed'1I M ! ftfl rII IIJI 1""I ARFI' - A a.P4a