4 ARTS Tuesday, November 26, 1985 The Michigan Daily Page 6 'Marathon' goes the distance Prine'S rough sound strips sensitive side By Craig Varterian JUST WHEN YOU thought quality theater was fone from an amateur production, Patricia Boyette and the University Players came along this weekend at the Trueblood Theater and brought some badly needed relief. How's this relief spelled? M-a-r-a-t-h-o-n '33 and it was both captivating and engrossing. The docu-drama, written by June Havok, por- trayed the perverse nature of the dance marathon craze of the thirties. While all of the other contests which began in the 1920s, (rocking chair derbies, goldish swallowing and the like) had eventually faded, marathons grew into a business, where people would actually bet on their favorite dan- cers. Boyette and company take us right to the middle of this phenomena, by using everything in sight at the Trueblood. The seating set-up was reminiscent of old theater-in-the-round productions where the audience not only viewed the play itself, but also the responses of other audience members. The conversion of the Trueblood into a resurrected marathon arena included tiered sleeping quarters at the rear of the stage above the bandstand and MC post. One exit of the theater was used as a makeshift hospital and another as a feeding area for the marathoners. The dance floor itself was in the center of the audience. The net effect inspired the same type of crowd behavior associated with the original marathons. Actual audience members were throwing pennies at the performers on stage as crowds of the 1930s did. The realism was enhanced even more by a scoreboard flashing the hours gone by. 300 hours.. 2800 hours...3100 hours ! The play follows the life experiences of Havoc the playwright, and revolves around June/Jean Reed (she changes her name at the beginning of the contest) - an innocent young girl who has run away from her vaudeville family to do her act. While all the other con- tests which began in the 1920s, (rocking chair der- bies, goldfish swallowing, and the like), had even- tually faded, marathons grew into a business, where people would ac- tually bet on their favorite dancers. Jean (Eden Cooper) is soon thrown into the lions den. She has difficulty finding a place to perform her act and is talked into competing in a marathon by Dankle (Randy Herman) a shady nightclubber. The cigar chomping "Mr. D" (as his employees call him) launches the starving Jean into a par- tnership of necessity with Patsy (Daniel Tierney), a happy-go-lucky, smart-aleck young dance king. The two sludge though the duration test with com- pelling portrayals of the keen human emotion to survive in the face of almost incomprehensible competition. The players provoke he types of emotion brought on by human ffering. The sickening coordinator of the event, the MC, rambles on calling the shots as to what's going to happen next, giving a call out to the audience to give money to the performers. He demonstrates the web of pain in the dance arena, with his hyper-pitch and his phony cries for audience sympathy. ("You saw poor little Robin collapse folks"). The sleazy band ushers in the dancers from their 15 minute on the hour breaks, to painfully join the floor once again. The sound of the drum rolls sent a chill up my back every time the lights went down and the procession took place. Side antics by the dancers were often humorous, but also reminded people of what the dancers had to do to maintain their sanity. There was not much of a story line to Marathon '33. Most of the work gave the sense of being im- provisational, just as the original marathons were. This was undoubtedly the intention of the directors. Considering the amazingly large cast (36), the play was fluid and extremely well cast. As was overheard by one audience member "they don't even seem like they're acting. . . they fit so well." The whole point to the production was to give the student actors experience in a production, therefore there was not meant to be any leads, as mentioned in the program. Even so, standouts in- clude Eden Cooper's compelling rendition of the tough young vaudeville actor-turned-marathoner, and Daniel Tierny as Cooper's partner, Patsy. In addition, Randy Herman playing Dankle, deser- ves note for his convincing portrayal of the over- powering, down-in-the-gutter Dankle. By Peter Ephross OFTEN, the criticism about a John Prine concert revolves around the fact that he doesn't play all of his songs that the audience wanted to hear. Well, this is not my, criticism of his performance Satur- day night at the Power Center. He played a lot of songs, including most of his favorites. I just wish somebody else would have played them. During the opening set, shouts of "Where's John?" echoed throughout the audience. Their shouts were justified. Opening act Mustard's Retreat,Lwhile playing songs like the "Great Lakes Fishing Trade" that appealed to the hometown crowd, certainly are not top-notch perfor- mers. Only with their final song, the traditional favorite, "Sixteen Tons," did they really get the crowd ex- cited. Finally, John Prine took the stage. Prine doesn't walk, he kind of swaggers, in a style reminiscent of George Jefferson. He played his songs similarly, in a combination of honky-tonk country style. This style was fine for his Nashville influenced tunes: "Be My Friend Tonight" and "Oldest Baby in the World," for example. But to sing such well-written ballads as "Donald and Lydia" and his final song "Paradise" fast and loud belies their meaning. Prine's best songs are those like "Paradise" in which he is able to capture the ethos of a particular situation. In "Paradise," it is the plight of nature, torn to shreds by coal mining. Prine was at his best when he toned down his performance and sang from his heart. "Souvenirs," for instance, which he dedicated to his recently deceased friend, Steve Goodman, created an incredible ambiance,.even in the unpersonal Power Center. He also delivered fine, crowd-pleasing renditions of, "Hello in There" and "Please Don't Bury Me." This last song is perhaps. Prine's finest. In it he is able to combine wit and emotion to effec- tively satire our posthumous rituals. Prine's performance should have been a more enjoyable one. After all, both he and the audience "Knew a lot of the same songs." I waited a long time to hear John Prine's con- cert. It's just too bad his loud abrasive style got in the way of his beautiful music Saturday night. 0""N woo/I, 'I I - - I 14n I Di 7434-IC11i7 FOR SALE 76 BUICK REGAL Runs great, body needs work. $400 or best offer 662-9732. 45B1204 IS IT TRUE You Can Buy Jeeps for $44 through the U.S. Government? Get the facts today! Call .,1-312-742-1142. Ext. 1137-A. 90B1210 -CHEAP TRANSPORTATION '74 Ford LTD Runs OK $100.00 663-1716.4 41B1204 PLANE TICKET, round-trip, good to anywhere "in continental U.S. Best offer. 995-3545. After 5:30. 43B1204 SMITH CORONA typewriter - electric, portable, good condition, $75 firm. Call Larry at 764-9032. 23B1127 FOR SALE - BURSLEY FEMALE lease in a double, winter term. Call Heather 763-8011. 13B1127 SOUTH QUAD LEASE for sale. Winter-term '% female double. Lisa 764-9686. 17B1127 FOR SALE, Female double lease in Bursley Hall. Full Carpeting, Full loft. Available immediately. Call Sarah, 763-3818. 14B1127 BURSLEY FEMALE DOUBLE lease for sale. Winter term. Contact Hope at 763-1914. 28B1127 CHEVY NOVA '73 - V-8, AM/FM cassette, fuzzbuster, sunroof. Looks and runs good. $995. 482-3180. 22B1127 DESPERATE! I've moved, I have to sell my house. 3 bedroom split ranch, west side, one mile from campus. 1-612-869-5895. CALL COLLECT, 57B1202 FOR SALE FOR RENT PERSONAL CHEVY MALIBU 1978 - V-6 4-door, automatic, power brakes/steering, air, AM, rear defogger. $2000.761-7599. 37B1203 EAST QUAD Female lease. One-third of a triple. Denise 764-5683. 38B1203 FLORIDA, Tampa: roundtrip air ticket December 19-January 7 $179. Call 662-8913. 33B1127 ALICE LLOYD LEASE for sale. Winter term. Female single. Call Sarah at 764-4961. (keep trying). 46B1127 SPACES NOW AVAILABLE FOR WINTER - in cooperatives. Room, board, and community; average of $265/month. Includes food, phone, free laundry machines, etc. Call 662-4414 or stop by 4002 Michigan Union. Contracts also available for fall 1986. cB1203 TOYOTA COROLLA '76 $395. reliable car call after 6 p.m./ 668-1031. 18B1127 1978 RED CHEVETTE, 4-door. $800. 92,000 miles. 996-8231 after 6. 15B1126 '73 BUICK REGEL, runs great, many new items, JVC Cassette, no rust, $900/best offer. 996-3834. 24B1127 FULL SKI EQUIPMENT - 1 year old. EXCELLENT condition. Ski size 170's, 8, skiboot. Best offer. Brian 971-3812. 95B1204 Use Daily Classifieds JAN - AUG lease available. Two bedrooms in a three bedroom apartment (2-3 people needed). Furnished, laundry, close location. 662-6456. 39C1204 MALE ROOMMATE needed in a nice one bedroom apartment. Great location, furnished, laundry $187.50 includes heat. 668-1957. 40C1204 ONE BEDROOM available in two-bedroom apartment on South Forest near Hill. Call Tom 663-2013. 42C1204 FEMALE SUBLETTER: own room in 5 bedroom house, 4 month lease, reduced rent, ideal location. Call 996-8365. NCC1127 FEMALE SUBLETTER - Wanted. One bedroom inside a 3-bedroom apartment. Good location, Greenwood. $190/month. Jan-May or June. 761-2187. 32C1128 AVAILABLE Jan 1, Female grad or professional. to share 2-bedroom apartment, Burns Park area, $190/month. 662-1305 eves. 34C1203 ONE-BEDROOM - available, Jan. 1 - Sept. 1 (or May) in beautiful, huge house near campus with 7 great coed housemates. See it now and you won't regret it! Call Adam immediately at 996-4488. cCtc WANTED: Female border in a sorority for winter term. Do not have to be Greek. GREAT LOCATION. 761-8904 $375/mth & meals. cCl2ll WINTER SUBLET available - Jan.-May lease. Two bedroom apt., can accomodate 2-4 people - modern, furnished, covered parking, laundry facilities, swimming pool, utilities included - located on E. University - call persistently for a GREAT APARTMENT! 663-3068. 37C1126 LARGE BEDROOM for rent. Hardwood floors and big windows. 665-2880. 25C1127 FEMALE GRAD seeks room in house or one bedroom apartment. Needs unfurnished room or storage space. Responsible, quiet. Shelly, 995-2550. 85C1127 2 BEDROOM APARTMENT. U-Towers: great location. Great view of A'. January - May lease. Call Debbie/Maria persistently - 662-4783. 20C1127 MALE GRAD student for two person apartment. Sublet January-August 1986. $195 utilities included. Deposit negotiable. Strong 663-8307. 19C1127 ONE BEDROOM apartment, Oakland/Arch. Jan.-Aug. lease. CALL 665-5184. 36C1203 AVAILABLE Jan 1, Female grad or professional, to share 2-bedroom apartment Burns Park area, $190/month. 662-1305 eves. 34C1202 FEMALE SUBLETTER - Wanted. One bedroom inside a 3-bedroom apartment. Good location, Greenwood. $190/mouth. Jan-May or June. 761-2187. 32C1202 2-BEDROOM APT. for 3-4 people on S. Forest. Winter-Spring/Summer 994-6419. 69C1202 MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED winter term, spacious 2-bedroom apartment, Jan. - May lease, $160/Month and electric, great location Hill and Packard. Call Bill/Jeff 996-8458. 73C1203 SUBLET for Winter term. Single room in spacious 6 bedroom house. Low rent. 761-2685. 66C1127 LEASE FOR SALE - Own room in double suite. Shares bath with 4otherwmales.mBates-Lee Peter 764-3082. 03C1205 A CUT ABOVE HAIR DESIGN - Special $5 off any service, first visit only. Call 662-2544 for appointment. cFtc CONFIDENTIAL & INEXPENSIVE GYNECOLOGICAL CARE PLANNED PARENTHOOD 3100 Professional Dr., Ann Arbor (near Washtenaw & Huron Pkwy) 973-0710 cFtc WHY STUDY SO HARD? Study SMARTER, not longer!! Teach your deeper mind to retain, retrieve vital info! 2 cassettes by Emmett Miller, M.D., containb the easy way to prepare for tests, boards. Wise Investment -$15.95. To: BETTER LIFE MGMT., P.O. Box 5247, Bloomingtorn, IN 47402. cF1211 STUDENT SERVICES MERCURY'S MESSENGERS - Balloons & Cakes delivered for all occasions. Visa, MC, AMEX accepted. Call 24 hours. 668-8492. cGtc QUALITY TYPING SERVICES: Fast, accurate, professional. Reasonable rates. 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Research Assistance 11322 Idaho Ave. #206-SS, Los Angeles CA 90025 Custom research also available-all levels DAILY CROSSWORD PUZZLE Edited by Trude Michel Jaffe ACROSS 1 Forms of identification 5 Gourmet's savoring 9 Steve Martin movie (with "The") 13 Arm bone 14 Sealed glass bulb 16 Cousin of etc. 17 Radio signal 18 Suspicious 19 Debussy's "Clair de -" 20 Behave matter- of-factly 23 Mimic 24 "-This Moment On" 25 Find fault 28 Normandy town 30 Hot off the press 35 Misjudge 36 Endless time, in poetry 38 Author Wiesel 39 Close up shop 43 Film star Jannings 44 Choreographer Antony 45 Barrel 46 Boxing weight 49 Polish parliament 50 English cath- edral city 51 Me Tangere 53 Blue 55 Struck a bargain 63 Venezuela copper center DOWN 1 Brass instrument 2 A Waugh 3 Midge 4 Brazilian dance 5 Unnatural singing voice 6 Buddhist mountain 7 Sign in a new store 8 Famous Ger- man engraver 9 Coagulate 10 Vanity case 11 File's partner 12 Swiss artist 15 Disinfectant 21 Unexpected outcome 22 Tiny, in Glasgow 25 Mideast desert region 26 Fragrance 27 Jetty 29 Southpaw's trend 31 --cent store 32 Lycee student 33 Hemp 34 Easily annoyed 37 Like skinny dippers 1 2 3 4 13 17 20 21 23 40 Farthest: Abbr. 41 City on the Aisne 42 La Douce namesakes 47 Babylonian deity 48 Grandma- 52 Nobelist Pauling 54 Minimize 55 Humid 56 Dies - 57 Dickens heroine 58 Lie in the sun 59 Part of QED 60 Stravinsky 61 Loyal 62 Odium HELP WANTED SNOW SHOVELING - High earnings, part-time. Call Jeff 973-9153. cHtc ARTIST WANTED to paint portrait from photograph. Call Scott 761-9848. 30H1128 BEAUTIFUL WOMEN OF ALL AGES have you often wondered what it would be like to be a model and have your own pictures just like Glamour or Cosmo? A well known photographer from California can now make that dream possible, call for an appointment or just stop by, West Coast Photography, Golden Gate Mall 8551 N.Lilley, Canton, MI 48187,453-7580.GcH2ll GLSCo RESTAURANT & Tavern offers excellent part-time work opportunities. The following positions are currently available: cocktail server, host or hostess, bartender, busperson, cook, dishwasher. Apply between 2-4 p.m., Monday through Friday or after 5 p.m. daily. Corner of State & Ellsworth. 98H1206 SITTER NEEDED: Afternoons, experience with kids; own transportation. $4.00 per hour. 769-3094. 26H1203 EARN UP TO $200 per week, at home, clipping newspaper items. Rush self-addressed, stamped envelope to: M-B Dept. T-2, P.O. Box 3075, Ann Arbor, MI 48106. 08H1126 MODELS WANTED - professional photographer seeks attractive new faces. $15-$30/hr. 451-7162. 10H1127 DO YOU HAVE PIMPLES OR ACNE? Earn $75-$100. Volunteers needed to test medication for facial acne. Office visits and medication are provided free to eligible participants. You must have moderately severe acne (12 pimples or more). $75$100 paid at the successful completion of the 12-14 week studies. Call UM Department of Dermatology Research 763-5519, M-F, 94, for further details. 53H1211 BUSINESS SERVICES TYPING SERVICES - $2 per page - Letter Quality 663-1871. cJ423 SEWING: Slack hems, alterations, mending, and non-clothing projects. Phone O'Della: 973-0565. 55J1209 SANDI'S TYPING & WORD PROCESSING *** 10% Off 1st paper (with this ad) *** Fast & accurate. Papers, briefs, resumes, letters, theses. Campus pick-up & delivery. 426-5217. cJtc EDITOR - 40 years experierue in making good writing better. Best quality, low rates, fast service. 995-0772. cJ1211 TYPING - ALL KINDS - Fast, efficient service. Reasonable rates. Laurie, 973-1592. cJtc A-1 TYPING - On Campus. Professional Rush Service Available. 668-8898. cJ1211 Papers/Resumes/Coverletters EXECU-TOPS Word Processing 663-7158 cJtc TYPING - Computer spell checking. Fast. Efficient service. 455-8270/459-1136. cJ1211 FREE RESUME w/20-pg. paper or 20 coverletters EXECU-TOPS Word Processing 663-7158. cJtc HOME ROW TRANSCRIPTION/WORD PROCESSING 572-0649 cJ0423 ACCUTYPE WORD PROCESSING LASER-JET PRINTER Resumes, Papers, Cover Letters, Etc. Complete Secretarial Service Available Same Day Service 761-5050 cJtc MUSICAL TAPE SALE: MAXELL XLII-90 for $2.10 each, TDK SA-90 for $2.00 each. Call 451-7109. 44N1205 LESSONS: Voice, Piano, Harpsichord, Band coaching, Theory/Songwriting. 994-5949. 77N112 THE NEW SCHOOL OF PIANO First lesson complimentary. 994-0371. cN12l1 LESSONS - Special Pay for 4, take 5. Best teachers in state. REPAIRS, bows rehaired. Herb David Guitar Studio. 665-8001.302 E. Liber y. cNtc MISCELLAN EOUS WANTED: Staff-paid parking permit for winter term. Call 764-3820. 29M1202 UNIVERSITY TOWERS FURNISHED APARTMENTS 536S. FOREST 761-2680 cMtc Read and Use Daily Classifieds TICKETS WANTED: 4 blue tier season basketball tickets. Call Chris 761-6077. 04Q1205 WANTED - UM Basketball tickets/973-9582. _ cQtc WANTED: Blue tier basketball tickets. Price no object. 994-0145. . 93Q1126 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING INFORMATION: RATES LINER ADS: Prices are based on number of words and insertion days. Sample rates are listed below. Student discount is 200/ off, with I.D. Liner and classified display contracts available. 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