ARTS Wednesday, October 26, 1983 The Michigan Daily Romantic remorse By Michael Fisch M AYBE ROMANTIC Comedy shouldn't have a title. It isn't very romantic, and it isn't all that funny. The film showcases one accomplished star, Dudley Moore, and one up-and-coming star, Mary Steenburgen.. Moore plays Jason Carmichael, a successful N.Y. playwright who enters into a writing collaboration with Phoebe Craddock (Mary Steenburgen). The two meet on the day of Jason's marriage. Jason and Phoebe make eyes at each other, and stammer their lines, the director making it clear that the two fall in love at first sight. They are set up as star-crossed lovers. If one is married at any time during the film, the other is not. Both actors strive to make their por- trayals believable and complex. They are so conscious of the complexities in fact, that they become obvious and Overdone. Moore and Steenburgen end up spelling out everything, and the audience is not prepared for this spoon- feeding. Romantic Comedy is a predictable film. Right from the start, the moviegoer knows that Phoebe and Jason are going to get together; one must simply wait for the inevitable climax. It's like knowing about your Page 5 Beautiful beaux Mary Steenburgen and Dudley Moore are successful playwrights who won't admit their love in 'Romantic Comedy.' By Gordon Jay Frost T OP-FLIGHT musicians don't suf- fer from histrionics. Van Cliburn, for example, finds himself better suited as a patron of the arts. Neither do per- formers need to maintain an affectation of distance from their music. This is both dull and an insult to the composer. Rather, a comfortability and care for instrument, score and audience, as the Beaux Arts Trio displays, is an exam- ple of great care and remarkable skill. Sunday's concert was a lesson to our musical community. Right on time, the musicians entered with their music and they began their first piece , Mozart's Trio in G Major. There was no irritating preening or fine-tuning. The first noticeable element was their attitude; there was no sense of melodrama that accompanies many musicians. It seemed as if these men could be anywhere: a village square, a Hopwood tea or just jamming on the back porch while their spouses- were! out. For the most part, this set the audience at ease. The atmosphere lent an edge to the Mozart. They didn't rush over or dwell on every note. Their interpretation was upbeat, energetic and joyous. Sixteenth notes were played to their values, but with a special resonance. Mozart pref- fered this style as he said in a letter to his father: "It is much easier to play a thing quickly than slowly: in difficult passages you can leave out a few notes without anyone's noticing it, But is that beautiful music?" The Beaux Arts Trio obviously doesn't think so. The violinist (Isadore Cohen) jumped into themes like a gypsy fiddler. This was a quality which suited the Mozart well and was exciting in the Smetana Trio in G Minor. Balanced against a controlled and rich performance by Bernard Greenhouse on cello, their in- terchange was wonderful to watch as well as hear. Fully aware of one another, they did not search their music, instruments, or partners for cues or intention. While every fine performer has a good degree of technical skill, and it need not usually be mentioned, the tone and fullness of sound Greenhouse and Cohen master in pizzizacto sets them apart. Of course, their instruments are extraordinary (e.g., Greenhouse's "Paganini" Stradivarius), but it requires equally extraordinary talent to generate such sound - especially as they did in the Mendelssohn Trio in D minor. The man who deserves the most praise, however, is pianist Manahem Pressler. Arthur Rubinstein once men- tioned that one must be able to sing in order to be a great pianist. Pressler must have taken the late master at his word; he sang (silently) throughout the entire performance. Looking to the others frequently, he consistently mat- ched their tone, volume, and intensity. Rackham seldom accomodates such soft sound or controlled attack. As the heart of the Beaux Arts Trio, Pressler centered the sound and influenced its direction as well as allowing it to alter when appropriate. The audience greatly enjoyed the concert, although only about a third stood during the ovation. The trio played a short movement from a Dvorak Trio as an encore, to placate those who had to hear more and those who had other engagements. They are seldom here and are a great treat: this stop in Ann Arbor brings their average to one University of Michigan concert in 1000 worldwide. Try not to miss them the next time around. surprise party a week before it hap- pens. The moviegoer doesn't mind thinking, but Romantic Comedy doesn't give him the chance. Romantic Comedy is not a terrible film. Dudley Moore is probably why. Even when he is not at his best (he was great in Arthur), he's a presence, and a funny one at that. When Moore isn't wrapped up in the role game - con- sciously attempting to make his character complex and believable - he's quite a funny man. If things are flowing naturally for him, and this does happen during the film, one starts', to forget a few of the movie's flaws. Romantic Comedy had potential, it just left me unsatisfied. IBlunderland' stumbles on something good I r I INDIVIDUAL THEATRES 5h'Ae o' Lberty 761-9700 1 $2.00 WED. SAT. SUN. SHOWS TIL 6 EXCEPT "NEVER" $3.00 Limited 2 Week Engagement A FASCINATING GLIMPSE INTO THE WORLD OF THE URBAN GYPSY A FILM BY ROBERT DUVALL ANN:RBO F try x5.4: } s k : i I oil By Elliot Jackson A LICE IN Blunderland: Reflections of a Nuclear Age, played to a full-or nearly full-house at the St. Andrew's Episcopal Church this Sun- day afternoon. The audience itself $seemed to be a slightly more homespun group than is usually found at Ann Ar- bor theatrical "events": women were knitting, children were running up and down in the aisles. This in itself pleased me. I have never been a fan of that philosophy which holds that theater is a night on the town, is entertainment for which one dresses up. The more informal the surroun- dings and one's dress, the more likely one is to react as he genuinely feels to 'What ensues onstage. The audience member is not overawed by stage machinery nor the glamour of the situation. With that in mind, let us turn to Alice herself, and consider her adventures in Blunderland. Billed as a "modern day morality play," Alice in Blunderland is an account of a little girl who passes through a magic mirror into the mar- velous land of Blunderland, where cats and rabbits and flowers talk, and all the world seems to be cheerfully employed - or at least employed - making, selling, justifying, and getting rich from, Fairy Dust. Fairy Dust is used to make bombs, which the Blunderlanders stockpile to protect themselves from the dreaded JABBERWOCKS. We watch as Alice meets first the Rabbit (a concerned environmen- talist), then the Prime Minister of Blunderland (who tells her the Rabbit is a dangerous radical and extols the wonders of Fairy Dust), then the Cheshire Cat (who is hep to all that is going on, but will print only what sells), the Flowers (who, since it doesn't con- cern them, could not care less about Fairy Dust), the Walrus and the Car- penter (the one a big businessman traf- ficking in Fairy Dust, the other the scientist who develops it), and, of cour- se, Tweedle Dum and Tweedledummer, who feverishly collect newer and bigger Fairy Dust bombs with which to protect their interests. I trust that by now the allegories can- not be possibly escaping anybody. Cer- tainly they were not lost on the audien- ce. Alice offers a picture of nuclear build-up which is pretty hard to argue with, at least to the perception of one who has fairly liberal biases. Therein, however, lies the question which I always have for this kind of theatre: just how many converts does it make? Do we not always judge a work's quality by how closely its world view conforms to our values? Con- sequently, anyone who goes to see a play like Alice in Blunderland will most likely be convinced already that nuclear warfare and technology are dangerous and disagreeable things. To its credit, the group who performs the play does not promise miracles of consciousness-raising. In fact, Legacy, an interfaith group from Akron, does not promise anything at all. The mem- bers of the group ask only that the play will inspire. And, according to their literature, it has. So much for my skep- ticism. "But is it art?" Or, does dedication alone make a play into an effective piece of theatre? I am inclined to say no, but there are those who disagree with me. Some training in the rudimen- ts of acting-or at least, vocal development-would add to the charm of the actors and their performances. It would have been nice to be able to un- derstand everyone. It would certainly have been nice to dispense with all the microphones that littered the church and actors' bodies, interfering with mobility and expression. The audience, however, responded enthusiastically. At the end of the per- formance, they flocked to the tables where Legacy's anti-nuke pamphlets and books were set out. They talked to the actors. Perhaps effective com- munication had been established after all. And in the final analysis, there is nothing more important than that to any kind of theatre. THURS. 7:25, 9:40 (R) WED. 12:45, 2:55, 5:10, 7:25, 9:40 1 0 ACTION ADVENTURE! ~h sIN cp"NIE min DOL B YSTEREO I~ THURS.7:00, 9:30 WED. 12:00, 2:20, 4:40, 7:00, 9:30 I I The Professional Theatre Program. presents PATRICK CREA N in Records "THE SUN I (EVER "1 SETS A one man show based on the works of Rudyard Kipling The Alarm-'The Alarm' (IRS) You know I just love IRS records. In the course of a year they release more unpretentious treasures than one could hope for. R.E.M.'s Murmur, for exam- ple, was simply one of the summer's best albums; it made driving my con- vertible obscenely fun. Only IRS would have released R.E.M. when they did, likewise they're the only ones I can imagine giving the Alarm a release now. Someone asked me today how I would classify the Alarm. I was excited. Not only was he interested in IRS' latest group, but he was also interested in my opinion. Wow. Would my classification perhaps further his inter- est in the band? I realized then that he probably didn't really care and was only making a weak attempt at being social. I told him, "They're one of those punky Go-Go-esque we can't play real great but we're cool people so so what groups."Having heard him say, "oh," I knew he definitely didn't care about my description. Still not knowing how to pigeon-hole this group, I went home and listened to the Alarm's EP again. I was im- mediately taken by their funky-twangy garage-band sound. The first cut creates a lot of ex- citement as they urge us to make "The Stand" against what they're not exactly sure, perhaps just complacency in general. The other four cuts are similar in their childish optimism and judgement. This may bug some people. I myself am ready to lynch the next set of ego-preening-cum-Loverboy- pretty boys that hit the airwaves and therefore find the Alarm very refreshing. Sure, the Alarm hasn't grown up yet, but I suspect we'll be able to watch them do so with subsequent records. We can let Leonard Nimoy search for growth in Loverboy records. "Marching On" is the outstanding cut on the record. Here the Alarm best ar- ticulate their frustration with the com- placency, bitterness and selfishness that always seem to quash the efforts of op- timistic post-adolescents. These guys overwhelm me. I am amazed that a bunch of Brits can run around playing anthemic twang in cowboy suits and pull it off. I am even more amazed that they can find cowboy suits like the ones I wore in kindergarten in London. I've decided to classify the Alarm as a group that makes records I like. -Doug Coombe OCTOBER 29 8:00 p.m. Trueblood Theatre Tickets $10 PTP Ticket Office (313/764-0450) Michigan League Building New Marines land in Beirut, deaths mount (Continued from Page 1) The Marines were ordered to their highest state of alert and reporters were told to get into bunkers or leave the area after suspicious trucks. were seen around the airport. "There have been three vehicles spotted driving around the area. There are suspicions that they could contain explosives," said Marine Capt. Wayne Jones. Officials gave no further infor- mation about the trucks, but the Marines remained on alert throughout the day. ANOTHER Marine spokesman, Maj. Robert Jordan said anyone ap- proaching the gate to the camp would be shot. "It will be a shoot-to-kill situation," said Jordan. Marine guards took over the seafront boulevard in front of the British Em- bassy, crouching with guns leveled at those who ventured nearby. The U.S. emhasv han head its temnnrarv nffies wounded Marines with the Purple Heart and flew yesterday to Beirut to review the Marines' security. Kelley said he thought security measures at the base were "very adequate" and that it would have been difficult to prevent the attack. "If you have a determined individual who is willing to risk his life, or rather give up his life, chances are he's going to do that," Kelley said. "So let's not blame the security measures." THE COMMANDER of French troops, Gen. Francois Cann, said much the same thing. "We are dealing in this case with people who are fanatic," he told reporters at the scene of the Fren- ch explosion. Cann described the suicide terrorist attack that blew up the headquarters of a French paratroop unit as almost exactly like the attack on the Marines. tn e A n .A +rptir ,moo onnlaA d n- The French Foreign Ministry an- nounced the foreign ministers of the four countries involved in the multinational peacekeeping force in Lebanon will meet in Paris Thursday to discuss the situation following the double bombing. The United States, France and Italy have vowed to keep their troops in Lebanon. Britain has said only that.it will not keep its troops there in- definitely. U.S. Secretary of State George Schultz announced earlier that he would go to Europe this week for the meeting. UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN BAND-O-RAMA 1983 Featuring: Concert Band Symphony Band I-- MAJOR EVENTS PRESENTS Z9Y, yvd jlv .. I I w V / s_ f SA