E Page 10 - The Michigan Daily - Monday, December 4, 1989 :C.f .k. :.i.:...Y m INLsiVAUV A Comedy Company goes Bonzo They came. They saw. They cackled. Under a spell of laughter cast by tle witty humor of the Comedy Company in Bedtime for Big Show, audiences came away from the Men- delssohn Theatre this past weekend looking at the lighter side of life. All of the sketches took regular situations or ideas out of their usual clay molds and shaped them into slightly bizarre, Play-doh representa- tions of life. The generation gap be- tween father and son was satirically depicted in "The Family Stone," with a Neanderthal-like father (Jon March) and evolutionized son (Jason Dilly) finally resolving their petty differences after reminiscing about The Flintstones lullaby. And speaking of differences, back in the '70s a heavy date was a far-out and groovy one. But in "He Ain't My Brother, He's Heavy," the pro- verbial blind date turned into a hefty, hefty, hefty experience with Blake Robinson playing the literally dense date. Another twist of reality was shown in "Coffee, Tea or Me(xico)" in which plane hijackers Jon March and Blake Robinson ended up taking orders and threats from feisty pas- sengers instead of giving them. How many people do you know would ask if there was going to be a movie during a flight pirated by skyjackers? Southern belle Susan Potok didn't seem to mind. Of course, if the story were in The National Enquirer, it would contain three-headed aliens who took over the plane and brought it back to their planet, Alphazentron, holding all passengers hostage until President Bush traded them for twinkies. In "Meet The Enquirers," BOOKS Continued from page 9 sive. His main impulse towards other human beings was to establish a dominant relationship over them - something that Wells fiercely re- sisted." an Enquirer reporter (Todd Callen) and his family played off of the pa- per's ridiculously sensationalistic journalism as well as running into a living and fully costumed Elvis (Jon March). One of the most creative skits brought audiences into the fantasy world of Bazooka bubblegum with eye-patched Bazooka Joe (Matt Price) and the gang. With "meaningful" fortunes and crazy jokes, Joe and the gang made the crowd burst their bubbles with their hilarious chorus of "Oh ho ho that Bazooka Joe!" Complete with the fifth-dentist sur- veyed and a Hubba Bubba showdown of the biggest bubble, this skit, with all nine cast members, brought out each of their distinct comical talents. And, how many times have you wondered if milk really does a body good? In the "Milk" sketch, similar to the commercial, a young boy is shown getting progressively older but not necessarily taller or in better form while talking to an image of the perfect girl. In the end, he real- izes milk not only doesn't get you the girl but it makes you fat as hell. Milk... it only shatters dreams. Overall, Bedtime for Big Show reeled audiences in hook, line, and sinker with its absurd wit, satirical vaudeville style, and creative writing and directing. In between skits, the audience showed humor of their own with rousing choruses of theme songs from The Brady Bunch, Gilligan's Island, and The Addams Family accompanied by piano and banjo, maintaining the spirit of laughter throughout the show. -Ami Mehta Present Laughter postscript Love and lust among the upper class with a case of mid-life crisis tossed in for spurious loftiness. With little digression from the love/lust crisis, Noel Coward's Pre- sent Laughter is a witty view of Bri- tish actor Garry Essendine, a man accused of ceaselessly acting, and his retinue, consisting of his ex-wife, producers, secretary, debutante one- night fling, Swedish maid, Cockney butler, producer/good friend's wife- cum-one-night fling, and a crazed admirer. Essendine's dealings with the egocentric, greedy bunch leads to a reunion between himself and his independent yet watchful and loving wife Liz. The University Players, under the direction of Philip Kerr, gave an en- ergetic if somewhat remedial presen- tation of Coward's play at the Power Center this weekend. Unfortunately, by reducing each character to one broad clich6, Kerr has erroneously washed the subtlety and subtext from much of Coward's script. At times when other characters believe Essendine is acting, he isn't really, but the audience never got to sense Ian Knauer's Garry without his masks. Clad in stylish 1930s blazers and robes, designed by John Gutoskey, Knauer's performance had tremen- dous enthusiasm, despite being mis- guided at the end of the play. He was quite adept at over-emoting to get rid of a pouty Kristen Berhendt as Daphne Shillington, the aforemen- tioned deb, who had spent the night in the spare room of Garry's studio apartment, and at briskly fending off advances by Patrick Beller's overblown, love-struck writer, Roland Maule. But what is necessary is more variation between the performing Essendine and the relaxed, casual Essendine. The last act, as Essendine is pushed to the dreaking point by Hugo and Morris, husband and lover I q DAVID SMITH Gary and Liz Essendine (Ian Knauer and Erica Heilman) live the good life in the University Productions staging of Noel Coward's Present Laughter. Wit and sophistication reigned supreme, although some of the performers were not up to the task. respectively of Joanna (who also seduced Essendine in the second act), there needed to be a period of uncontrived sincerity from which Knauer could explode to throw his most cutting and verbally abusive punches without being falsely melodramatic. Then, moments later, when the two men tell the actor that he will have to perform in a theatre he abhors because they just purchased it, Essendine should have been leveled. This news should have left Knauer writhing in the death throws of a hunted animal rather than simply posturing in another over-acted bit. Those actors whose characters were more or less unidimensional by Coward's design - secretary Monica Reed, maid Erikson, and butler Fred - worked best within Kerr's stag- ing. As Monica, Lisa Mintz pre- sented a perfectly timed, wry-hu- mored depiction of Essendine's hard- edged, no-nonsense secretary. Lines like, "I'm not taking a moral view. I gave that up years ago," in response to Garry's implication that she is be- ing too critical of his tete a tetes, combined her brass tacks attitude with a blend of sarcastic humor which endowed the play with its most entertaining moments. Missy Hart and Ken Weitzman added to the humor with their caricatures of the chain-smoking, befuddled house- keeper and the lively stepping, eye- brow-raising butler. Weitzman and Knauer have a delightful musical in- terlude which opens the second act as Knauer gently plays the onstage pi- ano and Weitzman tangos virilely with a serving tray. Despite the musical diversion, the first scene of the second act in which Essendine is seduced by a friend's wife left one flat. A misdi- rected Joanna, played by Andrea Car- nick, presented the Lorelei in a series of misshapen rantings. Visually Carnick is captivating in both a black velvet gown with an open back and a white traveling suit with black Russian collar and millinery, but her monotonous, over-empha- sized accent reduced the dimensional temptress, who plays numerous lit- tle games before finally snaring Essendine in her web, into a forced, persistent nuisance. Undeniably, Present Laughte# was largely a show of pretty pica tures. Gary Decker's elaborate one- room, studio flat with its expansive windows and cozy atmosphere wad deftly lit by Tracy Eck (except for the mirror-balled curtain call). Ms. Eck's soft tones created both late morning sun and interior evening light to vividly complement cos- tume designer John Gutoskey's ele- gant period creations. Smartly dressed British elite smoked, drank posed, and quibbled their way across. the footlights, although with only a modicum of the true subtlety and so- cial grace that Coward's play de- manded. And a few performances were lost in the affected British ac-, cents (especially that of Patrick Beller, whose bombastic, rural di alect all but buried his best lines).: But the play did have many humor- ous moments, and the energy of the cast made a commendable evening. ' -Jay Pekalaa him business advice." Still to come in this prodigioust life are Heartbreak House and St Joan; the 1925 Nobel Prize; Shaw'f lifelong friendship with Lawrence oc' Arabia; his visit to Hollywood ii the '30s; and his admiration of Muse solini and Stalin as strong leaders Holroyd's final volume, The Lure of Fantasy, is scheduled for publicatiorv in 1991. -Edward Karam This Bernard Shaw, in fact, is often arrogant, tactless and perverse. His criticism'of World War I so en- raged fellow writers that 53 of them, including Wells, G. K. Chesterton, and James M. Barrie, signed a decla- ration supporting the war effort. As Holroyd points out, it was Shaw's ALL YOU CAN EAT PIZZA! $4.00 (Every Tuesday & Wednesday) 6:00 - 9:00pm ALL YOU CAN EAT SPAGHETTI! $4.50 (Every Sunday) 5:00 - 9:00pm WE DELIVER!! CORNER OF STATE AND HILL 994-4040 need "to feel up to his chin in what was going on" that motivated him. "He could not sit quietly at home and continue with his peaceful work as he advised others to do - he would rather actively represent such peace-desirous people." Yet Holroyd makes clear that Shaw, despite his shock tactics, did have a tender side. When Barrie's beloved godson was killed, the au- thor of Peter Pan, "pushed a note through the doors of Shaw's apart- ment. When he read it, Shaw wept." Shaw's writing also provides him with power. After Stella, who played Eliza Doolittle in Pygmalion, threw him over for a young officer, George Cornwallis-West, Shaw was deeply hurt. His 1916 epilogue to the play was a response to the audiences at Pygmalion who believed that Eliza and Higgins would get together again. Shaw insisted that Eliza ran off with Freddie Eynsford-Hill, con- sciously mirroring Stella's situation. In both cases the great intellect, Hol- royd points out, had been rejected in favor of "a double-barrelled nonentity like George Cornwallis-West." But the Pygmalion story comes late in the book, and the theatrical events in the first half of The Pur- suit of Power lack sparkle. Holroyd is thorough in most aspects of Shaw's theater life, but he is often dry. (Strangely, the death in 1905 of actor-manager Sir Henry Irving, Shaw's nemesis for 20 years, is glossed over with a reference to Shaw's "controversial obituary.") Things pick up with Holroyd's sharp analysis of Misalliance (1910), on through Pygmalion. One of Holroyd's strengths is the panorama of Edwardian society he gives us. Shaw knew everyone. He meets the reclusive Strindberg. He sits for a bust by Auguste Rodin in Paris in 1908. During the Boer War he clashes with Arthur Conan Doyle. Almost as fascinating as the Shaw-Wells rivalry is the series of debates about socialism that Shaw and Chesterton, author of the Father Brown detective stories, carry on pe- riodically between 1911 and 1927. What's left? Women's suffrage, rights of authors, war, peace, box- ing, vivisection, vegetarianism, Irish home rule - and the Shavian wit, of course. On French playwright Victorien Sardou: "Sardou's plan of playwrighting is first to invent the action of his piece, and then to care- fully keep it off the stage and have it announced merely by letters and telegrams." Advising authors on how to protect their works: "Whenever a publisher gives me lit- erary advice I take instant and hideous revenge on him - I give I A Student's Best Friend April 19 Could Be The Most Important Day of Your Career Why April 19? 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