ARTS Wednesday, November 11, 1987 The Michigan Daily Page7 Brecht Co. 'S a complex success By Jennifer Kohn Bertolt Brecht's conception of the "Lehrstuck," the learning play, does not allow the viewer to leave with the simplistic self-satisfaction gained in the common theatre. The perfor- mance itself leaves the audience with a sense of confusion. The Brecht Company's Embrac- ing the Butcher is successful o n these terms. Viewing the plays, "The Measures Taken" and "Mau- ser," requires post-production con- sideration, if not introspection, on the part of the audience. Through these works of Bertolt Brecht and Heiner M(iller, Embracing the Butcher emphasizes the subjuga- tion of the individual's emotion to a more powerful collective force. Brecht Company Dramaturge Martin Walsh explains this in the production's program. "Soon after its premiere in Berlin in 1930, Brecht and his composer/collab- orator, Hans Eisler, withdrew 'The Measures Taken' from public per- formance, insisting that the piece was strictly for the production and consumption of the performers themselves." For this very reason, the audience is compelled to intel- lectually participate in the play. The play presents an account of the liquidation of a comrade as told by four agitators to their Control Chorus. The agitators were sent by the Control Chorus (the purveyors of a Party Doctrine) to raise the col- lective conscience of the Chinese downtrodden. They had accepted the assistance of a young comrade, who later betrayed the party doctrine and was subsequently annihilated. Since Brecht envisioned a cast rotation, such that each actor might play each role, no individual can gain prominence. The play also di- vides the actors into two factions, each reciting lines in unison throughout much of the production. Turns are taken reciting these lines only among the four agitators, as each actor portrays the comrade in a different scene. Director Bob Brown suggests that even this casting is ar- bitrary and would perhaps rotate dur- ing the course of the season. The musical accompaniment to "The Measures Taken" is beautiful in its quality and unity. The music's consistency, in contrast to the vari- ance created by the portrayal of the comrade, creates a powerful schism between the individual and the com- munity, achieved without the real- ism or formality of conventional dialogue. Miller's "Mauser" complements puterized music, the driving force which holds together the chorus's unity. Even as Stanton and his computer are situated on the stage, he merely presses buttons and obeys his own command with the rest of the chorus. "Mauser" was written with the potential to be cast in the same ro- tating style as "The Measures Taken." Again, the Brecht Company chose to delegate the role of A. to an individual. Ironically, Montgomery is the strongest individual force within the program, providing depth and development to the role of a failing computer. What is most dif- ficult about his being cast in this role, is that the production would be more satisfying if his role had ro- tated. If you still can't grasp the scope of Embracing the Butcher, your confusion was not unanticipated by- the Brecht Company. Each perfor- mance is followed by a discussion period in which the directors, cast, and distinguished panelists discuss the themes of the play, Brechtian thought and theatre, and production. Guest Panelists include Village Voice Theatre Critic Alisa Solomon; Carl Weber, a former member of Brecht's own company, The Berliner Ensemble, and the translator of "Mauser"; Herbert Blau, a foremost practitioner and theorist of American avant garde theatre; and Walter Bilderback, dramaturge with La Jolla Playhouse and Center Stage in BM- timore. Moreover, texts of the plays are available for spectators and the cast will "replay" and "retool" the production. The Brecht Company uses this means for the viewers and the actors to further participate in their learning processes. By "re- tooling," the actors play a scene, each assuming a different role, changing the emotions expressed as they perform their roles, and ques- tioning different suppositions about how "The Chorus" would present it- self in response to dissention. All are encouraged to see The Brecht Company's fall production, and stay for the discussion afterward. Not only does it offer a compelling concept for the audience to wrestle, it incorporates the most progressive use of the stage in Ann Arbor theatre. EMBRACING THE BUTCHER will be performed tomorrow, Friday, and Saturday night at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m. in the Residential College Auditorium in East Quad. Performances will continue the fol- lowing Thursday through Sunday. Tickets are $7, $5 for students and senior citizens. Dan Montgomery in the Brecht Company's 'Mauser,' one of two plays that make up 'Embracking the Butcher." "The Measures Taken" as it unfolds the suggested potential. A. (Daniel Montgomery) is the killing machine who can kill no more and is thus implored to take his own life. Muller plays off of Brecht's power of the collective, which is re- inforced by Geoffrey Stanton's com- " Vienna String Trio has an enga By Ari Schneider Earlier this semester, Leonard Bernstein lead the Vienna Philharmonic in two very mem- orable performances. One aspect which made these performances so inspiring and virtuosic was the solid playing of the string sections. Similar to the Vienna Phil- harmonic, the Vienna Symphony Orchestra has established a tradition of excellence in its string sections. The principals of the first violin, viola, and cello sections have fortunately come together to form the group appropriately called the Vienna String Trio, thereby allowing patrons and fans of the "Vienna sound" to hear the masters who helped lead and create this precise and expressive style. The musicians who make up the Vienna String Trio include violinist Jan Pospichal, violist Wolfgang Klos, and cellist Wilfred Rehm. Pospichal has studied at the prestigious Prague Conservatory as well as with master teachers such as CINECISM Due to insufficient.space, we were forced to cancel 'Cinecism' this week. Look for it again next Wednesday. SKI WEEKEND 101 at CRYSTAL MOUNTAIN $69 per person U 9group rate Includes: 2 nights lodging & day and night skiing Friday thru Sunday. ENROLL IN GOOD TIMES: 22 slopes, NASTAR, free beginners lesson, XC skiing with lighted night trail, movies, entertainment, heated outdoor pool. Group rates apply with 20 or more-special savings for group organizers. Packages with meals, from Nathan Milstein and Franz Samohyl. Before becoming con- certmaster of the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra in 1979, he won first prizes in competitions such as the coveted Mozart Competition in Salzburg. Moreover, Klos has studied at the Vienna Academy of Music with the great pedagogue Hatto Bayerle, as well as with Bruno Giuranna and Ulrich Koch. After graduating from the Academy with honors in 1977, he immediately became principal violist of the Tonhalle Orchestra in Zurich and began teaching at the Conservatory in Bregenz in 1978. Klos became first violist with -the Vienna Symphony Orchestra in 1981 and switched to teaching at his alma mater in 1985. Furthermore, Rehm has studied with Hans Thomann at the Music Conservatory in Winterthur, Swit- zerland, and Richard Reichardt at the Music Academy in Munich. Between 1963 and 1967, he worked with Pierre Fournier in Geneva, and in 1967 became first cellist in the Zurich Radio Orchestra. Since 1972, Rehm has been the principal cellist the Vienna Symphony Orchestra. In addition to allowing the audience to hear its mastery of the string instruments, the main purpose of The Vienna String Trio is to allow the musician to play varied literature for this com- bination of instruments. Tonight's program exemplifies this. It includes Franz Joseph Haydn's Trio in G major, Op. 53, No. 1 (1784), Ernst von Dohnanyi'sSeranade in C major, Op. 10 (1902), and Ludwig van Beethoven's Trio in G ging program major, Op. 9, No.1 (1793). is a national significance to Hadyn's rarely played piece is Dohnanyi's work, Beethoven's identical with the piano sonata of work reveals what Beethoven the same key and opus number. authority Donald Francis Tovey Although the piano work is called "among the greatest works of enjoyable, the string version gains (Beethoven's) first period." significance and depth through the more colorful part writing. While THE VIENNA STRING TRIO Haydn's work has its origins in the l VNN STRING RIO divertimento, Dohnanyi's work, plays tonight at 8 p.m. in Rackham which was composed in London and Auditorium. Tickets are $14, $12, Vienna, is probably the most and $10 and are available at Burton noteworthy Hungarian work from Tower.Call 764-2538 for more the turn of the century. 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