Page 8 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 26, 1989 Sentimental journey Driving Miss Daisy inspires warm emotion BY JAY PEKALA In the present age of high-tech, high budget, high gloss theatrical spectacles, it's refreshing to see a simple three character play that tick- les us while it touches us. Alfred Uhry's sentimental comedy Driving Miss Daisy presented Tuesday evening at the Michigan Theater is neither garish nor grand, but it warms to one like a cuddly kitten. With only a chair and table, a desk, a small credenza, two stools, and sev- eral telephones set against a plain blue backdrop, the contention of a crusty, aging Jewish woman for her son's appointment of an affable Black chauffeur named Hoke is slowly worn away. Over.25 years, a deep friendship grows as the two come to understand one another and the intolerant prejudices that affect their lives. In a purple dress with lace trim, Rosemary Prinz captures Daisy's cantankerous and flip yet somehow lovable character with style and wit. During a power outage, she invites Hoke for the first time to "Eat any- thing you want from the icebox," then punctuates glibly, "It's all gonna spoil anyway." Ted Lange as Hoke is functional though perhaps not inspired casting. At first Lange relies on stereotype for his portrayal, which fits about as well as his hand-me-down gray suit. It may also be that Lange's voice is too youthful for Hoke. But as Hoke's dedication and self-pride urge Miss Daisy's respect and admiration, Lange relaxes and seems more at ease. In a scene in which Hoke is about to purchase Daisy's old car, he gently warns her smoking son, Boolie (Fred Sanders) to "keep them ashes off my upholstery" with a per- In a purple dress with lace trim, Rosemary Prinz captures Daisy's cantankerous and flip yet somehow lovable character with style and wit. During a power outage, she invites Hoke for the first time to 'Eat anything you want from the icebox,' then punctuates glibly, 'It's all gonna spoil anyway,' fect blend of authority and tender- ness. Uhry's chronology of scenes highlighting the pair's 25-year rela- tionship is a bit sluggish at the start. Daisy crashing the car, she and Boolie discussing insurance, and Boolie hiring Hoke provide back- ground and characterization, but they feel expositional and may even re- strain some of the play's later en- ergy. Once the play is moving, Uhry puts a comic tag at the close of each scene. It's cute once or twice, but then becomes pat. While Driving Miss Daisy is a clever piece of theatrical writing, it is also very predictable. Hoke not being able to read and Daisy teaching him and giving him a primer, Hoke getting his salary increased after get- ting an offer elsewhere to "name your price," and the couple's even- tual break-up due to passing years are all notions that we've seen be- fore. There is really very little new about the situations, yet like a fa- vorite book, they have a timeless charm. Despite a couple of lighting diffi- culties and some dreary incidental music for violin and cello, the rec- onciliation of two different cultures is vastly moving. Prinz, Lange and Sanders have that elusive chemistry that is so vital to such an intimate play. Daisy weeps quietly as Hoke recounts seeing his friend's father dangling from a noose. And Hoke is left speechless as he softly pats Daisy's chair before her house and its contents are sold. In the scene of their last drive to- gether, both are so elderly that their getting into the mimed car, accom- panied by banjo music, plays like a Laurel and Hardy sketch. As Hoke backs the car up, the image of him and Daisy both slowly turning around to see through the rear win- dow as they had done much more quickly years before has that senti- mental tug that leads you down a teary trap. But the magic is there, and we eagerly take the bait. C Joe Slovak (Matthew Modine, right), a cocky medical student, shakes hands with Laurie Rorbach (Daphne Zuniga, left) in Gross Anatomy. It's probably just congratulations over a cadaver well cut up, but love has developed in stranger situations than this one. Rigors of medical school diagnosed as trite in Anatomy BY NABEEL ZUBERI During its more convincing moments, Gross Anatomy almost makes you feel sorry for medical stu- dents - sorry for those long, arduous hours of work and study, and sorry for the blood, sickness and disease that they have to put up with day after day. Almost makes you sorry, because then you remember that they're going to be messing with your bodies and tak- ing lots of your money, so it's only right that they have the most rigorous training absolutely possible. All first year med students at Chandler Ufniversity's School of Medicine have to pass a course in Gross Is an affirmative action employer. Human Anatomy - the systematic dissection of the ' . Jim ~niewozik Every 1human body. For our hero Joe Slovak (Matthew Mo- Peaim kE dine), studying is a breeze and carving up a cadaver is as easy as slicing roast chicken. Joe meets Laurie Or- W ee6 kenc bach (Daphne Zuniga) and romance sparks as the - - scalpels cut through epidermal tissue. But, becoming a doctor and having a "relationship" are not compatible, Senior P and so our. protagonists spend quite some time "working things out" and "getting in touch with their feelings." Yep, Gross Anatomy starts off like a bad John Hughes teen flick, except that you had more empathy with Molly Ringwald. The Modine character here is such an obnoxious, cocky fellow that it's difficult to give a toss about him. And when the film suddenly de- cides to be a serious drama about what it is to be a doctor, it's far too late because we just want to see him get hammered by the tough instructor Dr. Rachel Woodruffe (Christine Lahti). Lahti, who was brilliant in Bill Forsyth's House- keeping, is wasted here, though she gives the film a semblance of substance. As the hard but vulnerable teacher, she's the most sympathetic character in the movie. Her relationship with Modine could have been better developed. She helps him to "grow up," but his transformation lacks credibility. The film ends up caught between being a teen comedy and a treatise en- nobling the medical profession. The theme of "doctors shouldn't be just 'body technicians,' but should really care for their patients as individual human beings" isn't explored more than as a platitude to be simply stated. Gross Anatomy feeds into the myth that the medi- cal profession is somehow of a higher moral order than the rest of us. I suppose this is because we've had too many years of Dr. Kildares, Marcus Welbys and the like - too many saintly healers. This is a fallacy be- cause in the real world we're more likely to encounter a Dr. Mark Craig (St. Elsewhere) with all his irritabil- ity and fallibility. One day a great film will be made about death, ethics and the medical profession - or maybe David Cronenberg's already made it. GROSS ANATOMY is now showing at the Ann Arbor 1 & 2 and Showcase Cinemas. The characters in Joe and Laurie's dissection group are stock American types: we've got the young, preg- nant woman who's trying to raise a family as well as working towards a career in medicine; there's the snotty, preppie type for whom medicine will lead to rounds of golf with the right people; and finally, there's the pitiful hard worker who just doesn't have what it takes to make the grade. Despite their differ- ences, the group members inevitably buckle together when it comes down to exams and memorizing 3,500 pages a week. II STATEHPACT f 1T~ QVO IEXPH)IREMS$UPaIs.: . 1 1 1IS~-- - - - ----- - - - - r 15 OZ.I I $TATE COUPON** G-I I'N * N 9$f{A VEBO M S 1 _« EXPR -6-89 XIRSi. -- -_ __----------..---.--- - - "Roosevelt's paralegal program was my stepping- stone to a rewarding career." Litigation e Real Estate Corporations " General Practice Estates, Trusts & wills Employee Benefit Plans . Largest A.B.A.-approved program in Illinois + Effective employement assistance " Three-month day and six-month evening classes " Loop, Arlington Heights, Oak Brook and Olympia Fields locations " Student loans for qualified appli- cants " Fall term begins in September and October . On campus: November 8 For a brochure and your invatation to an information session, write or call: Express yourself in Daily Arts Call 763-0379 Roosevelt University . Lawyers Assistant Prgram S4305S. Michigan Avenue Chicago, Ii. 60605 312-341-3882 Name Address city State Zip kinko's the copy center HOURS OPEN 7 DAYS OPEN 241 niversity Michigan Union 540 E. L )070 662-1222 761-4 Anne Hslard Legal Assistant I Mont, DP 11 OPEN 24 1220 S. U 747-9 HOURS Liberty 4539 an evening with Stephen Jay Gould . J lecture and signing of his new book Rackham Auditorium Thurs, Oct. 26, 8 pm visit sponsored by U. of M. Museum of Paleontology and Borders Book Shop S S y. ', I . .* ::.*~**..*.*******.** . . . . ..:.1. v w