Page 10 -The Michigan Daily - Friday, March 30, 1990 Going by the book Brecht Company faithfully reproduces Romeo by Jay Pekala IF a Shakespeare company performs a Brecht play or even Guys and Dolls or Les Miserables, no one seems to mind. But when Ann Arbor's Brecht Company announces they're doing Shakespeare's Rcmeo and Juliet, that's unusual. But Company Producing Director Bob Brown, who directed Romeo and Juliet, assures that the group's latest production faithfully follows Shakespeare's text. Aspects of the Romeo text are surprisingly similar to techniques Brecht used in his own play structure. The chorus at the beginning of the play, for example, summarizes the whole play in a 14-line sonnet before the actors walk on stage. Anyone who doesn't already know the story of the "pair of star-crossed lovers (who) take their life" and thereby "bury their parents' strife" is told what happens. All of the suspense is removed, and the audience will inevitably focus more attention on the depiction of the societies in which the two feuding households of Verona exist. Brecht was actually a strong advocate of the classical repertoire. What he objected to was the Victorian spectacles that sacrificed the classical texts to visual extravagance. He believed that redoing works gave the plays a new historical perspective. The plays are able to convey insight into our contemporary lives even though they are hundreds of years old. Brecht himself wrote versions of Coriolanus and Measure for Measure. lie also wrote hypothetical scenes for Romeo and Juliet and Hamlet which were to be inserted into the existing scripts and used during the rehearsal process. These scenes were basically extrapolations of the story that informed and expressed the characters with a more political and social bent. The two scenes written for Romeo and Juliet relate the title characters to their upbringing. In one, Romeo gets money to purchase gifts for Juliet by selling a family servant's land from underneath him. In the other, Juliet forces a household maid to abandon her lover in order to create a diversion while Juliet and Romeo are on the balcony. In both cases, the jaded youths are much more than mere romantic souls; they are products of privilege. Brecht's additions, though, only help to point out what Shakespeare's play already does. It depicts a larger social picture of which Romeo and Juliet are only a small portion. Capulet and Paris arrange Juliet's mar- riage to which she is expected to submit willingly, the Friar marries Romeo and Juliet hoping to do good, the Prince (the ruler of Verona) constantly fails to keep order in the city, etcetera. As director, Brown says he wanted to bring out the ongoing eruptive violence that characterizes Romeo's Verona. He didn't set out to create a Brechtian adapta- tion of Shakespeare but, by simply following the text, created similarities that are perhaps staggering. ROMEO AND JULIET opens tonight at the Resi- dential College Auditorium and runs March 30-April 14: Thurs.-Sat. 8pm and Sun. 1pm. Tickets are $9-$12, call 668-8397 to order by phone. Daniel Stern, Patrick Demp Ride to Coupe de Ville dir. Joe Roth by Wendy Shanker I can picture screenwrite laughing themselves silly arou ner table each year when th Story." Somehow, I doubt th between that family tale and th became Coupe de Ville, even d true story. Patrick Dempsey, Arye Gre tray the three brothers who ar father (Alan Arkin) to drive a C Florida for their mother' (Loverboy, Can't Buy Me L young rebel seeking acceptanc Gross (Soul Man), as the midd' life with his college girlfrien between baby Bobby and th played militantly by Daniel St Unlike movies with a them and self-discovery, Coupe deV to make a right hand turn tow or hang a left to laughter, like One source of constant l Arkin's hilarious performarn v3 a. Oa sey and Arye Gross took a wrong turn. Wrong movie, guys. NowberesV1le, grouchy, unemotional father who's life advice to his * sons is, "Don't screw up!" Yet Arkin has a believable soft side, something that the actors who play his sons don't quite manage to convey. As much as Coupe revolves around relationships be- r Mike Binder's family tween the brothers, the father's road trip idea is the cata- nd the Thanksgiving din- lyst that brings them together. I couldn't help but think iey retell "The Cadillac that if Fred had been a better father this expedition ere are many similarities among the three sibling strangers wouldn't have been e script Binder wrote that necessary. though he claims this is a Marvin, Buddy and Bobby are part of the generation that was the calm before the storm of Vietnam. The oss and Daniel Stern por- music - early '60s dance tunes - includes "Louie e commissioned by their Louie" (which inspires a huge debate over whether it is Cadillac from Michigan to a dance song, a hump song or a sea chantey), "The s birthday. Dempsey Wanderer" and "Whole Lotta Shakin' Going On." Love) plays Bobby, the Coupe's claim to fame is that the love renaissance e from his older brothers. between the brothers, along with the trials and tribula- le son Buddy, dreams of a tions that follow them as they travel south on the inter-' d. He acts as peacemaker state, really happened. It is too much of an adventure e oldest brother Marvin, and has too much silliness to be a successful imitation ' ern (Leviathan). of reality and its heartfelt emotion isn't compelling ne of cross-country travel enough to make it a family drama. Ville can't decide whether Let's put it this way: If you want to see a great ard drama, like Rainman, movie about people in a car, go see Driving Miss . Midnight Run. Daisy. Coupe de Ville is headed directly to the video anhter in this movie is junkyard. RECORD Continued from page 8 And, on the subject of guitar groups fronted by women: the Sundays are better than the Primitives or the Dar- ling Buds. If they're given the same "push" that Rough Trade gave the Smiths, they could be as big as Blondie. Their songs are just meant to be sung in kitchens and on buses. Reading, Writing and Arithmetic is a very English record; with its almost Victorian title and the re- straint of its plangent music, it's. akiii to a fine china ornament on the mantelpiece - beautiful but fragile. Mast of the songs deal in a specifi- cally British way with being trapped in a humdrum existence, and yearn- ing to escape the confines of home, family and class into a space where individual identity can be formed. The lyrics are double-edged; escape is never fully realized, but the simple urge and effort to overcome circum- stance is welcomed. As for love, the Sundays echo the tender pathos of the Shirelles or the Shangri-Las: love is always too awkward and ill- fated to reach complete fruition in a "relationship." Lyrical twists and Harriet's strange enunciation mean that there's enough irony and self-deprecation on the record to assuage those (misguided) listeners annoyed by Morrissey's tragicomic narcissism. On the brilliant "Here's Where the Story Ends," Harriet delivers the cynical lament: "I never should have said that the books you read were all I loved you for." Lines that touch the heartstrings of every bibliophile, admit it. "Sticks and stones may break my bones/ But words will just finish me off," goes the refrain in "Hideous Towns," a song dealing with provin- cial mentalities. The beautifully ach- ing and lush "You're Not the Only One I Know" (very Smithsonian ti- tle) includes the word "lavatory" and is about is as rude as Harriet gets on the LP. "What's so wrong about talking aloud when I'm on the lava- tory," she inquires quite reasonably. In "My Finest Hour," Harriet con- fesses that her finest hour was find- ing a pound on the (London) Under- ace as Fred Libner, the COUPE DE VILLE closed last night. ground, and goes on to address her prospective lover: "I keep hoping you're the same as me/ And I'll send you letters and come home to your house for tea." Very English, indeed. Of course, the incredibly wise and wonderful "Can't Be Sure" had to be included here. Ironic, resigned, but still desperately romantic, the song has the feel of one of Jacques Brel's morose yet darkly comic gems. "Live for a job and the perfect be- hind," relates Harriet, and then sums up the nation perfectly: "England my _ _ f"r LL* 4 C? 4 E w 0 Distinguished Lecture Series DR. REGINALD JONES "Psycology and African Americans: the Decade Ahead" Wednesday, April 4, 4:00 p.m. 1270 Business Administration Bldg. Reception immediately following the lecture BANNER DAY CAMP Now Hiring Summer Staff! Counselors & Specialists Womens Glee Club Annual Spring Concert This series is sponsored by the Center for Afroamerican and African Studies, the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, and the Office of the Vice President for Academic Affairs June 18-August 10 Excellent Wages-Call Collect (708) 295-4900 4 Director-Dean Earl Coleman Friday, March 30, 1990 8:00 p.m. Rackham Auditorium Tickets-$3.00 Students, Seniors $5.00 General Admission at School of Music offices 9-5 or at the door. . I i I- - 1K Are you concerned but confused about ozone depletion, the greenhouse effect, or acid rain? Develop informed opinions about these important issues of the 90's and beyond. Attend the: BROWN BAG ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCE TEACH-IN (Presentations by atmospheric scientists in layperson's terms) JOSTENS GOLD RING SALE IS COMING! country, the home of the free/ Such miserable weather/ But England's as happy as England can be/ Why cry." The chorus of "Can't Be Sure" captures the essence of Reading, Writing and Arithmetic; Harriet - opines, "Did you know desire's a ter- ; 3 rible thing/ The worst that I could jfind/ And did you know desire's a terrible thing! ButI rely onmine." - , -Nabeel Zuber : DON'T SEND S YOUR WINTER CLOTHES HOME- S STORE THEM FOR THE 3 SUMMER! S GOLD BOND i CLEANERS 332 Maynard 668-6335 SALE. Wed., Mar. 28 - Sat., April 7 Intematial Foods & Gifts 1156 BroadwayY in the Broadway Kroger Plaza Open Mon. - Sat. 10 a.m. - 8 p.m.G 10%0 OF w/ad Regular Items Only Except rice, soy sauce, sesame oil UAC Presents , Up iltPeopla WATCH 1 110010GkW COME AIVON 9 AE * ,I @: i F: k s' MONDAY OZONE DEPLETION TUESDAY ACID RAIN WEDNESDAY URBAN AIR QUALITY THURSDAY GREENHOUSE EFFECT Noon each day during Earth Week (April 2-6) in 1210 CHEM Sponsored by the Dept. of Atmospheric, Oceanic, & Space Sciences (936-0503) BURGER RUSH! When the munchies attack... When you're partying or studying... When you want a great burger... [ Burger Fresh - Delivers Fresh! I _10 It 14 O'Q j1 X00 +a Solo R ESD Formerlv Burgers Direct Order your college ring NOW. Stop by and see a Jostens representative, Wednesday, March 28 thru.Friday, March 30, 11:00a.m. to 4:00p.m., . . , . .. f _ m Li