ARTS The Michigan Daily Thursday, February 2, 1989 BY LEAH LAGIOS IN third grade, I thought I wanted to be a dancer. As I cranked up the Hooked On Classics album and the classical music station my mom lis- tened to, I was a ballerina, leaping and bounding over furniture, thinking I would someday be famous. When I grew tired of the classics, I switched to disco - the Bee Gees and Shaun Cassidy had a great beat. But my friends told me I had no chance; I should give up ballet, let alone a ca- reer as a "Solid Gold" dancer. So instead of performing, I now have an opportunity to at least write about the excitement of dancing and music. And now I can do both, be- cause tonight, on the Power Center Stage, the University Dance Com- pany will present Viva Stravinsky! in conjunction with the University Symphony Orchestra. Special per- formances by the University Jazz Ensemble and the Women's Glee Club will also be featured. Stravinsky is known as a com- poser for dance, as he worked closely with the Ballet Russe in the first half of this century. But although this program is featuring some of the finest works in Stravinsky's reper- toire, many of them are less familiar and have never been choreographed before. Viva Stravinsky! has several promising features. Its music is spirited and vibrant, a variety of new media is involved in this production, and according to Richard Rosenberg, "it will be able to offer something to all tastes of the public." This production will be the first to use the new Telaria Video Projec- tor and other design concepts devel- oped at the University's Center for the Performing Arts and Technology. Richard Rosenberg, conductor of the Page 7 Bruce's poetry sates Hunger (From left) Sarah Blackburn, Christine Knight, Caroline Sutton, Torya Beard, and Katherine Smith perform an Op art version of "Minstrel Dances" in the University Dance Company's production of Viva Stravinsky! Vivacious Viva BY JAY PINKA "In many museums, a cosmic clock illustrates the history of life on earth, showing that human life begins a few minutes before mid- night." -Debra Bruce, "The Clock in the Museum." If the chill wind of this winter Thursday evening threatens to blow you past museums to lecture hall to library, howling for the nectar of spring maple to sweeten your mea- ger meals - why not break for din- ner today with poet Debra Bruce as she reads from her newest volume, Sudden Hunger (1987). Bruce's voice resonates a deeper level of meaning with a sincere re- spect for the quirks of people and re- lationships, as her careful concern for structure flexes the living muscle of poetic form. Her focused flow of rhythm and meter is characteristic of the New Formalist resurrection of structural tools in the poetic process. Bruce's approach is refreshing, effectively disarming any stale, per- haps unconscious attitudes toward familial and societal relations that ,the reader brings to the page. She examines and hints at explanations to cultural traditions such as shop- ping trips and holidays, in "My Fa- ther Refuses to Read the Obituaries," while in "Aunt Judith and Her Housemate Ann," she reflects on society's limiting outlook on CUPIDS are ready to shoot arrows into your loved one's heart! Put a Valentine in the Daily. 764-0557 764-0557 homosexuality. And, in "My Mother Refuses to Tell Her Age," she fasci- nates us with the complexities and comedies of the dynamics betweeb mother and daughter. University professor and poet Al- ice Fulton describes Bruce's work as "unsentimental" while "celebrating the qualms of affection... meaning" effectively underscored by meter." Fulton appreciates the poet';s "graceful, meticulous structures" as skillfully polishing the passions of the poem. The poet's first collection, Pure Daughter, was published in 1983 by the University of Arkansas Press. After growing up in Albany, New York, she earned her bachelor's de- gree at the University of Massachu-i ssetts, her master's degree at Brown University and her masters of fine arts at the Iowa Writing Workshop. She has been published in the American Poetry Review, The Geo- rgia Review, The Prairie Schooner, and The Virginia Quarterly Review. In addition, she has received grants from The National Endowment for the Arts, the National Endowments for the Humanities, and the Illinois Arts Council. And to top off this smorgasbord of achievement, Bruca won the Carl Sandberg Literary Award in 1988. Debra Bruce's artistry responds to a literary need for excellence in forn integrated with gut meaning. W2 reread for answers to the haunting questions aroused by her inconclusive strains, as we are struc by the elementally personal framed by the detailed unfamiliar. DEBRA BRUCE will read from her works today at 5 p.m in the Rackham East Conference Room. SUNGLASSES SALE! 20%-40% OFF RETAIL Ray Ban, Vuarnet, Serengeti, Incognito, Body Glove, & MORE I When: Friday, Feb. 3, 9a.m. - 6p.m. Where: Michigan Union Mall Inf a Pbet a 4-154 GOING PLACES Relive your fantasies to the University Dance Company's production of Viva Stravinsky! Read aw Ube 'Daieq University Symphony Orchestra, says the video art "reveals the inner motivation of characters that are be- ing performed on stage. Think of it as a Greek chorus commenting on the action on stage." This evening will also mark a world premiere of a new composi- tion, a Fantasia, by Steven Rush, the Music Director for the University Dance Department. This work "has elements of Stravinsky in it," says Rush, but also a style all its own, employing a full orchestra plus the University Women's Glee Club. Under the direction of the talented Dance School choreographers and professors, student dancers will per- form to works such as "Petrushka," "Pastorale," and "Fireworks," by Stravinsky. For a little off-beat entertainment, the audience will also experience the Ragtime of the '20s with dances to Stravinsky's "Ragtime," Scott Joplin's "New Rag," and a new work by Steven Rush called "Seventh Heaven Rag." Another inviting aspect of tonight's performance will be the placement of the orchestra. Rosen-, berg said that "contact will be greater and more intimate for the audience" because the orchestra won't be below the stage, but on the floor of the au- ditorium where they will be able to be seen along with the dancers on stage. Peter Sparling, chair of the Uni- versity Dance Department, claims that this concert "will be very special for our audience. They will hear some of the great music of this cen- tury performed by a full orchestra; they will see the application of the newest in performing arts technol- ogy; and they will witness a perfor- mance by a dance company whose quality and level of performance has never been better." VIVA STRAVINSKY! will be performed at the Power Center on February 2, 3, and 4 at 8 p.m., with a Sunday matinee at 2 p.m. on February 5. Tickets may be pur- chased at the League Ticket Officefor $10, $7, and $5 with student I.D. The Power Center Box Office will be open one hour prior to each perfor- I CLASSIFIED ADS MISCELLANEOUS 0 U-M FLYERS PRIVATE PILOT GROUND SCHOOL starts Feb. 8, 7 p.m. Room 439 Mason Hall. For information call 994-6208. ROOMMATES MUSICAL AVAILABLE NOW- 1 rm. in 3-bdrm. Hill & State. Big, kg., fum., all util., $2S0 til Aug., monthly OK. Nick 668-8132. AVAILABLE NOW! Share a dbl. rmn. with a female. Must sublease. Call 662-8713. REWARD! 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