The Michigan Daily -.Friday, February 17, 1984 - Page 7 Stoppard with surprising skill By Dave Kopel LET ME COME to the point quickly. Dogg's Hamlet, Cahoot's Macbeth is 'one of the most perfectly performed pieces I've seen in Ann Arbor. Each character delivers each line just right. At $3.50 a ticket, the show is a great bargain. Dogg's Hamlet, the first of the one- act plays, kept the audience in hysterics. Several British schoolboys (who speak a language called "Dogg") put on a foreign language production of Sbakespeare's Hamlet (in English). While the schoolboys are building the set for the performance, a deliveryman arrives with a load of wood. The deliveryman speaks English, the schoolboys. speak Dogg, and neither realizes that the other is speaking in a different language. The deliveryman doesn't understand that when the schoolboys say "Useless, git," they mean "Good day, sir." The resulting confusion is hilarious. While one needn't intellectualize to enjoy the show, the play makes important points about how often we think we're com- municating when we're not, and about low we may communicate even when we don't intend to. ,The cast of Dogg's Hamlet is com- posed of students from U of M's Theatre M.F.A. program. Having worked together for over a year and a half, they give a very strong ensemble perfor- m.lance. The play moves along precisely iand energetically, climaxing with the 15-minute schoolboy performance of Hamlet, followed by a side-splitting two-minute encore "mini-Hamlet." Timothy Grimm, as the befuddled deliveryman, and Mary Jeffries, as the Schoolmistress turn in especially amusing performances. While Dogg's Hamlet filled the theatre with laughter, Cahoot's Mac- beth kept it solemnly quiet. Cahoot's takes place in modern Prague, where dissident actors (forbidden to perform in public) are staging a production of Macbeth for a living-room audience. It is based on the true experiences of Czechoslovakian playwright Pavel Kohout, a victim of the Communist dic- tatorship's "normalization." During the living-room performance of Macbeth, an. inspector from the secret police arrives. As the Inspector, Brian O'Sullivan is the perfect "cretinous fascist pig" - the agent of a regime deathly afraid "to risk the in- fection of an uncontrolled idea." The Inspector's bullying, L and the progression of the plot build the tension for the play's bizarre climax, which is Tom Stoppard at his best. The characters in Cahoot's Macbeth are much deeper and more human than those in Dogg's Hamlet. As each actor from Dogg's also plays a role in Cahoot's, the audience can only admire the cast's versatility. For an evening of fun, fine acting, and linguistic theory, one can't go wrong with Dogg's Hamlet, Cahoot's Macbeth. Performances at the New Trueblood Theatre begin at 8:00 p.m. through Feb. 18, and at 2:00 p.m. on Feb. 19. Tim Hooper and Brian Sullivan entertain in Tom Stoppard's Dogg's Hamlet, Cahoot's Macbeth. Are you ready for someone else to do the, repairs? University Towers gives you fast, in-house maintenance service plus a lot more. Consider our newly refurnished apartments 5 minutes from campus, our TV lounge, ping- pong, pool table, laundry facilities and heated swimming pool in the summer. Don't miss out! Best yet, our rates are very reasonable: Apartment 8 Mo. Lease 12 Mo. Lease 2 person/2 bedroom/mo. $525.00 $445.00 3 person/2 bedroom/mo. $530.00 $450.00 4 person/2 bedroom/mo. $535.00 $455.00 3 person/3 bedroom/mo. $590.00 $505.00 Only $125.00 refundable security deposit. UNIm V'ERSIT TWRS 536 S. Forest (corner of S. Forest & S. University) Visit our model apartments today! Phone: (313) 761-2680 Train's st (Continued from Page6) although a bit histrionic, as the man suspected of murder by everyone, in- cluding his lover. At the heart of' the film, is Robert Walker's beautifully diabolical perfor- mance as Bruno Antony, one of Hitch- cock's most memorable villains. Bruno wears garish flashy shoes and a lurid tie with lobsters and his name stamped all over it. "I wear it for my mother," Bfuno tells Guy with perverse pleasure. Bruno is a character only Walker could' bring to life. Frequently cast as a bland dummy, Walker made Bruno the per- formance of his career, a hideous mix- ture of evil and perversion balanced by a sick sense of humor. The film is laced with striking images and scenes which remain in one's nIemory. There's a great shot from GUy's point of view, at a grandstand of people watching a tennis match. All the heads move as the ball bounces from rangers one end of the court to the other, all ex- cept Bruno's, whose motionless gaze remains fixed towards Guy. When Bruno murders Miriam on an island next to an amusement park, the crime is, recorded in the reflection from a pair of glasses. The whole scene is underscored with "And The Band Played On," an ironically haun- ting tune when juxtaposed against the murder. Strangers On A Train is a great film because it's so fun. It's exciting, very funny, and has flashes of genius which make it a minor masterpiece. All imper- fections and inconsistencies aside, Strangers is Hitchcock at his best, and Robert Walker's Bruno Antony is worth the price of two admissions. The film is. showing Wednesday, February 22, at 7:10 at the Michigan Theater and is also being shown by Cinema 2 on the following Saturday at 7:00 in Auditorium A, Angel Hall. career here working on a defense prob See your placement office for more lem and later move into one of our many information, or write to: " Electronics Engineers * Mechanical Engineers " Physicists You're about to take that all-impor- tant step, from college into your first ca- reer position. It's a move that must be thought out carefully. energy research programs. 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