ARTS Tuesday, November 8, 1988 The Michigan Daily Page 5 Drums: Actors delive BY MATTHEW ZACHARIAS IF love is chaotic, then imagine; love set in the midst of a chaotic so-' cialist movement. This background sets the tone for revolutionary play- wright Bertolt Brecht's Drums in th' Night, the Brecht Company's mos recent production. The play, directed by Ann Shanahan with the help oh her well-casted actors, incorporates ar invigorating comedy into a spectruni of political tension. The dimension of the play centers on a young soldier, Andreas Kragler, who returns home after four years in a P.O.W. camp to a nonexistent welcome. Returning with the sole purpose to find his true love, Anna, he is faced with oppression and hu- miliation. Classic cast pro performances r Nobu (Mako) and Maso (Nobu McCarthy) separate after 45 years of marriage in The Wash. Film awash with good acting, refreshing plot BY MARK SHAIMAN Mako is not a shark - he's an actor. But in The Wash, his character is just as biting as one. Part of this comes from his natural personality, but an equal part is due to his recent separation from his wife. And while separation is hard enough, it is especially difficult when his wife leaves him after 45 years of marriage. This film begins with an ending and ends with a beginning, but it is really the process of going from one to the other that is at the heart of the story. And it is a story that has guts. New romances are usually reserved for young couples, so it is refreshing to see near 70 year olds fall in love. The film also makes the distinction between love and lust, two terms that too many filmmakers see as one in the same. When Masi (Nobu McCarthy) leaves Nobu (Mako), everyone believes that she will return in a short time. But she only comes back once a week in order to do his laundry - "the wash." This one link to her husband is a metaphor for the "cleaning up" of her own life. And it also allows for scenes between the separated couple which-provide insight into their characters, an insight Masi herself is looking for: "I'm just trying to find out about us. What happened." And, though this is a movie about older people, it is still a coming-of-age film. Along with the reali- zation that her married life is not working, Masi finds that she still has much to learn about life in general. And she also finds that a new romance is the way to do this. Sadao (Sab Shimono), a widower, slowly courts Masi, and it is both a minor triumph and a major expression of love when he convinces her to go fishing with him, something that Nobu himself had never been able to do. Much of the story deals with their two daughters and how they deal with their parents' separation. Marsha (Patti Yasutake), the older of the two, expects the parents to reunite, and even has them both over for dinner. This turns into a melee as Mako can't control his sharp tongue. Masi had taken a ceramics course and given an ashtray to Marsha; trying to start con- versation, Marsha shows this to her father who only replies "But you don't smoke." This immediately ex- presses what Masi has put up with throughout the marriage, and is now getting away from. Judy (Marian Yue), on the other hand, thinks that the separation is good and that her parents don't belong together. This partially stems from her personal enmity towards her father who has refused to communicate with her since her marriage to a Black man. This scenario brings about another feature of the film - its mature handling of the race situation. Director Michael Toshiyuki Uno makes no pretenses as to providing answers; Nobu is clearly a racist, and while Masi bears malice toward none, she would rather be with her own race. A few times in the film scenes of Judy's Black husband and their baby are presented to show that succesful intermarriage does work, and that it is the current generation that can make it possible. Still, this is as far as the film goes on the race issue. Its true strength comes from the more personal lives of the family, which is highlighted by the performances of the actors. Mako, who you'll surely recognize when you see him - he has been in count- less films - has the best part of his career, and he makes the most of it. While his character isn't too lovable, he manages to arouse sympathy for a generally unlikable person. And Nobu McCarthy takes on a radiant glow when she finds new love, adding one more shining light to The Wash - a film that should clean up at the Oscars. THE WASH is showing at the Ann Arbor Theatre. Andreas's reluctant pursuit of Anna acts as a microcosm for the grey streets of Berlin during the realm of the Sparticist uprisal of 1919. An intense mood of revolu- tion and anxiety fill the air while Andreas remains oblivious in his somber trek. Anna's parents, Karl and Amalia Balicke, represent the ultra-spoiled bourgeois couple, who are the most antagonistic towards Andreas's return. Accompanying their opposition towards Andreas is the aristocrat Frederick Murk whose only goal, aside from making money, is to marry the soldier's The romance of Andreas and Anna (front, Martin Sweeney and sweetheart. Molly Surowitz) faces the opposition of Anna's parents (rear, Danforth Tierney and Jennifer Lynn Hahn) in the Brecht * nCompany's production of Drums in the Night. e n ecomicai nriiliance of DLrums in the Night is perceptible through- out the play, especially in Brecht's ironic dialogue, but it also has its share of intense, emotional moments which strike an exact balance, thanks mainly to the play's gifted cast. Martin A. Sweeny, as Andreas, expresses the anguish and confusion of a man facing his own personal hell; Molly Surowitz is believable as Anna, a woman bogged down by her own circumstances (mainly her pregnancy) and her insecurities; Danforth Tierney and Jennifer Lynn Hahn are perfect as the rotten Bal- ickes; Marc Maier succeeds as the money-thirsted snake Frederick Murk; Jeffrey Lupovitch cleverly portrays the strange journalist; and Kurt Maier is charming as the po- etic, melodramatic waiter who acts as the narrator during the play's most tender moments. The prop organization by Helen , Hurwitz is most notable, in particu- The comical brilliance of Drums in the Night is perceptible throughout the play, especially in Brecht's ironic dialogue, but it also has its share of intense, emotional mo- ments which strike an ex- act balance, thanks mainly to the play's gifted cast. lar the symbolic red moon that refers to both the socialist uprising and also the elaborate city backdrop of Berlin. But, it is director Ann Shanahan, in her debut production, who pre- sents Brecht's classic with an expert touch, making Drums in the Night a must to see, listen, absorb, and learn from. The Brecht Company's production of DRUMS IN THE NIGHT runs through this weeken~d at the Residential College Auditorium in East Quad, with performance s Thursday, Friday, and Saturday at 8 p.m.and Sunday at 2 p.m. Ticket prices are $7 Friday and Saturday, and $S Thursday and Sunday. Michigan Daily ARTS 763-0379 Long Time Gone By David Crosby and Carl Gottlieb Doubleday $18.95 / Hardcover differs from how others recall them and feel about them. Gottlieb, a friend of Crosby's and participant in many of Crosby's experiences, provides an unbiased third viewpoint. "Sex, drugs, and rock 'n' roll - I was in it from the beginning," states Crosby, and Long Time Gone chronicles his journey, beginning with his childhood, following Crosby, Stills, and Nash, and his increasing drug use. Beginning with marijuana during his folksinger days, Crosby progressed to harder drugs. He remained a recreational yet heavy user until he was introduced to a new method of cocaine use: freebasing. Freebasing produces a highly potent and highly addictive smokable form of cocaine, to which Crosby became addicted. Crosby ... teaches himself well The first line, "This is how I remember my life," is an apt description of Long Time Gone, David Crosby's autobiography. Crosby's recollections of his past are supplemented by the memories of a long list of his famous and not-so- famous friends and acquaintances, and by the objective viewpoint of his co-writer, Carl Gottlieb. The text by Crosby is set in a different type size and style than the contributions of his friends, and Gottlieb's writings are set in yet another type style. This distinguishing of who said what is interesting and useful, for how Crosby recalls some events drugs, he was suffering from several physical ailments, and he was going to jail. During his time in jail, he kicked his habit, played in the prison band, and put his life back together. After his release, he began- performing again, reuniting with Graham Nash and Stephen Stills, with whom he has recently released a new album. His girlfriend, Jan Dance, also kicked her habit, and they married. Long Time Gone paints an unforgiving picture of the highs and lows of the '60s rock 'n' roll lifestyle, from sold-out concerts to groupies to the depths and CLASSIFIED ADSI Call 764-0557 through his trouble-making days in Crosby's decline through schools, and through his early days addiction is chronicled for us: his as a solo folksinger and guitar spending of vast quantities of money player. Then we come to the meat of on drugs, his multiple arrests on gun the story - his "overnight" success and drug charges, his friends with the seminal rock group the attempts to rehabilitate him, and Byrds. The Byrds rocketed to the top more. At the time of his incarcera of the music charts, providing tion in Dallas, he and his girlfriend instant fame, money, women, and were consuming up to seven grams drugs to Crosby and his bandmates. of cocaine and half a gram of heroin The book follows Crosby a day - a costly habit in more ways through the breakup of the Byrds,. than one. He had no money, he had the formation of the supergroup sold all his possessions to buy SCHOLARSHIP INFORMATION FOR M Eu :STUDENTS WHO NEED MONEYFOR COLLEGE degradations of cocaine addiction. The use of remembrances from Crosby's many friends, including Graham Nash, Stephen Stills, Jackson Browne, Grace Slick, Peter Fonda, and a host of others enables a balanced presentation of Crosby's story. His statements and opinions about his addiction are tempered by viewpoints not under the influence of a powerful addiction. Long Time Gone is a fascinating story of the '60s generation, of a major rock star's life, and of a man conquering his personal demons, and it performs admirably on all levels. -Chuck Skarsaune h .s Y n d d s n s 1 Y PLASMA DONORS $ Earn Extra Cash $ Earn $20 on your first donation. You can earn up to $120 a month. Couples can earn up to $240. Repeat donors who have not donated in the last 30 days receive an additional $5 bonus for return visit. Plasma donors are people helping people.