ARTS The Michigan Daily Tuesday, November 3, 1987 Page 7 Cryer tries to shed teen star's shadow By John Shea Jon Cryer recently attended a U2 concert in Chicago, the city where Ferris Bueller's Day Off was filmed. A group of girls saw Cryer and thought he was Matthew Broderick; they approached him as if he was God. They asked Him for autographs, and Cryer had to tell them that he was not God - that he was not Broderick - but just Ducky from Pretty in Pink. Just Jon Cryer. At first the girls were not convinced, but Cryer ran his hands through his hair, and they believed him. They settled for his signature. Cryer sits back and laughs about this story. He was in Southfield last week to promote his new film Hiding Out. He talked about what it is like to be constantly mistaken for Matthew Broderick. "I feel like yelling, I AM NOT MATTHEW BRODERICK." He laughed at this, but certainly there is a part of him that cannot think this is very funny. How ironic it must be that Cryer's first acting job was on Broadway, in Torch Song Trilogy - as an understudy for Broderick. Seven weeks later, Cryer was fired because he wasn't a "big enough name." And how frustrating it must be that Cryer, a 22 year-old actor with seven feature films under his belt, including the enormously popular Pretty in Pink, is still unable to emerge from the long, dark shadow of Broderick and other contemporaries; still lost in a sea of young actors with prettier faces and bigger titles to their credit. The beauty of Jon Cryer is that he takes all of this in stride. He does not spend his mornings, afternoons, and evenings staring into a mirror. Casually dressed in an oxford shirt, blue jeans, and black shoes with pointed tips, he is the very picture of youth. Now. If you were to paint a picture entitled "Youth," wouldn't you draw features similar to Cryer's? How could you not fill an entire canvass with those apple-cheeks, wide eyes, and boyish-grin? And when the picture comes to life - when you meet Cryer in person - the image is a most pleasant surprise. Cryer is not loud and obnoxious, as some would believe. He has a warm sense of humor; he preludes every answer to every question with a joke. What is the most important thing to him as an actor right now? He flashed a smile from ear to ear. "Money and lots of it." Well. Maybe only half-kidding. Cryer feels the main reason why his career has not skyrocketed is not because of the scripts he has chosen, but what the editors and producers have done to his projects. He says he has been burned in the past by poor editing decisions. Cryer cites last year's Morgan Stewart's Coming Home as one such example. "I got the script for Morgan Stewart and it was really good," he said. "Except for this one little dumb problem at the end. I was sure the producers were going to cut it out. Instead, they reworked the whole picture around this one problem. They fired the director and I was stuck working on a project I absolutely despised. You couldn't pay me enough to talk about it." Another film that leaves a particularly bad taste in Cryer's mouth is Superman IV. "I walked off the set thinking this was going to be great. I took my grand: na to see it and she said, 'Oh, Jon, t. is is just terrible."' He sighed and let out a little laugh. "I couldn't even get it by grandma." Maybe she'll likeHiding Out better. Cryer plays Andrew Morenski, a young Boston stockbroker who escapes the wrath of the mafia by "hiding out" as a high school student. It is part suspense, part action-adventure, part romantic-comedy. And Cryer is pleased with the final product. "I'm real excited about it," he said. "I was attracted to the project because I thought the script was funny." But what Jon Cryer really wants more than anything right now is more creative control. "The most important thing to me as an actor right now is getting to a place where I can make the movies I want to make." Cryer is confident about the future. But what about the past? "We've all had big boffo sequels that haven't done so well. You take a chance. Most good movies are just happy accidents. I just hope to make one or two in my career." As his press conference in Southfield wound down to the end, Cryer was asked one last question before he was to hop on a plane and go home. "Do I have you confused," one reporter asked, "with another actor who was briefly on a series called Hard Copy ?" Cryer scratched his chin. "Yeah. You do. I don't know, uh..." "Did you do an L.A. Law ?" "Nooo. There's another actor (who looks like me) who played a gay lover with AIDS (on L.A. Law ) "No," the reporter said, "this guy was selling cocaine out of the law office." "Oh, Okay. I wasn't in either one of them." He looked relieved. Actor Jon Cryer has had a hard time finding success on his own terms after his portrayal of Ducky in 'Pretty in Pink.' Malpede to read from her plays F .y Let Them Know How You Feel!! DAILY PERSONALS 764-0557 By Marie Wesaw "You can't help your voice," Karen Malpede states when explaining her choice to write dreamlike lyrical drama. "The writer's voice just' comes to the writer... The only choice you have is whether or not to honor that voice." Classical drama, Malpede's favored style, releases "primal physical tones and energy to speak poetic." "In the American theater, (you) don't have enough beautiful language," says Malpede. She attributes this lack from the fact that plays often get "works hopped"; beginning playwrights are encouraged to work on standard ;methods, but are not encouraged to have their ownvoices. Malpede, a New York based avant-garde playwright is the founder of the New Cycle Theater and the ,New York Women's Salon for Literature, two literary innovations on the 1970's. Two of the three plays in her collection A Monster Has Stolen The Sun, "Sappho and Aphrodite," and "A Monster Has Stolen The Sun," take place in distant times to demonstrate Malpede's respect of classical thought. The other, "The End of War," has a more modern setting, the Ukraine during the ,Russian Revolution, yet also breaks from the realism mode by rejectingj the establishing of one hero in the play. Malpede rejects using a sole heroic figure because she believes that women experience the world in a collective fashion through their relationships. "The important function of women in my plays is that they tend to survive. The importance of women survival is crucial." Malpede emphasizes that in 'many plays, women had little social :function or importance, and they usually experienced a tragic end. "The way men have defined dramaE is by emphasizing death and murder as the great heroic events," comments Malpede. "The End of! War" is an anti-war drama that illustrates that through the collective thoughts of the community, there are other heroic actions. Also, Malpede believes, "The greatest sufferers from war are the very young. The younger you are, the more life is stolen from you." She along with the progress of the war. The woman's child is still-born. Along with the selections from A Monster Has Stolen The Sun and Other Plays, Malpede will read selections from "Us," her most recent play that opens on December 17 at the Theater for the New City in New York. Although the play contains ethnic tensions and many heavy sexual situations including incest and sexual abuse, Malpede considers the play not to be realistic because it deals not just with the social issues, but on a larger scale with the connection between the classical concept of eros and the social world. Karen Malpede will read selections from her collection A MONSTER HAS STOLEN THE SUN AND OTHER PLAYS , as well as her play "Us" today at 4 p.m. in the Kuenzel Room in the Michigan Union. The dramatic reading is sponsored by the Department of Theater and Drama, the Women's Studies Program, The Women's Project, and the Visiting Writer's Series. - I ROGER BOISJOLY Ethical Decision-Making Morton-Thiokol, and the Space Shuttle Challenger THURSDAY NOV. 5 RAYMOND B. CARROLL AUDITORIUM CHRYSLER CENTER, NORTH CAMPUS 8:00 P.M. FREE " Flexible evening hours - $4.50 - $6.50/hour plus bonuses - Build your communication skills and resume " 763-7420. Z .611 Church St. 3rd floor C) Sponsored by: Collegiate Institute for Values and Science Student Pugwash at Michigan (517) 764-1810 339-0096 " ELECTIONS * ELECTIONS ELECTIONS ELECTIONS ELECTIONS " NOV. 18-19 " NOV. 18-19 " NOV. 18-19 " NOV. 18.190" NOV. 18-19 " NOV. 18-19 " ELECTIONS ELECTIONS ELECTIONS * ELECTIONS ELECTIONS " . ~. .. . 1:. , Vij ',r I.. ... . . . -. - - .... y .. .' -" .-te - h _ ~-. , rI r -, j NOV. 18-19 " NOV. 18-190" NOV. 18-19 " NOV. 18-19 " NOV. 18-19 " NOV. 18-19 " ELECTIONS ELECTIONS * ELECTIONS ELECTIONS * ELECTIONS." LA e Appropriates money to student organizations 1 I , Appoints students to student-faculty committees S Monitors the school from a student's viewpoint i "Montos te chol roma sudnt' vewpin Nw 3. j4