41 ARTS The Michigan Daily Friday, February 17, 1984 Page 6 Bernstein gives amazing performance By Bob King IN THEIR cardigans and oxfords at Wednesday's rehearsal, one facet of the Vienna Philharmonic normally lost in the glare of harmony became evident: the orchestra is composed of individuals. They're devoted, 100 per- cent musicians, but they are 100 per- cent individuals, too. And young. "They look like a college orchestra, but ..," trailed off Bernstein, whose casual ap- pearance hid nothing of his splendor, "some of them are really 'just kids." This was no exaggeration, the first horn is 23. The 4th U.S.-Japan Automotive Industry Conference *' * * Age and all else apart, there is nothing but love between Bernstein and the orchestra: "We've become so close, closer than I was with the New York or in Israel . . . I guess it's this repertoire - that's what they live for. "They grew up in the city with Mozart, Schumann, Haydn, Beethoven," glows Bernstein, "I can think a phrase, and they play it." Clairvoyant or not, the orchestra per- formed with intense emotion, Bernstein merely fine tuned them as did Shakespeare his thoughts into verse. Reflecting on a recent recording of Mozart's Symphony No. 41 with this group, Bernstein smiles "the adante is simply to weep; in all of 'Jupiter,' I've never heard anything like it." Ann Ar- bor would find out the same this. evening. As Bernstein ascended the podium, the more-than-sold-out audience fell silent with awe, this reaction was im- mediately justified by the exposition of "Jupiter." For lack of skill to praise properly, I can only say the orchestra lived up to its reputation: mere words fall short. The strings glowed in harmony musicians hear only in their sleep. The interpretation was sharp, yet smooth, the energy tempered with classic restraint. By the third movement Ber- nstein was himself in dance, conducting not by motions but example. The ap- plause called the maestro back on stage three times. After intermission, P.C. Boylan, Dean of the Music School, announced that Wednesday's performance by Leonard Bernstein and the Vienna Philharmonic was their 100th perfor- mance together, a fact that had sur- prised Bernstein at rehearsal more than it did the audience this evening. The evening's crescendo came as our own Hal Shapiro ascended the podium to re-introduce Leonard Bernstein and the 'Philadelphia Philharmonic,' an oratory clearly supported with an ap- plause of laughter. Fired by this initial triumph, the President moved onward to explain the aesthetic importance of this concert in each person's life, its cultural value, the attendance, stopping short of Bernstein's horoscope only at the incessant coughing of the first cello. The orationnwas astimely as a Bud- weiser commercial at a frat party: there wasn't one unappreciative neuron in the entire audience. ; Bernstein then reascended the podium, and Brahm's Symphony No. 2 began; the maestro drew sound from the musicians like a necromancer draws spirits from a circle: the origin never seemed orchestral. Following a standing ovation, again divided into three parts, Bernstein left the stage for the evening. But, as Shapiro had pointed out, this wasa per- formance that left no one unaffected. I I* a k 6° The American Automobile Industry: Rebirth or Requiem? Public Forum March 20, 1984 Workshops March 21, 1984 Featuring Lionel H. Olmer Under Secretary for International Trade Daily Photo by REBECCA KNIGHT Leonard Bernstein caught in a contemplative moment Wednesday morning E at Hill Auditorium. Owen Bieber UAW President Shohei Kurihara Advisor to MITI Public Forum $100 Workshops $125 Academic Registration Presented by: The University of Michigan Information: (313) 764-1489 Daily Don't talk to str A Acts Staff! 200 Million People, And Only 35,000 Get to Read 01 .e SUBSCRIBE NOW 764-0558 By Paul Clipson_ A MAN ARRIVES at a train station. As he nears his train, another man exits a taxi and makes his way to the same train. Both men enter the same carriage from opposite ends, walk towards each other and sit down facing one another. They are strangers - strangers on a train. One man acciden- tally bumps the other's legwith his foot and apologizes. A conversation develops. Watching Alfred Hitch- cock's Strangers On A Train, onecannot suspect that this chance meeting will eventually lead to murder. It does. Suspicion and murder are two of Hitch- cock's favorite themes, and he uses them brilliantly in this chilling and suspenseful film. Strangers On A Train is the type of gripping, creepy movie for which Hit- chcock earned his nickname, "The Master of Suspense." this is a gem of a thriller packed with weird characters and famous scenes. The film accen- tuates Hitchcock's knack for telling a story in purely visual terms, as in the opening train station sequence where the camera focuses on only two pairs of shoes, following their fateful paths which eventually cross; in the same way, a train follows a track which crosses many others. The story is meticulous and full of twists that are part of the film's appeal. Guy Haines (Farley Granger), a tennis star, bumps into Bruno Antony (Robert Walker) on a train on its way to Washington, D.C. The two strangers chat over lunch. Guy is quiet, reserved and conservative. Bruno, on the other hand, is an unabashed. irresponsible playboy. His passion for drinking, driving at high speeds (with his eyes closed) and plotting imaginary mur- ders, borders on the insane. As they talk, Guy becomes alarmed at Bruno's knowledge of his private life. Bruno reads the "scandal sheets" which frequently publicize Guy's tennis career, his strained marriage to an adulterous wife and his affair with a beautiful senator's daughter, Anne Morton, whom he wants to marry. Bruno tells Guy that he, too, has a problem. He hates his father. So much so that he often dreams of the different ways in which he could kill him. Bruno 'angerso1, suggests that if Guy murders his ol man, Bruno will kill Guy's unfaithful-. wife, Miriam, who will not consent to ai-_ divorce. Thus,. there would be tw&) motive-less murders, and two perfect alibis. At this point, Guy realizes Bruno is nothing less than a lunatic and- jokingly tells him that his plan is a-. sound one and disembarks. Unfor: tunately for Guy, Bruno takes this reac-. tion to be Guy's consent to his morbid- plan, and murders Miriam that night. To make matters worse, Guy had a conspicuously violent argument with Miriam that same day, making him a chief suspect for the murder.'Guy soon learns that Bruno expects him to carry out his part of the "bargain." Guy must now murder Bruno's father. If he doesn't, Bruno will frame Guy. What. began as a casual conversation on the, train has thrust Guy into a suspicious world where Bruno and the police con- front him at every turn. The film has its strengths and weaknesses. Some of the dialogue is unconvincing, perhaps because the' script passed through several screen-.- writers' hands during preproduction.; Ruth Roman's performance as Guy's. lover, Anne Morton, is just too stiff and,- cold to be engaging. Roman and Farley.' Granger were thrust into playing the: leads, against Hitchcock's wishes, by' l, the production heads of Warne Brothers. Granger is effective see STRANGERS, Page 7 ADRIANS T-SHIRT TA M : e R PRINTERY "5 TEAM_ WAShINqTON Juniors o interested in on CapitolF " Unique interests V gress in the mittees. r Seminar experts, fo issues. " Washinc the chair; Intern Advi - Disduss mation andc participant Filing dea a_ _ _Argil P INTERNSI p r Seniors with a 3.0 average: in Congress? Earn 16 credits Hill. Hnternships based on your Vork with members of Con- eir offices and on their con- rs with leading government ocusing on current policy gton Faculty headed by nan of the Congressional sory Council. sion Groups to share infor- opinions with fellow student s from around the country. adline for Semester I: University Players presents Tom Stoppard's Hilarious Comedy o og~s xM~,B ; V o .. M I