ARI The Michigan Daily Sunday, January 29, 19 84 Page 5 Michael Jackson stable, surgery may be, LOS ANGELES (UPI)-Singer Michael Jackson, hospitalized with burns caused by fireworks that ignited his hair during filming of a TV commercial, may need surgery but should be able to attend next month's Grammy ceremonies, doctors said Satur- Jackson, 25, was dancing down a stairway at the Shrine Auditorium Friday night in a scene for a - multi-million dollar Pepsi commercial when a special effects smoke bomb apparently misfired and set his pomade-slicked hair ablaze. Dr. Steve Hoefflin said Saturday Jackson was in satisfactory condition with second-degree burns and a small third-degree burn on the back of his head. "He's in moderate pain, he's much more tired than he anticipated. He needs sleep at this time," Hoefflin told reporters at a hospital news conference. Jackson checked out of the hospital Saturday. We're applying ice and antibiotics and he may require some reconstructive surgery. But we can t determine that at this time. It depends on the amount of hair growth."4 Jackson, the country's top singer, won seven American Music Awards earlier this month and picked up a record 12 Grammy nominations. Hoefflin said Jackson will be able to attend the Feb. 28 Grammy presentations at the Shrine "if he feels up to it." A spokesman for Jackson said the singer requested that a tape of the accident be made public as soon as the film can be processed. "Michael wants to make certain that his fans know exactly what happened," Larry Larson told reporters at the hospital. Askedl if Jackson was contemplating a lawsuit, he said, "There's no indication at this point." , Hospital officials said the medical center had been inundated with thousands of phone calls since Jackson arrived and a spokesman pleaded with the public to stop calling, saying emergency calls could not get through. eeded The singer's Thriller album topped the music char- ts last year, placing an unprecedented six singles-including "Billie Jean" and "Beat It"-in the top 10 and spawning several popular videos. The accident Friday night occurred before an audience of about 3,000 people who won tickets to the - taping from a local radio station. One witness said Jackson removed his jacket without breaking stride and tried to put out the fire. "There was supposed to be an explosion for his big entrance," said Daryoush Maze, 25, an extra in the cast. "As he went off, an explosion went off and there was blue smoke all around his head and neck. There were no flames, just blue smoke from the stuff he had in his hair. "It seemed like it was part of the show. He was doing it very professionally, still dancing. He's a good trouper." Michael Jackson suffered third degree burns on the back of his head while filming a Pepsi commercial. He is in stable condition, and has been released from hospital. -------- -- - -- -------- Butley boasts brazen oratory By David Grayson T HE MICHIGAN ENSEMBLE Theatre's production of Simon Gray's BUTLEY is a successful attem- pt at some highbrow English humor and the portrayal of the not too funny prospect of a man's self-destruction. Ben Butley (Nicholas Pennell) is a fallen professor of English at the University of London who dulls his in- creasing despair and loneliness through heavy drinking and verbal attacks on students, aquaintances, and friends. On this particular day, Ben is informed of both his estranged wife's engagement to a man he considers to be "the most boring man in London," and his protege and former lover Joey's (Davis Hall) decision to move in with a new lover. The play, static by American stan- dards, is a challenging mix of rapid-fire dialogue, extensive vocabulary, and enchanting word play that would keep an adept lexicographer on his toes. BUTLEY is presented as a comedy, at least on the surface, but as author Gray points out, "there are some biographical elements." Nicholas Pennell, a leading member of the Stratford Festival company and a long-time acquaintance of the University theater program, gives a notable per- formance as the aloof and bitter Butley, who was once a promising scholar of Eliot at Cambridge and is now reduced to obsessive recitations and personal interpretations of Beatrix Potter. Though Butley becomes infantile and unjustifiably vicious, at timbs, Pennell portrays a likeable, once caring man whose continual alienation from those around him only perpetuates his misery. Butley is a man totally lost in an endless facade of verbal cleverness. Unfortunately, Mr. Pennell's skillful portrayal is greatly diminished by the performance of David Hall as Joey. One infers from the play that Joey is a man of little backbone and a somewhat "creepy" nature, but Mr. Hall takes these traits to such excess that he gives a totally undefined performance. The result is a character with the depth of a cigar store Indian and a disgusting smirk that looks as if he is in constant fear of losing some dental work. One finds it difficult to detect anything ap- pealing about this prissy imp, and is likewise skeptical (and vaguely repulsed) at any character's claim of fondness for him. Butley is left without the powerful in- terloctor with which he is to parley throughout the play. Pennell, however, gracefully makes a monodrama of most of the first act as well as selected scenes from the second when only Joey is present.. When Pennell does get the oppor- tunity of opposing an actor of equal merit, the result is impressive. Case in point is the confrontation between Butley and his not yet ex-wife Anne. Patricia Boyette gives a wonderfully haunting performance as a woman deeply wounded, but determined to plow through what is left of her life. It is during this scene, undoubtedly the play's best, that Butley's confusioni and undirected assaults on others come clearly into focus. The rest of the cast gives solid, but not particularly notable performances, that provide an- appropriate backdrop to the professor's rantings. The scene design and lighting of Butley's office (the only set) is effective and easily believable to anyone who has ever been to an English professor's office. Walter Eysselinck's direction can be cbn- sidered par for the course of M.E.T. productions; professional quality theater with sufficient attention given to all aspects of production. Though far from perfect, Butley gives us some noteworthy acting, strong insights, and some precious laughs. Despite its flaws, the play suc- cessfully brings us to- the close with empathy intact for this man who has driven himself into loneliness. 4, y' o 0 ANN ARBOR L iINDIVIDUAL TwEATRES 5th Ae e 1tue',y 761-9700 Nicholas Pennell contemplates life after a too short vacation away from the University. $2.00 SHOWS BEFORE 6:00 P.M. MON. THRU FRI. DAILY 1 P.M. SHOWS PAULINE AT THE BEACH Paul Taylor dancers impress with delicate steps By Julie Edelson WHEN THE PAUL TAYLOR Dance Company made one of its first ap- pearances, their avant garde dancing was so offensive that several audience members left in the middle of the per- formance. Needless to say, some 29 years later, no one walked out on the Paul Taylor performance at the Power Center. Friday night's performance not only indicated that the audience has come to appreciate more radical dance, but also that Paul Taylor has modified his style to incorporate a variety of movements-from classical to contem- porary. The concert opened with a stage covered with wooden dogs. This rather humorous device set the mood for the piece, "Diggity," which consisted of a series of playful antics. The dancers, dressed in casual grey and white, executed light, graceful movements such as jumps, leaps, and turns, to con- vey the convivial mood. The piece was extremely well-dramatized by the dan- cers' excellent facial expressions. The female/male flirtacious interactions were especially comical and enjoyable. The greatest achievement in this piece was the dancers' ability to sidestep the obstacle course of dogs with total ease. Clearly, this was a difficult task, but the dancers performed it effortlessly, so the audience was unaware of the dif- ficulty. The second, more modern piece, "Profiles," was impressive at the start, but quickly lost momentum. The dan- cers, dressed in geometrically designed unitards, were able to make magnificent shapes with their bodies, climbing on top of one another, and in- terlocking arms and legs. This highlighted their light, flexible bodies. However, the piece, void of diversity, became monotonous after a few minutes, and the background violin music sounded like nails on a chalk- board. Although this may have been Taylor's intent-to create a clashing, harsh dance, it became annoying after the initial appeal of the piece was lost. The company's ability to work as an ensemble was prevalant throughout the concert, but it was best seen in "Images." The company was syn- cronized in every step, and they moved as a unit, blending together in a very graceful fashion. There was a constant flowing movement, and an ease that is sometimes lost in the harsh movements common in modern dance. But "Images," like "Profiles," became repetitious and monotonous, with a series of repeated steps, and the dance could have been shorter. The last piece, "Airs," Taylor's com- promise with the classical, was by far the best. Here, the company was able to magnify their greatest strength: the ability to combine the grace of ballet with the ease and casual nature of modern dance. The magnificent music of Handel, which played before the curtain rose, set a pleasurable mood. Indeed, the dancers did look "aerial", as the title denotes, with the women wearing powder blue, flowing skirts, and the men in matching tights. The women, moving with a soft, sultry :e Boys Twin-Tone.). If the last Replacements LP, Hootenanny, made your blood tingle with the same excitement that 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue does, then I'm sure this double-header will tickle both the funny and dancing bones, abandon provided. Oh, yes.. . Monday night, Joe's Star Lounge, and all that. elegance as they executed their high- extended arabesques, resembled nym- phs, and the men were equally graceful. The most attractive movement was the partnering sequen- ce, with Linda Kent, Susan McGuire, and Kate Johnson, who appeared weightless in the lifts with their par- tners, Christopher Gillis, Thomas Evert, and David Parsons. With the exception of the somewhat annoying harshness prevalant in some of the movements, and the unnecessary length of the pieces, Paul Taylor has successfully proven that he can com- bine a variety of movement elements to create truly high-quality dancing. POETRY READING with Ruth Schwartz and LynnCrawford M nay. January 30th 8:00 p. m. GUILD HOUSE 802 MONROE "BRILLIANT VILLAGE V( "EROTIC" New'Y "EFFERVESCE New York Ti FRI., M SAT., SUN. 1:15, 3 T" )ICE NT" imes ' (Rj (ON . 1:00, 7:15, 9:35 :15, 5:15, 7:15, 9:35 WINNER LOS ANGELES FILM CRITICS AWARD BEST PICTURE, BEST ACTRESS AND BEST DIRECTOR SHIRLEY DEBRA JACK MocLAINE WINGER NICHOLSON FRI., MON. 1:00, 7:00, 9:25 SAT., SUN. 1:00, 3:30, 7:00, 9:25 Psychedelic rebellion of Slick By Larry Dean W ASHINGTON, D.C. is the kind of place where dreams come true. While there's all this hype about starry- eyed youths hitting the road for New' fork City, L.A. or Hollywood with elebritihood on their minds, just as nany folks dedicated to "making it" in a variety of different manners) find heir feet scudding the sacred soil of our aations' capital in search of a break. Under the grim shadow of the Washington Monument phallus, they extend their hats, give a little soft shoe, and hope that passers-by will help fund their search for show-biz immortality. Pigeonholing the Slickee Boys' noise as "psychedelic" might be easy, yet it's not fair. True, they have recorded the Yardbirds' "Psychodasies" before, (on their debut LP of some eight [!!] years ago) and true, they do tend to ape the psychedelia pose, both through song titles ("Manganese Android Puppies") and appearence. But as we all should have learned by now, labeling is merely a kick-off point for the music, and doesn't need to leave it at that. For, in the Slickee Boys vocabulary, humor and sheer absurd excess seem to be the domineering forces behind their garage-band-derived produce. As with many struggling outfits, the Slickee Boys have endured a number of personnel changes which has left them, to date, with a five-membership. I'm sure this quintet of musical myopics will rock and roll you with tongues-in- cheek (or in-check, if you prefer), having practiced quite a lot over the span of years, and between stops at the zoo to watch the pandas sleep, or else see the polar bears frolic. Along for the ride is Minneapolis' Replacements, whom many devout fans swear by. This knack for profanity on the listeners' part is no doubt due to the Replacements' virtuousity-in troth, they play blues, jazz, rock, folk, field hollers, even skiffle! But it does all come from the same base, which the band members like to call "trash rock" with the same kind of pride that prom- pted Haydn to pen his piano sonatas. The Replacements are on the Twin- Tone label, a Minneapolis-based com- pany which also boasts the Slickee Boys as members of the roster (You might've even seen the Boys' video, "When I Go to the Beach," on Empty-V, celebrating their initial recording for Light lunches: Any sandwich 12.85 with soup or all you can cat salad bar add 11.25 'All yo Munchie desire"Hour r Sunday - /" 4-7 p.m. ....nc h 2 fors FREE UNIVERSITY COURSES AND WORKSHOPS NOW OPEN Free, six week Free University courses on the following topics will begin starting Feb. 5, 1984: Media and Politics City Politics Co-ops Central America Tenants' Rights Blacks at UM Nuclear Disarmament Communes Exploring the Gender Gap Military Research Capitalism, Democracy, and World Peace Political Theater Free, one or two meeting Free University Workshops on the following topics: Political Music The University's Budget The War Powers Act . Nineteen Eighty-Four War Tax Resistance Student Empowerment Qualities for Social Activism