ARTS The Michigan Daily Tuesday, October 4, 1983 Page. Franken and Davis,the horror ani t:. By Eli Cohen W HEN AL FRANKEN and Tom Davis come to the Power Center Thursday night, Ann Arbor is in for a treat. These two powerful comedians form the writing talent behind much of what is funny in the eighties. Franken and Davis are the writers of much of Saturday Night Live's material, Trading Places, and the MTV parody "Under My Thumb." The duo from Minnesota are one of the up and coming talents in the movie industry. Yet before they become per- manently placed in Hollywood, Franken and Davis will retrace their roots on college campuses across the country. "We enjoy doing colleges," said Tom Davis. "We do a combination of old and new material; some new stuff, just written, some stand-up type stuff, talk shows, and slides and films," Davis elaborated concerning the show. Franken and Davis were the "back- bone of Saturday Night Live" accor- ding to Dan Ackroyd. They were the creators of such famous skits as the Coneheads, Weekend Update's "Point- Counterpoint," and Steve Martin's "Theodoric of York." They also wrote the famous "Placenta Helper" com- mercial. "It was great for five years," said Davis about the original Saturday Night Live. Both Franken and Davis won Emmys as writers for SNL. But Davis feels differently about the even- tual fate of SNL, "I try not to think about it," he says. After Saturday Night Live Franken and Davis went back on the road. But this year they aired an hour-long cable TV special "Franken and Davis in Con- cert." Along with their TV career the duo have a budding role in Hollywood. They appeared in Trading Places with Eddie Murphy and Dan Ackroyd, and are currently writing films for Warner Brothers and Universal. "We're writing two screenplays, one for Trading Places director John Lan- dis," said Davis. "We are also writing for a, new TV show. What we write is geared for ourselves. But we do aim for the mark." Davis' view is that the team writes "anything we want within the realm of professionalism." Franken and Davis got their start in high school in Minnesota. Al Franken went on to Harvard where he majored in behavioral sciences. "What else you gonna major in at a party school?" In Franken's last year the duo began playing the Improvisation in New York. At the club they met Jimmy Walker, Gabe Kaplan, Andy Kaufman, and Freddie Prinze. In 1973 the two went to Los Angeles and worked the Comedy Store, Vegas, and Reno. In 1975 they began writing for producer Lorne Michaels and Saturday Night Live thing," said Davis, "I like working with Al. We make up for each other's weaknesses," said Franken. "I'm Jewish and have Jewish neuroses. He's a WASP and has WASP neuroses. We both grew up in suburbia and watched the same TV shows." The material upon which they draw for comedy often has a political basis. For SNL they created the Three Mile Island takeoff, "The Pepsi Syndrome," and "Nixon's Final Days." "I'm real interested in politics," said Franken. "We have some pieces that are political satire," agrees Davis, "it's a good sub- ject for humor." Other material is drawn from "anywhere - all different places." They found the best way to inspire themselves is to listen to each other. "We get most of our stuff from me and Al spending time together," claimed Davis. Their newest idea is one that has been brewing for some time. The Rolling Stones parody was thought up several years ago. "Al put a billiard ball in his mouth, and we saw what a big mouth he had. That's when he started doing the Mick Jagger mouth," explained Davis. First they tried a parody called "White Sugar," but decided on just doing it straight. The "Under My Thumb" video came about with a little guitar work from Davis. "It's kind of like Mick's nightmare." The team is renowned for both writing and performing. They feel that 1 glory as writers it helps to perform and to get a feel for the audience. "As performers we know the audience," said Davis. "We both really write for how the audience reacts.", College crowds are favorites of the team. "We gear most of our mnat ijal for a college crowd," agreed Davis, "We went to a dinner club in Min- neapolis, and came out with the same stuff we did for the colleges. But we could see we were missing then,.sp we adapted and picked different scenes." In the Power Center they won't have to do that. "We're really looking .for- ward to Ann Arbor," said Franken. "We both have a passion for comedy.," The Office of Major"Events is selling tickets at the Michigan Union Ticket Office and all CTC outlets. The.price is $8.50 and the show is at 8 p.m. Thursday, October 6. So come on down and see everything from placenta helper tothe Mick Jagger mouth. Come revel in what Tom Davis calls, "The horror and the glory." I- F Al Franklin and Tom Davis make merry this Thursday night at Power Center. began. "The partnership is the strongest ANN ARBOR L2 INDIVIDUAL THEATRES - t , 've at",,, 7.."900 $1 .50 TUESDAY ALL DAY Set in two time spans, it tells the' story of a modern young English woman and her great "aunt's shocking love in India in the 1920's. JULIE CHRISTIE THUR. 7:00, 9:15 TUES. WED. 2:30, 4:45, 7:00; 9:15 Stemn gives seriesa ,great start By Mike Drongowski D ESPITE AN unresponsive audience, Isaac Stern, accompanied by pianist Andrew Wolf, gave Ann Arbor a rare musical treat last Satur- day night. Performing together since the Fall of 1980, these distinguished artists paired to open the University Musical Society's 105th Annual Choral Union Series. The recital began with Mozart's Sonata in C minor. Andrew Wolf's delicate piano accom- paniment balanced and highlighted the pizzicat- to notes from Stern's bow. An early intonation problem was adjusted and the Stern-Wolf duet skillfully carried this sonata to its gentle con- clusion. Stern then moved into more modern territory, playing Sonata No. 3 in A minor, Op. 25, com- posed by Enesco. Written in 1926, this piece re- enforces Stern's role as champion of modern music. Although highly dissonant and seemingly without meter, Stern played this modern sounding sonata with tremendous expression. An- drew Wolf's piano advanced and parried Stern's barbed arpeggiation, but never over-powered it; While the interplay of the piano and the violin parts was exquisitely timed, it never appeared to be calculated or over-rehearsed. Stern followed with a rich, full-phrased inter- pretation of J.S. Bach's Sonata No. 3 in E major, then moved to the concert's climax, Claude Debussy's beautiful Sonata in G minor. This piece seemed almost alive as Stern caressed each note - each phrase blossomed and rose like a gentle swell and then receded again. Andrew Wolf complemented Isaac Stern's playing with his own wonderfully expressive accompaniment, and lush, colorful musical plateaus were reached as Wolf and Stern blended to provide the evening's finest listening. After a truly fine performance of a com- position such as Debussy's G minor sonata, one might expect the next number to be anticlimac- tic. Not so. Isaac Stern completed the program with the marvelously alive Introduction and Rondo Capriccioso, Op. 28, by Camile Saint- Saens. The full, expressive measures were in ex- .cellent contrast to the light, delicate passages, and Stern played this opposition to the fullest, bringing the performance to a close. -L I M GERARD DE PARDIEU T REUN TUES. THURS. 7:25, 9:30 WED. 1:10, 3:15, 5:20, 7:25, 9:30 i t Cooper ASMALLISH SAFARI PARTY. In- timate, yet full of the vastness we associate with the great unexplored passages of mountains, plains, and various rain forests. Unexplored, however, only on our part, for Jerome Cooper seemed to, on Saturday night, hold within him the long (I mean cen- turies) accepted proposition that it is ridiculous to attempt (here, in art) to portray, reflect, or capture Nature ':, without first becoming one with it; that pis, unless you know what Nature is, how can you play it. 4, b .. .And b then again A By C. E. KRELL a ° Art, unless it happens to be the name of your next door neighbor, can be a pretentious and oblique word to ! Idescribe. Again, if one equates Nature *with art, or perhaps more ap- y propriately, Art with nature, one must 'know what Art is (if he is a neighbor, shake his hand), define it themselves, before that great Art can be reflected in their particular field. But fields, even hosts awesome s produced by Jerome Cooper was Art (to me, a given), nor will I make the assumption that because he performed solo, that Jerome Cooper touched no one near him. To put it more simply, we will let Nature take its course, even here. Try to imagine global geography, the different areas of climate and topography; the flats, the mountains, the dry, the wet.... A shrill animal, perhaps a bird, awakens the day with its cry. As the sun begins to rise over the long, dry grassy fields, another morning rhythm drips out, setting the pace for another 24 hours, or even better, sunrise sunset period of experiencing, challenging, trial, error, and most of all, another learned practice or attitude. Survival on the plain means taking those things from the environment and using them to their best advantage, in order to reach some sort of higher plain. Now it is moist. Leaves clinging, dripping, dewy carpet. Everywhere there is the smell, of fur, blood, and ripening fruit. Animals roar with Ayleresque moan tones, under a hear- tbeat rhythm that propels the inhabitants toward life's discourse. As afarigig the pace of the day quickens (night has fallen), more life seems to assert itself; there are many births and deaths. The omnipresent pressure sinks like a lead zeppelin, and the stink grows, but... The Wind rustling over the tops of reeds calms the air, and slowly the shape of a temple discerns itself, surrounded in a sort of opium induced mist. In order to release the Earth of its passivity, great bells and gongs break the air into swirling entropy. Shining and gleaming, in some sort of twisted celebratory gesture, statues come to life and revel in the noise. Overtones reverberate, cracking domes and in- fluencing friends and family... This is no place for a family to be. Leave the kids home. The sound now is the clinking of glasses, the tying off of veins, and the smoke of cheap tobacco. The dress is sophisticated, and the band on the stage blows and bops. Couples can dance, others throw dice and feel up the cheap whores lying abut. As the alcohol flows (cheap bourbon and cheaper scotch), the orchestra swings to the tune of the asphalt and neon choking the buildings outside... A missed recital is often a missed op- portunity at the game of existence. I HUNDREDS TO CHOOSE C,Z C,, PA FROM WITH VALUES UP TO $20.00 SITS $50 -M A"UMt'vSwP& 201 E. WASHINGTON 994-3572 FRIDAY & SATURDAY ONLY MON. -FRI. 9-8 SAT. 9-7 S2 YOU COULD BE QUALIFIED FOR AN INTERNSHIP IN MADRID, PARIS, BONN, LONDON OR EDINBURGH 12 _' ... natural man when mowed, can be lonely; standing alone, and sharing, one would be wasting their time. So, then, to avoid pretention, I will not even attempt to prove that the music If you have the language fluency, the right GPA plus a positive attitude you could work for Members of The Cortes, National Assembly, Bundestag, or House of Commons. In addition there are places in Law, Medical Research, Business, Museums, Town Planning, The Arts and Communications. r Records I iil i 1 4 FULL DETAILS FROM EPA, MARYMOUNTCOLLEGE, TARRYTOWN, N.Y.10591 Phone (914)631-3200 The Style Council - 'In- 0 troducing the Style Council' \(Polydor) After the Jam broke up last year, their guitarist/singer/songwriter Paul Weller made the first attempt at a dif- ferent musical project. He teamed up with keyboardist Mick Talbot and, with a group of session musicians, the Style Council was born. After a few import 12 inch EP's, the group have finally come 0out with their first album, Introducing the Style Council. All of the material on this album (or mini-record, as it states on the cover) has already been released on vinyl via the 12-inch EP's. So this album's pur- pose is to expose the band with the best that they have to offer. The best in- cludes variations between hot dance cuts and flowing ballads. Side one starts off with "Long Hot Summer," which became a hit in England. Its slow, melodic rhythm and hand clap beat, mixed with Talbot's lush keyboard treatments, make this song a laid-back highlight of the album. The club mix version of this song on side two was a bad excuse to fill up space. But that is about the only fault in this record. "Headstart for Happiness" is a won- derful, but short ballad featuring Weller on acoustic guitar and Talbot's rollicking organ. The two liveliest songs on the album, "Speak Like a Child" and "Money-Go-Round," are two energetic dance songs. "Speak Like a Child," the first English single y the group, is fronted with Talbot's bright organ and syn- thesizer work, a heavy bass, and op- timistic lyrics to form a sassy and bouncy tune. On the other hand, "Money-Go-Round" combines Weller's politically-minded lyrics with a fierce bass lick and Talbot's driving keyboar- ds for a funky and wild song. Both songs feature the powerful horn blasts of the horn section. The music on Introducing the Style Council is quite a departure and has more of a sense of maturity from Weller's punk/mod days in the Jam. The classification of the musical style of the band is hard to pinpoint to one certain type. It is not electronic-dance music nor adult-contemporary pop. The Style Council is a blend of many dif- ferent musical types: White-boy funk, European pop, pinches of folk and jazz, and a little bit of soul - there is a lot of style in this council. - Bill Orlove Join the Daily Arts Staff NURSES .. . You're Needed All Over the World. Ask Peace Corps volunteers why their Nursing degrees are needed in Africa, Asia and Latin America. Ask Peace Corps volunteer Nurses why they teach basic health care to rural villagers in the Third World. They'll probably say they want to help people, use their skills, maybe learn a new language, and gain valuable career experience. Ask them why Peace Corps is the toughest job you'll ever love. GRADUATING this WINTER or SPRING? Z\1r~r Nv MOT fnr -1 QRA nr- ni nrr A] 1 ia Y ? ?; r Attention Students YOU CAN JOIN THE COMMUNITY SKILLS EXCHANGE AND TRADE YOUR SKILLS FOR THOSE YOU NEED Need your bike repaired or hair cut or film developed? Want to learn a musical instrument or auto repair or sewing? .*- - l1 VI'7 I5O scTACOS II i