ARTS Friday, September 28, 1984 The Michigan Daily Page 5 4 Secret honor returns for world premiere Joe S to stay open during October Ann Arbor music fans take heart - at least for a few more weeks. A recording at Joe's Star Lounge yesterday announced the club will be open for at least part of October. No scheduling information, however, is available at this time. Joe's was scheduled to close this weekend then reopen in a month at a new location. Stay tuned for further details. Robert Altman returns. Two years after his acclaimed interpretation of Stravinsky's The Rakes Progess at The Power Center, Altman's second collaboration with the university has its Ann Arbor premiere. The film is Secret Honor, an adaptation of Arnold M. Stone's- and Donald Freed's 'one-man stage play about Richard Nixon. Long regarded as one of America's most unique filmmakers, Altman and the university have for the last two years enjoyed a mutually benefitting partnership. As in the production of,, The Rakes Progress, in which students worked both on-stage and backstage under Altman's guise, and with Altman given a free reign, the film was executed in much the same manner. Last January Altman brought the play to the Lydia Mendelssohn Theater for a weekend run, and subsequently shot it as a film in several rooms of Martha Cook Hall that were redressed as Nixon's set. Actor Philip Baker Hall reprised his role of Nixon that he had played on stage under Altman's direction. With the help of Professor Frank Beaver and the Communications Dept., thirty university graduate students were recruited to serve in various capacities as grips, gaffers, and camera assistants. After shooting wrapped, Altman returned to New York with the film, for post-production. Altman was drawn to the project, a study of the inner conflicts that drew Richard Nixon to his tragic downfall, by the intense conflicts of his story. As Altman himself stated at the time of production, "Secrets are rarely honorable, and honor is rarely a secret, but in the context of the Presidency of the United States, these words may find themselves as bedfellows." Two screenings of Secret Honor were given last night at the Michigan Theatre, with two more tonight. Showtimes are 7:00 and 9:00 p.m. -Marlene Roth THE NROTC COLLEGE PROGRAM. $2,000 EXPENSE MONEY AND A NAVY OFFICER COMMISSION. The two-year NROTC College Program offers you two years of expense money that's worth up to $2,000, plus the challenge of becoming a Navy Officer with early responsibilities and decision-making authority. During your last two years in college the Navy pays for uniforms, NROTC textbooks and an allowance of $100 a month for up to 20 months. Upon graduation and completion of requirements, you become a Navy Officer. with important decision-making responsibilities. Call your Navy representative for more information on this challenging program. CONTACT LT. JOHN COSTELLO, NORTH HALL 764-1498 NAVY OFFICERS GET RESPONSIBILITY FAST. Philip Baker Hall portrays Richard Nixon in 'Secret Honor,' Robert Altman's latest film which premiered last night at the Michigan Theatre. 4 4r I Noon' brags and bores I V.1. 1 LONDON (AP) - A long-lost semi- autobiographical novel by D.H. Lawrence has emerged from its time warp to a mixed reception from the critics, but the publisher says it is selling well. The hostile reviews call Mr. Noon niediocre, overwritten and boring. But othiers have hailed its appearance, not only for its literary value but for the li'ght it casts on the great author's life and sexual attitudes, portrayed in such classics as Sons and Lovers and Lady Chatterly's Lover. Novelist Anthony Burgess called the work "something very like a major novel and one of immense autobiographical interest," while the weekly Listener welcomed it for filling in a major gap in Lawrence's develop- ient as a man and a writer. :Mr. Noon was completed in 1921 bpt never got published. Although tame by today's permissive standards, it is believed that it was too sexually ex- plicit for its time. 'In 1972, the manuscript was acquired by the Humanities Research Center at the University of Texas in Austin, and it was published last week by Cambridge University Press. The first part, 93 of the 292 pages of Mr. Noon, is a novella that was published in 1934 and describes the sexual adventures of a young man growing up in provincial England. The second part, only now published, chronicles 'the experiences of the Lawrence-like Gilbert Noon in Europe, focusing on his elopement with the wife of an English professor. Noon's elopement is believed to be a thinly disguised account of Lawrence's true-life romance with Frieda von Richthofen-Weekley, whom he lured away from her English husband in 1912 and married. They remained together until his death in 1930. News of the novel's imminent publication was greeted en- Stanley H. Kaplan The Smart MOVE! ,e thusiastically by Lawrence scholars hoping to learn more about the man whose sensitive explorations, of love and sex made him one of the most ac- claimed and controversial writers of this century. "And what have we? We have a long, disjointed, mediocre roman a clef," wrote Christopher Stace in the Daily Telegraph. "There is nothing here Lawrence has not done better elsewhere. The heavily autobiographical content means, of course, that thesis-writers will seize on Mr. Noon with delight, but as a work of art it fails." James Fenton of The Times found Noon's implied boasts of v sexual prowess tiresome and wrote that by the climax of the book, "it has been going round in circles for some time." He cited passages of writing which he thought were "blatherings." Several critics were put off by Lawrence's direct asides to the reader, as in, "Ah, dear reader, you don't need me to tell you how to sip love with a spoon." Francis King in the Sunday Telegraph called the device "jocose buttonholing of the reader in a manner that makes one want to jerk free in em- barrassment." But Burgess, writing in the weekly Observer, found Lawrence's "descrip- tive powers at their finest," his ap- proach "never without humor or irony" and "he seems to be wiser about women in this book than in any other, except. perhaps, Sea and Sarinia." The Listener said the book "fills one of the most intriguing gaps in modern literature" between Sons and Lovers of 1913 and Women in Love published in 1920. Sons and Lovers and with its hero leaving his English mining town. Mr. Noon wrote the Listener's Michael Poole, "is the 'sequel' we never had." Hilary Dodd, a publicist at Cam- bridgerUniversity Press, said the num- ber of hardback copies Mr. Noon now in print was "approaching five figures." Shesaid the first press run had been sold out and a new run had been ordered. i i. ---. .' Q aSeQ Q kv t a .1 y OR o ANN' ARBORI ( 5th Avenue at UberW St 761-9700 A I it DAILY 1st MATINEE $2.00 I i I :f 'i .; ?<::.r 3r Y2': ,::<. 2%:'o5} ' '>:: I 540 E. Liberty St. 761-4539 Corner of Maynard & Liberty I "Rare and Exemplary" -REX REED, N.Y. POST WENDY HUGHE'S He might hear youo ® ..... w:.n.6t.CENTUAro; FRI. 1:00, 7:20, 9:30,11:30 P.M. SAT. 12:50, 3, 5, 7:20, 9:3011:30 xx- SUN. 12:50, 3, 5,7:20, 9:30 :fir:: X.X >f ... ........ ........ ... : IX. "SEDUCTIVE" -NEWSWEEK ANOTH ER c oU NTRY ;.tip: , i , ..: