ARTS The Michigan Daily Thursday, November 13, 1986 Page 5 " 'the Knee Plays' bend the rules I'M # x. r By NVoelle Brower To take great liberties with a famous phrase of Tennyson's, "'tis better to have seen the Knee Plays , than not to have seen the CIVIL warS at all." Chances are, the En - glish poet would not have appreciated this, but considering the tenuous history of the making of American director Robert Wilson's epic the CIVIL warS , he wouldn't } have been the first. the Knee Plays is a series of 13, three-to-six minute entr'acte vig - nettes written to be performed in front of the curtain during the massive scene changes of the 15 acts of the larger production, the CIVIL warS. Planned as the central production during the '84 Olympics in Los Angeles, the CIVIL wars was scrapped at the last moment due to a lack of funding on the ,part "'7 xof the private sector in this country. Amid cries of 'crimes against culture' (as reported in the French publication Le Monde), the CIVIL Unusual staging and uncomfortable themes dominate Wilson's 'Knee warS has to date consisted only of Plays.' scattered productions of one act 'Livin' Fat' is a feast of fun and here, another there, around the world. Wilson's ambitious production, (somehow the word cannot en - compass the scale of the effort that went into its creation on the part of Wilson and artistic collaborators the world over), depicts the fragmented world history of conflict and reconciliation-an apt theme consi - dering the circumstances under which it was to have been per - formed. This international colla - boration garnered its greatest sup - port, both financially and culturally, from Europe where Wilson has been a prominent figure of the theatrical avant-garde since the early '70s. The Europeans took the risk to stage the CIVIL warS , only to find that the home of its creator prefered Lionel Richie. And one wonders about the state of the art in this country? Hailed as a theatrical visionary -by some and an artistic charlatan by others, Wilson's place in history has yet to be decided. Certainly the CIVIL warS has reserved a spot for him, it is just the size that remains vitality societies and embrace their hard - ships and their rewards, we can, she says, "begin to share, and thus begin to live better lives." to be determined. Detroit area audiences have an unusual opp - ortunity to judge Wilson for themselves this weekend when a touring group brings the Knee Plays to Detroit. Visually and thematically derived from the traditional forms of Japanese theatre with a dirgy New SOrleans jazz score by Talking Head David Byrne, the Knee Plays operates on two levels. In its function as an entr'acte enter - tainment for the larger CIVIL warS ,the Knee Plays reflects the general thematic structure of the CIVIL warS while remaining a complete and viable piece of theatre in itself. Who is Robert Wilson? Perhaps the question should be What is Robert Wilson? "Many times people ask me what my plays are about...And I frequently say, I don't know, but this is how I make them," Wilson once commented on this dilemma. Find out for yourself this weekend. the Knee Plays opens tonight and runs through Sunday at the Music Hall in Detroit. Performanc - e times are 8 p.m. all shows. For more information call: 963-7680. No one faces cancer alone. Call us. AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY By Julie Brown The University Players, 'in conjunction with The Black Theatre Workshop, will present Livin' Fat , tonight through November16 in The Trueblood Theatre. Livin' Fat is a comedy written in 1974 by Judi Ann Mason. Ms. Mason later went on to write the pilot for Good Times and segments for The Jeffersons. Appropriately enough, this play is illustrative of these situation Pcomedies which have become quite popular in the past decade. As seen most recently in The Cosby Show, black situation comedies have become vehicles by which the actors can convey a sense of what their life is all about. It need not. show the strife and struggles of the black people which at one time had been the only' way the black experience was conveyed. The emergence of the black comedies was a revolutionary process. The black drama, which commanded the audience to sympathize with what was going on within the black community could be heightened to another level, a comic one, for black people in America throughout the '60s gained much recognition. The comedy, according to Lundeanna Thomas, the director of Livin' Fat, says, "now that I have your attention, let me tell you about my life...let me show you how we have fun." It is an opportunity to let the audience in, to see people being themselves, laughing at themselves, and enjoying themselves. Livin' Fat is exemplary of this. It is about a black family with a dilemma. In their discovery of the American dream, their religious values are called into question. We can see through these characters, probable expressions of what a person could be. While Thomas does admit that this is a comedy "for black people, by black people, about black people" she does say that it allows everyone a chance to achieve a better understanding of what black people are about in their everyday life. Overall, she feels that any moral principles that the play's subject matter might challenge, is indeed secondary to the writer's intentions which were to write a play "just to be funny." Thomas goes on to say that Livin' Fat is "bringing theatre back to it's original purposes: to entertain." Livin' Fat - is a tremendous sendoff for The Black Theatre Workshop which has been in existence since the '70s. It was only in the last two years that it began to create theatrical prod - uctions. The importance of such productions becomes extraordinary and fills a definite need. Thomas says, "in order for us to begin to understand each other, we can look at the material in our plays." To begin to realize the different SPRING TERM IN NEW HAMPSHIRE The English Composition Board's ACADEMIC WRITING SERIES presents 2 "DOCUMENTATION FOR THE RESEARCH PAPER" One of the most frequently assigned writing projects on campus is the Research Paper. Whether in History or Bio-physics, Research Papers require accurate and appropriate documentation. In the fourth Academic Writing Series Sworkshop E.C.B. Lecturer Helen Isaacson will discuss when and how to document sources properly. She will also examine differences in documentation formats across the disciplines. Students are invited to bring the research papers they are currently working on for explanation and clarification on how to document its text. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 13 400-5 15 229 ANGELL HALL NEW ENGLAND LITERATURE PROGRAM Earn credit as you study Thoreau, Emerson, Frost, Hawthorne - in their native habitat. 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