ARTS a J ., The Michigan Daily Monday, February 8, 1988 Page 7 _ ', Alley aims at appeal (and laughs) -4" By John Shea Special to the Daily SAN FRANCISCO - When God made Kirstie Alley, He took two pieces of metal, each of equal strength, and fused them together. Country. City. The fibers are pretty strong at both ends. "I'm real outdoorsy," Alley said in a teleconference interview earlier last month. "I like to swim and play games a lot. But it's not like I'm a princess or something. It's just that when the sun goes down, I like to have a bed and a shower." (laughs) She laughs a lot. Never mind that Alley is creeping into her 30s; she still retains a laugh that smacks of schoolgirl charm. And while her deep, husky voice and strong limbed body seems more suited for Wheat Thin commercials than quiet drawing room dramas, it would be a mistake to think of her as a country bump- kin. Because merging with the hon- esty, the integrity and the innocence Alley got from growing up in Kansas is a sophisticated urbanite driven to survive. It is this drive that helped her weather the storm of the Cheers controversy last fall, and it is this drive that helped her get through the filming of her new movie, Shoot to Kill (opening in theatres nation- wide this Friday). In Shoot to Kill, she plays movie," another reporter said. "You don't wear any makeup, and there aren't many actresses who would do that." "I really hate makeup," she said. "The worst part of acting to me is sitting in the makeup chair. I mean, I could put on all the clothes and makeup and I still don't look that hot." With Alley, what you see is what you get. She is honest. She is frank. "How does it feel to be virtually the only woman in the movie?" "I liked being the only woman among ten men. (laughs) Ten, big, handsome men. (laughs harder) She is a bit of a flirt. "Do you consider yourself a star now?" "o No." And she knows where she stands. "Would you like to see more scenes between you and Tom Berenger?" she is asked. "Yes. I would like to see a big ol' love scene - a big ol' love, sex scene. (laughs really hard) I wish there was something in the begin- ning with us together. But then when I see the movie, I see a real isolation, a real desperation that it created by never seeing us to- gether..." She understands: Shoot to Kill is not her movie. It belongs to Poitier and Berenger and how their relation- ship develops from adversarial to amiable. Yet she accepts this and does the best she can with a character whose sole purpose is to be dragged through the mud. "I know what I am, and if I am anything, I am a survivor. And it would take a lot for me to quit in an area that I want to win at - like living. (laughs) That's how Sarah is just like me." "Is there a more vulnerable side to Kirstie Alley?" someone asked her. "Yeah. I think I have my vulner- able moments, just like everyone else. But I'm not a crybaby or a wimp or a whiner. That doesn't compute for me. I'm a pretty emo- tional person, you know. I'm senti- mental. And I'm vulnerable with the people I care about. "One of my most hated lines by men is, 'Is she really vulnerable?' Because I get this picture of a woman who is a sap. (laughs) Who starts bawling if you say the wrong thing or can't do something for her- self. I think that's an act. I don't think that's a real admirable trait." Silliness mixed with sensibility: that seems to be the way Alley likes to go. A little country, a little city. When asked her about her future plans, she said, "Oh, I have two or three scripts I'm looking at. And I'd GET IT!1. L~M~ like to have some babies. I'd like to start off with one. Or two." (laughs'; God, she laughs a lot. "I suppose, the inevitable." one reporter announced. "How's life on Cheers ?" "Pardon?" she said in French. "How is life on Cheers these days? Everyone was saying, oh, this can't happen, that can't happen - " "I don't want to brag," she said, "but the ratings are up." You would swear these words could only tumble from the mouth of someone who is, well, conceited.' Alley, somehow, is not. Nice people, I am told, get eaten up in this business like shoo-fly pie - fast and furious. Alley is the ex- ception. * "My big concern was first, I' screw up the show and the ratings would plunge. Then you think, if the ratings stay the same then it didn't make any difference if you were on the show or not. And the ratings went up a bit, so it makes me think. Maybe more people are watching. And maybe ... they want to see me." (laughs) Maybe. The Personal Column MICH4IGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADSa, "I know what I am, and if I am anything, I am a survivor. And it would take a lot for me to quit in an area that I want to win at - like living," said Kirstie Alley, who is best known for her role as Rebecca on 'Cheers.' Alley appears in the movie 'Shoot to Kill' which opens nationwide this Friday. Sarah, an expert trail guide in the Pacific Northwest who is taken hostage by a ruthless killer. Chasing after them is her lover (Tom Berenger) and a FBI agent (Sidney Poitier) who wants revenge. Alley's role is not what you would call a glamorous one; she spent the majority of the film either being dragged, pushed, kicked, beaten, or slugged. "In one scene," she said, "the killer slapped me and dislocated my jaw." "Really?" one reporter asked. "Yeah. It was the shot that they used (in the final cut)," she said with a perverse sense of pride. "I felt like a rag doll." "You're not a vain person in this Opera s By David Hoegberg When the Barber of Seville rode onstage on what resembled a Good Humor tricycle - from which he proceeded to pull wigs, razors, and a note from an Addams' family-type "Thing" in the front basket - Thursday's Power Center audience knew it was in for an enjoyable night at the opera. This device was just one of many fine touches from director Dugg McDonough that pro- vided visual interest while enhancing the sense of the text in the New York City Opera National Com- pany's performance of Rossini's comic opera, Barber of Seville. Another was the cast's machine- like motions during the finale of Act II, which accompanied the words (roughly translated), "I feel like I've stuck my head into some dreadful smithy where the ringing of anvils never stops." This reminded me of Henri Bergson's saying that the ucceeded essence of comedy is the machine gone berserk. An effect that didn't work, however, was the street band's trouble with sheet music during "Ecco ridente" - it distracted visu- ally and aurally from the focus of the scene. Stella Zambalis' Rosina provided the most attractive singing of the evening, deploying her slender mezzo with security and beauty. Her evocative facial movements vir- tually stole Bartolo's "A un dottor" out from under him. Tenor Robert Swenson as Almavia showed a clear and sweet voice used with some ef- fort, though his fioriture was not always clear. Richard Byrne, the Fi- garo, sensibly didn't push his young baritone, but he might have pushed his acting a little more towards spontaneity. As the genius behind the acting, Figaro should seem a bit more charming and unpredictable. The Company's supertitles were helpful and met with general ap- proval from the audience. One frus- tration was that the set for acts II with nice and III were placed too far back on the Power Center's stage, making most of the action in those acts in- visible from the last three or four aisle seats on right and left. Since th touches the house was sold out, this meant that a significant number of us were left in the cold, unable to share in the exuberance of this otherwise de- lightful production. ATTENTION! . Public forum, February 8, 8PM, Pendleton Room, second floor, Michigan Union. Topic: President Fleming's Discriminatory Acts Policy. "Some praise it as a great first step toward creating a better University environment." "Some criticize the policy for violating the first amendment and many other civil liberties and civil rights." Listen to and participate in the discussion as student, faculty, and administration representatives debate the Fleming policy. Sponsors: Affirmative Action Office, Civil Liberties Board, Michigan Student Assembly, Office of Student Services. February 8, 8PM, Pendleton Room, second floor, Michigan Union. Tues., Feb. 9 Wed., Feb. 10 Thurs., Feb.11 The University of Michigan SCHOOL OF MUSIC r University Band/PercussiondEnsemble Eric Becher/Michael Udow, conductors Program includes music by Persichetti, Wagner; new works from around the world for ragtime, ethnic, & contemporary marimba ensemble Hill Auditorium, 8:00 p.m. FREE. Concert Band/Chamber Winds Donald Schleicher, conductor Leslie Guinn, guest baritone soloist Program includes "Folk Song Suite" by Vaughan Williams, music of Grainger, Reynolds, Gabrieli Hill Auditorium, 8:00 p.m. FREE. Lecture-Demonstration by Jane Ira Bloom, soprano sax Co-sponsored by Eclipse Jazz Room 2044, School of Music, 3:00 p.m. FREE. MINORITY & INTERNATIONAL STUDENT GROUP . WOULD YOU LIKE TO SHARE YOUR EXPERIENCES WITH STUDENTS FROM OTHER PARTS OF THE COUNTRY OR THE WORLD? - ARE YOU FEELING BOTH SATISFIED BUT BEWILDERED ABOUT COLLEGE LIFE? - STILL FIGURING OUT NEW FRIENDS AND ROOMMATES? - ARE YOU WONDERING HOW YOU REMAIN YOU AND STILL FIT IN? - TRYING TO DECIDE HOW TO BALANCE YOUR SCHOOL WORK AND SOCIAL LIFE? A group for minority and international men and women will begin February, 1988. Students will have the opportunity to meet others and share their thoughts and experiences about life at The University of Michigan. The Group will run from four to five weeks. Blanca Charriez, the group facilitator, would like to talk briefly by phone or in person with interested students prior to first meeting. Please call Blanca at 764-8312. WHAT DAY? Wednesdays 3100 Michiga1Union[ STARTING Tentatively to Begin February 10 DATE? Led by: Blanca Charriez, ACSW Late Registration at UAC, 2105 M. Union Financial Planning Magic Sports Massage Speed Reading Tarot Cards Taxation without Frustration For up-to-date program information on School of Music events call the 24-Hour Music Hotline, 763-4726 c'mon... thursday's classes aren't all that important presents comedian NEW WAVE VAUDEVILLIAN OF THE NINETIES O.J. ANDERSON NOMINATED COLLEGE ENTERTAINER OF THE YEAR FOR '86 & '87 TOM FRANK Student Comedans CHRIS WASHINGTON WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 10 And Your Host PETER BERMAN JIM MERCURIO I