ARTS The Michigan Daily Thursday, October 27, 1988 Page 7 Betty and Bird: Tried and true team BY LIAM FLAHERTY VOCALIST Betty Carter resides in that jazz stratosphere where the air is thin and first names are all that's needed; Billie, Ella, Sarah, Betty. She is there due to an enormity of skill and range, and an abundance of experience. But mostly because her art is the art of improvisation. Her voice is an instrument that doesn't merely sing or interpret, but creates. Ron Brooks, bass player and owner of the Bird of Paradise, where Carter will play this weekend, calls her a "musician's singer" - meaning she has a suppleness, intelligence, and spontaneity that those who make their living from curved metal and ivory keys can appreciate. Her ability to express a wealth of emotions, create a mood, tell a story, and combine disparate elements into a seamless texture is a style Brooks calls "fluid and inclusive." And she gives back everything she takes in, drawing the audience to her whether reaching for a high note or coyly whispering the lowest. Ron Brooks... calls her a "musician's singer" - meaning she has a supple- ness, intelligence, and spontaneity that those who make their living from curved metal and ivory keys can appreciate. The shows at the Bird should be special, for Carter is returning home. A native of Flint, she studied piano at the Detroit Conservatory and lived in the city for a number of years. Carter debuted, in 1948, with great vibes player and bandleader Lionel Hampton. Her beginnings were modern jazz's, and she has played with its seminal figures, including Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, and Miles Davis. In 1960, she cut a classic album with Ray Charles which, until recently reissued, was almost impossible to find. But no one has had any problem finding her latest effort, "Look What I've Got" on Verve - it's reached number one on the Billboard jazz chart. The musicians Carter brings to the Bird might not get served. The band's average age is about 21, consisting of Darrell Grant on piano, Ira Coleman on bass, and Troy Davis on drums. Working with young musicians has factored in Carter's continuing evolution, and her commitment to jazz's. While some in the business feel the music stopped somewhere in the '60s (probably in the middle of a John Coltrane solo), Carter looks only forward. The Bird of Paradise and Betty Carter is a combination that has worked before. Now she's returning with a new band and on top of her game. Lay down the 15 bucks and see what she's got; she might touch some places you forgot were there. BETTY CARTER will perform at the Bird of Paradise tonight at 9 and 11 p.m, and Friday and Saturday at 8, 10, and 12 midnight. Tonight's 9 p.m. show and the 8 p.m. shows this weekend are all ages. Tickets are $15, available in advance and at the door. ~s -U "" ' :,": " , y I w Whoopi's latest a Heart-mbreaker BY ANDREA GACKI The film Clara's Heart, starring Whoopi Goldberg as a Jamaican maid who acts as the stabilizing agent for an upper-middle class Baltimore family torn apart by the death of their infant daughter, is a bit of a disappointment. On second thought, let's say it's exasperating. Okay, honestly: it's awful. How can it be that a movie, when broken down into its various factors, can appear to have some of the strongest components ever assembled and can then combine them in such a way as to relegate itself to utter mediocrity? Clara's Heart squanders virtually every one of its assets. One travesty is particularly offensive, and that is the way in which the acting abilities of Whoopi Goldberg are completely disregarded Goldberg's Oscar-nominated film debut as Celie in Steven Spielberg's The Color Purple was lauded as the coming of the new Black actress, one that defied the stereotypical barriers implanted by Hollywood. She followed it with Jumpin" Jack Flash, Burglar, Fatal Beauty --all sad vehicles for a talented actress. And now, Clara's Heart. Her performance as Clara Mayfield, a veritable saint with a horrific past, is actually commendable; her Jamaican accent is superb, and her comportment betrays the warmth and the supreme depth of her character. But she is surrounded by pap. Mark Medoff, the Oscar-nominated screenwriter of his play Children of a Lesser God, brings a newfound triteness to the words of Joseph Olshan's novel. Leona and Bill Hart (Kathleen Quinlan and Michael Ontkean), the parents in the Baltimore family, spout sloppy sentiment when their marriage falls apart, when they ultimately lose touch with their only son, when they do anything at all. Director Robert Mulligan, praised for his deft treatment of youth in such films as To Kill a Mockingbird and Inside Daisy Clover, presents a stale imitation of boyhood in David Hart (Neil Patrick Harris). David's actions are too precocious, and thus one-dimensional, as he deals with his parents' divorce and as he investigates Clara's mysterious past of rape and suicide. This film is all the more detestable because it had the potential to be good, and this potential was wasted - leaving Clara's Heart riddled with overt, mind-numbing symbolism and intent upon being true to a rather superficial style. Whoopi Goldberg deserves better than this slow cinematic descent. If nothing else, however, regard Clara's Heart as yet another example of a logical fallacy of division: an object's worth depends not upon its separate properties but upon their interrelationship. Hopefully the components of Clara's Heart will never interact again. CLARA'S HEART is showing at the State Theater. W_ M1Z BY CHUCK SKARSAUNE "Tapeheads - a funny movie with music." So reads the ad copy for Tapeheads. But you should know by now not to trust everything you read. Ivan (John Cusack), a scheming shyster type, and his buddy Josh (Tim Robbins), a geeky nerd type who happens to be a wiz with a video camera and an editing deck, decide to combine their talents and start their own video production company, the Video Aces, with Ivan marketing Josh's creativity. They produce a commercial for a fried chicken and waffle restaurant, and several bad videos for an equally bad Swedish rock group. But they get their big break when they accidentally combine the footage of a funeral with the soundtrack to a rock video - the result miraculously turns into a hit and makes them huge stars overnight. We get to see all these video pieces in all their glory, making the first half of the film a series of bad videos strung together with little or no rhyme or reason. Once Ivan and Josh become stars, they get the bright idea of producing a video for the Swanky Modes, their childhood musical heroes (played by real life soul men Sam Moore and Junior Walker). On their way to the The Lords of the New Church share a laugh about how much money they got to appear in Tapeheads. The film is about two men starting their. own video-production, business - which, judging from the quality of this movie, might not be a bad. alternative. top, the Video Aces also un- knowingly acquire video footage of a presidential candidate in various compromising positions. The second half of the movie is a lame extended chase scene, with thugs hired by the candidate trying to kill the Video Aces and retrieve the offending tape. This all leads to a comical, yet definitely unfunny, finish. The first problem with this film is its lack of humor. For a film that claims to be a "funny movie," Tape- heads is remarkably short on laughs. The second problem is, yes, the music. The performances by the Swanky Modes are good, especially the ending sequence, since Sam Moore and Junior Walker are ex- perienced musical performers. Yet the rest of the music is somewhere between blah and bad. Third problem is the characters. They are, for the most part, un- believable and one-dimensional. Tim Robbins' and John Cusack's talents are wasted here. Josh goes through a personality change in the middle of the movie, but why? There's no reson given. The characters' mo- tivations are simplistic or unclear, making for flat, lifeless acting. Producer/co-writer Peter Mc- Carthy, who previously produced Repo Man and Sid and Nancy, and 'rector/co-writer Bill Fishman, a veteran video director himself, are unable to hold the viewers' attention for the film's 93 minutes. Given the topic, the actors, and the number of cameos - by everybody from Tdd Nugent to Jello Biafra - it seems they would have had enough strong material to work with, but the weakness of their own script does them in. This movie wouldn't last five minutes in the cold, harsh world of television. True video heads, with the attention span of gnats, would blip the remote control right quickly. And in the theater, the absence of a remote control adds to the dis- comforting realization that you paid cold hard cash for this experience. "Tapeheads - a funny movie with music." Not guilty on all counts. TAPEHEADS is showing Showcase Cinemas. at Cornerstone The affordable answer to overpriced lecture notes CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP (an interdenominational campus fellowship) Students Dedicated to Knowing and Communicating Jesus Christ Anthropology 101 Anthropology 161 Classical Civilization 101 Economics 201 Economics 202 1st l!ass Geology 100 Geology 107 Geology 115 Political Science 140 Sociology 101 Weekly Meetings: Thursdays: 7:00 pm 219 Angell Hall John Neff - 971-9150(0), 747-8831(H) I 222 S. State SI Arn Arbor, M] 48104 761- 2711 corner of S. State & E. Liberl t. s 1 rty Dollar Bill Copying * 611 Church - 665-9200 Open till midnight for your studying convenience come in today for your free sample The University of Michigan Armenian Students Cultural Association invites undergraduate and graduate students to a presentation on THE ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY SUMMER INTERN PROGRAM FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1988 UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN MICHIGAN UNION BALLROOM 1209 7:00 P.M. ANN ARBOR, MI .. 1.F pi f " . 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