RTS The Michigan Daily Tuesday, October 8, 1985 Page 5 Daughter-in-law':_n absorbing show By Chris Lauer B OYS WILL BE boys. And romp wide-eyed, floppy-eared through mother-centered lives of childish rage and glee - something to do with fer- tility. And all of Ann Arbor has the opportunity to watch two typical as there ever were boys, creations of D. H. Lawrence, play their half-man games across the stage of the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre in Project Theatre's production of The Daughter-in Law. The intensely psychological play is funny in a way. Lawrence doesn't exactly drop the theme on your head, but he lets you know what's hap- pening, psychologically speaking - while the characters themselves, by the play's very nature, are always in the dark. And what is the play's very nature? It's intensely real - you know the source of Lawrence's material. You see the foolishness of the characters - boys and women alike - and see real-life correspondence. But at the same time Lawrence allows you to stand outside and even kind of above it all. And that's what's funny - laughing at yourself. The story, set in an English coal mining town in 1911, concerns the boys of Mrs. Gascoigne, Joe and Luther, and how one of them may or may not have become a man. The widow Gascoigne, a rock of a woman, keeps her boys in line with bits of tinny but authoritatively delivered folk wisdom. Notice the boys also spout platitudes - but you know where they got them. Besides being the cornerstone of the family, Mrs. Gascoigne is the rock of the play, the source of motivation and conflict. Lily Lodge, a veteran of many Broadway productions, plays the role with flawless projection of mother-figure soft, yet hard affection - something the two male actors have no trouble orbiting around. The older boy, Luther, who has married Minnie sometime previous to the play, gets in trouble when another woman becomes pregnant by him. Matthew Conlon at Luther achieves wonderful boyishness throughout, especially when the pregnant woman's mother chides him - remember when Beaver Cleaver broke a window with a baseball? Joe, Luther's brother, played by Jason Robards III, is the weakest of the roles. Robards plays the charac- ter as too much of a brutish big bully, never backing off enough to be just a smart-ass kid. Robards kills the character's mental sharpness with unfocused savage behavior. Later in the play when Joe softens up a little and begins to say some perceptive, poignant things, Robards' perfor- mance as a big dumb loudmouth makes woefully little sense. I expec- ted more careful sarcasm, and a sly glint in the eye; violent, yes - but like a boy, not a gangster. Annalee Jefferies as Minnie, Luther's wife, plays a perfect com- pare-and-contrast role to the mother figure. Visually, the costuming clues you in - the mother looks like the Rock of Gibralter in a baggy black frock, while Minnie is brightly clad in a dress that accentuates her slim figure. Jefferies meets Lily Lodge's acting abilities head-on; the two make the female clash over Luther vivid and poignant. Even when they aren't on' stage together, which is most of the time, the conflict is always present. And all the while Jefferies displays subtle signs of becoming the sub- stitute mother figure - visual signs of an actress at work. Jefferies' acting subtleties work exactly they way they're supposed to - the end is kind 7 Barber Stylists Professional * Experienced NO WAITING! DASCOLA STYLISTS Maple Village ...........761-2733 Liberty off State.......668-9329 of a surprise but it really isn't. Lily Mansell as Mrs. Purdy, the mother of the pregnant girl, clicks with something in my mind. The wild, Edith Bunker-like voice inflection, the deeply furrowed look of concern that isn't really a look of concern, the over-reaction to the slightest piece of news: She is The Gossipy Old Woman. Impeccable character acting. I ap- preciated the clear enunciation so I too could hear the slightest bit of news. Enunciation, indeed, is important for the play. Being set in northern England, it is written in a dialect that takes some getting used to. The Daughter-in-Law is the first production of the University's reorganized professional theatre program. Director of the program and its productions, John Russell Brown, who also heads the University theatre department, is to be com- mended not only for the ambitious quantity of his work, but especially for its outstanding quality. His direc- tion of The Daughter-in-Law is tight; not a wasted or extraneous moment. Everything for theme's sake, not its own sake. I don't understand how Brown knew in advance that such a difficult to un- derstand and perform play could make an absorbing show, but I hope he'll continue to bring us good and in- novative theatre. TheiDaughter-in-Law can be seen October 6-12 at the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre begining at 8 p.m.; and Sunday, October 13 beginning at 2 p.m. A defense against cancer can be cooked up in your kitchen. Call us. AMERICAN CANCER SOCE1Y 0111110 41111 - -- -- - - - - - OIO -11 0 1111 I- f i JOIN THE GREEK SYSTEM Form Lasting Friendships Enjoy the Greek Tradition Freshman - Sophomore - Junior - Senior Women Welcome! Mass Meeting: Rush Party: Personal Interview: Preference Party: Wednesday, October 9, 7:00 p.m. Pendleton Room, Michigan Union Thursday, October 10, 7:00 p.m. Pendleton Room, Michigan Union Friday, October 11, begin 9:00 a.m.- Michigan Union (Appointments prefered; interview sign-up at Mass Meeting, or call Panhellenic for appointment- 663-4505.) Saturday, October 12,4:00 p.m. The location will be announced. Pictured is mama's boy Luther (Matthew Conlon) tirading at his patient wife Minnie (Annalee Jefferes) in Project Theatre's.production of The Daughter-in-Law. k, 'Blueprints 1 HE TIME: past, present, TJorever. The characters: everyone. The conflict: sacrifice. The P theme is always the same. The latest variation is called Blueprints and it played over the weekend at the Per- formance Network. i Blueprints was derived from three biblical passages: the legend of Abraham and Isaac, the allegory of Jacob and Rachel, and the story of Hannah. It wove together past and present, pointing ultimately toward! the future. With surreal imagery and disjointed chronology, it caught the audience in a web of intrigue. The tale of Abraham and Isaac was a definitely the most comical of the three. Although it was a mish-mash of the past and the present, the plot closely resembled the biblical legend. The comic portrayal of Abraham and Isaac was balanced by a 'frightening second act. In the story of J Jacob and Rachel, Jacob often con- Ysults with the spirit, of Rachel; a fight between two of Jacob's sons p escalates into war; and Rachel won- ders why people give birth in the first played on biblical themes place when death is the inevitable result. The third act, the story of Hannah, was the most intriguing of the three. Hannah, a Holocaust survivor, is in- tent on overcoming her infertility. Af- ter a doctor convinces her that her inability to bear 'children is psychosomatic, she gives birth to Samuel. She immediately gives the newborn up for adoption by an or- thodox family in the hope that they will give Samuel the religious up- bringing that she was unable to provide. The 14 characters in Blueprint were played by only three actors. Nancy Heusel played the parts of Sarah, Rachel, Hannah, and Tiebel with warmth and feeling. Her presence on stage often compensated for a weak plot line. Jeffery Seller played the parts of Isaac, Joseph, Yossi, and the atten- dant. Although he improved as the show progressed, Seller tended to overact. Larry Henkel played the parts of Abraham, Jacob, Dr. Jacobson, and Avram. He was able to change his personality as each character required, and his melodic voice lit up the stage. - Seth Flicker 411000 414000-om Build a career on your language skills at the Monterey Institute of International. Studies Graduate Study - The Monterey Institute specializes in graduate language studies and career-oriented progams for students with strong language backgrounds. Master's degrees are offered in the following areas: International Management (MIBA), International Policy Studies, Language Studies, Translation and Interpretation, Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL), Teaching Foreign Languages (MATFL). 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