ARTS The Michigan Daily PGe Thursday, January 30, 1986 'Why does RC dominate Hopwoods? "By Alan Paul E IGHT OF TEN 1986 Hopwood Underclassmen Award winners are students in the Residential '' llege Creative Writing Program. Why has the RC, which accounts for only 4.3 percent of the LSA student body, been so successful in producing writers? "The program is really good because it's not restricting," accor- 1ing to Mary Lynch, an RC sophomore and winner of the top poetry award of $300. "It's deman- ding but not confining. Everything - discipline, approach - is completely up to the student." RC Freshman Jeffrey Peters, who received $250 as the top fiction award, agrees with Lynch. "A lot of regular writing courses 'tell you to write about what you did over winter break, incorporating a netaphor and a simile or something. We follow our own direction here," Peters said. Peters, as well as fiction awardees Lisa Arsuaga and Beth Serlin, are students in Warren Hecht's Creative Writing Tutorials in which students meet once a week with Hecht, chair- man of the RC Creative Writing Program. Hecht agrees with the student's assessment of the RC's Hopwoods success. "You can't limit students," Hecht said. There's a tendency among writing professors to try and mold students into their own style. This has to be avoided." "RC students represent such a small percentage of those eligible," Hecht continued. "It may be because so many teachers in LSA freshman and sophomore composition classes are fellows. They're students who don't have as much time or interest to spend with their students. I'm full time and that's what we do here (in the RC). We teach the kids." Ken Mikolowski teaches poetry tutorials. Three of the four poetry winners, including Lynch, Phillip Barnhart, and LSA sophomore J. L. Utley, study with him. He too believes that the freedom granted to his students produces positive results. Mikolowski sees another reason for his program's success - an emphasis on contemporary American poetry. "It's 1986. It is not realistic to try and sound like an Englishman who's been dead for 200 years." Mikolowski smiled through a thick, graying beard. "It bothers me how many 'Modern Poetry' classes study Robert Frost and T. S. Eliot. It would be ab- surd to have a modern music class that studied Glen Miller and there've been as many advances in poetry and music the last 50 years." Both Hecht, whose students have won over 100 Hopwoods, and Mikolowski separate themselves from their student's success. Both also have high praise for the Hopwood Awards. "There is self selection," Hecht said. "The students are self motivated but the Hopwoods really improve attitudes. People want very badly to be writers, but everything is against it - parents, peers, financial pressures - so recognition provides optimism. It makes them stop and realize that it is possible to succeed even though the odds are against you - if you persevere and are good. A Hopwood Award is often the first in- dication of this." The winners support Hecht's "morale boost" theory. Arsuaga' who won $175 in the fiction category, is planning a dual Creative Writing- Communications major. Though she wants to be a writer, she desires the communications degree to fall back on because of the unpredictable nature of a career in writing. Barnhart, whose poetry won him $325, is more to the point. "It's hard to tell people that you're going to be a Creative Writing major," the RC sophomore said. "The award is a big plus. Now I feel a lot more comfortable to just tell people what I want to do." Hecht and Mikolowski have also been impressed by the award's diver- sity. "There's a real contrast in styles among my three students who won and I'm glad that the Hopwoods are able to recognize quality in different forms," Mikolowski said. "I know I allow this diversity and I'm pleased that the Hopwoods do also." The Hopwoods format calls for two judges in each category. Each awar- ding the judges change, which Hecht believes is crucial. "One man's good judge is another man's bad," Hecht stated. "If there were always the same judges, it would force people into a mold." Perhaps Peters best summed up the meaning of a Hopwood award. "This is a big confidence boost. It makes me stop and say, 'Give it a try'" . I The kind of stuff Below is a sample of the stuff Hopwood Awards are made of. This poem, by Mary Lynch, won her the top poetry award last week. Take the shock of rotting fruit. Where skin should be stretched taut around smooth flesh that skin is loose. Hold it and it seems to throb: the hand mistakes itself imparting a pulse into the held object, into a pit in the center, that reticent place still hard and alive known by the teeth before mouth encircles flesh and bites out a piece. The good and bad from January celluloid By John Shea TANUARY.is the best month of the i year to see movies. It is no coin- cidence that many top notch films have come out of the woodwork recen- tly. Next week the Academy Awards nominations will be announced and filmmakers who aspire for Oscars release their works this month so the build up of press coverage and momentum of box office receipts will translate into votes. The latest movie to enter the Oscar race is Twice in a Lifetime, produced and directed by Bud Yorkin. Twice in a Lifetime is the story of infidelity in a twenty-five year old marriage. Harry MacKenzie (Gene Hackman), a steel mill worker in Washington who's more interested in the Seattle Seahawks than his wife Kate (Ellen Burstyn). The kids are all grown up and the in- trigue and romance of Harry and Kate's marriage has long past. However, on the night of Harry's fif- tieth birthday, he meets Audrey (Ann- Margret), an invigorating woman that gives Harry the chance to live and love again; hence, the "lovers' triangle". When Kate discovers I Harry's affair, she is crushed and when the oldest daughter, Sunny (Amy Madigan), finds out, she is in- furiated at her father. Sunny must fight to keep the marriage alive, for Kate is too subserviant and weak to do so herself. " On such a sensitive subject as this, screenwriter Colin Welland doesn't want to take a position on who's right and wrong; who's innocent or who's guilty. However, the audience sym- pathsizes more with Kate, who is ob- viously being dumped. Harry, so anxious to jump at a second chance for love, just completely disregards twenty-five years of marriage and the pleas from Kate and the rest of the @1 Rent a Car from Econo-Car Werent to R. _ STUD ENTS! Choose from- small economical cars to ,I vans. Special WEEKEND rates Pick up services upon request We accept family to try and make the marriage work. The essential message of the movie here is that it's okay to leave a marriage if the love and romance is gone. But by having Hackman perceived by the audience as the bad guy, the message loses some of its validity and punch. Twice in a lifetime is reminiscent of Terms of Endearment in that the central female character undergoes a complete metamorphosis from weak-old-ninny to tough-old broad who is now young at heart. Lifetime is a simple story and is touching without the emotional manipulation of a film like Endear- ment. Both Gene Hackman and Ellen Bur- styn were excellent. As a man struggling to come to terms with his boring life by pursuing his desires, Harry becomes a believable charac- ter. Burstyn gives an emotional per- formance, so powerful that we take sides with her. Ann-Margret and Amy Madigan are also enjoyable but there was little else for Margret to do ex- cept to act like a slut (which she did quite well); Madigan is a bit over- bearing with her constant outbursts, but we come to admire her tough ex- terior. I'm still not sure whether I liked Twice in a Lifetime or not. While the story was interesting and Hackman and Burstyn gave excellent perfor- mances, I'm taken aback by Wellands and Vorkin's nonchalant at- titude toward marriage. After twen- ty-five years, I would have to think that once is enough. MOVE OVER, KITT. You've got competiaion. The star of Harvey Cokliss' new film, Black Moon Rising is not Tom- my Lee Jones or Linda Hamilton, but an aerodynamically perfect car that runs on hydrogen molecules from water. The Black Moon (as the car is named) can reach speeds of 350 mph and, as an added bonus, can jump from one thirty story building to the next if necessary. Interested? So was I. However, there is good escapism and bad escapism and Black Moon Rising suffers from having nowhere to go. The premise is interesting enough; Quint (Jones), a professional thief, is hired by the government to steal evidence against a tax evading company it is prosecuting. Being pur- sued by an old nemesis who also wan- ts the evidence, Quint is forced to hide it in the Black Moon, which is stolen by Nina (Hamilton), who is working for a car ring. As a general rule of thumb, you know you're in trouble when during the opening credits you see that it took three people to write the screenplay. John Carpenter, Desmond Nakano and William Grey collaborated on the script, and while the idea of Supercar is interesting, the formula story - in- cluding the gratuitous sex and violen- ce - isn't enough to keep us enter- tained. And while the star of the movie sits in a parking garage for half the movie, we are left bored, waiting for the grand finale. Jones and Hamilton realize they're playing backseat here, and they do the best they can with the material given, but they are neither compelling nor in- teresting enough for us to care. This is Harvey Cokliss' first time in the director's chair, and surprisingly, he is not out to impress anyone as he lets the story take over. All Cokliss wants is an exciting, slick package. But if the script is poor and weak in areas, it is the responsibility of the director to compensate for it; Cokliss fails miserably. When the car isn't smashing through buildings or drag racing the wrong way on a one-way street, the movie simply plods along. Zzzzz ... It would be easy enough to shoot down Black Moon Rising because it has no redeeming social value or isn't thought-provoking, but it's not sup- posed to be and Cokliss doesn't pretend it is for a single moment. All Black Moon Rising is trying to do is give us ninety minutes of escapism and at times it succeeds. ' * KF4c F-Xi KK RFF F KFr - i F4 i t * ann arbor civic theatre main street production --- present : LONE STAR * and *~~i OUIIW 4 vwv". 9 * 2 one-act plays by James McClure January 23, 24, 25, 30, 31 38:00 P.m. February 1 $5 donation * 338 S. Main St. for further information call 662-7282 9 **************ykti~kkiyt~**** lr*** ***#***********rdr~**rl******* .9'K Special Student /Youth Fares to SCANDINAVIA On Scheduled Airlines! The inexpensive way to get to Scandinavia and other destinations in Europe, Asia, Africa and the Middle East. Winter Rates to Scandinavia New York to Copenhagen, Oslo, Stockholm from $215 one way, $350 roundtrip Chicago to Copenhagen from $215 one way, $350 roundtrip Chicago to Oslo, Stockholm from $255 one way, $430 roundtrip For Information Call: WHOLE WORLD TRAVEL Youth and student travel experts for over a decade 17 E. 45th St., New York, NY 10017 (212) 986-9470 More seductive than sex... More addictive than any drug... More precious than gold. And one man can get it for you. For a price. I I For Those of You Not Yet Convinced That Excel Has the Finest MCAT Preparation Available: WE INVITE YOU TO ATTEND LESSON 1 - MCAT CHEMISTRY SKILLS Instructor: Norman Miller EVEN IF YOU ARE ENROLLED ELSEWHERE, YOU OWE IT TO YOURSELF TO COMPARE! LESSON 1 - THURSDAY, JANUARY 30th, 6 P.M. The Seminar Was Just The Beginning! Nn CNARF-- Nn ni IIATIflN