ARTS Monday, October 1, 1990 The Michigan Daily Page 5 The Stuff comes with groovy sarcasm by Mike Molitor The Wonder Stuff's first record, The Eight Legged Groove Machine, was released in 1988 and quickly earned the English band a cult fol- lowing that was impressed by irrev- erent tunes like "It's Yer Money I'm After, Baby" and "Give Give Give Me More More More." The band's no-bullshit attitude was perhaps best typified by "Astley in the Noose," a song that gained them the wrath of Rick's record company: "Astley in the noose/ he hasn't got a use/ but he's trying/ * trying to take it like a man/ that he can't sing at all." The band's brash wattitude fits well with its danceable rock 'n' roll sound. Lines like "I didn't like you very much when I met you/ and now I like you even less" seem even more sarcastic when they come surrounded by catchy, major-key melodies. On their first tour of the U.S., the band discovered country music (shades of U2?) and incorporated elements of it into their second record, 1989's Hup! . Although it's doubtful that they'll go so far as to film the tour for theatrical release or record some songs at Sun Studios, tunes like "Golden Green" and "Unfaithful" have a definite twang to them. Not that the band has lost its punk edge though - "Don't Let Me Down Gently" and "Cartoon Boyfriend" still crunch along at a mean pace. The Wonder Stuff hasn't lost its wit, either. "Radio Ass Kiss" lashes out at the sorry state of con- temporary radio and contains what appears to be a derogatory reference to Casey Kasem. Despite rumors that the band nearly broke up earlier this year, and the departure of The Bass Thing (a.k.a. Rob Jones), who was replaced by Paul Clifford, The Wonder Stuff toured as the opening band for The Mission U.K. this summer and are now headlining their own tour. That makes tonight an opportune time to celebrate the implementation of the University's new drug and alcohol policy by getting really fucked up and going to see a genuine no-non- sense rock band with brains. THE WONDER STUFF bring their brains to the Nectarine Ballroom tonight with TOO MUCH JOY opening. Doors open at 9 p.m. and tickets are $9.50 (plus evil service charge), available at Ticketmaster. IN Al' " ,evie The Wonder Stuff hang out on the tracks trying to come up with some witty songs for their next album. Life in Hell Although Dorothy Parker's wit is hilariously amusing on paper, the Attic Theater touring company's production of What Fresh Hell is This? An Evening with Dorothy Parker suggests her work does not adapt well to the stage. However, none of the blame for this often monotonous production should be placed on Parker. After all, a writer that can produce such brilliant one- liners as "You can lead a whore to culture but you cannot make her think" has proven herself. What this production lacks is the proper inter- pretation Parker's work deserves. What Fresh Hell? exemplifies many of the things Parker criticized about theater. Apparently, from a few of the critical essays presented last weekend, she had a considerable distaste for redundancy and produc- tions that assumed all audiences had to be spoon-fed plot and information in order to grasp a deeper meaning. As an audience member of What Fresh Hell?, I felt a desperate need to grab an original manuscript of Parker's work so that my eyes could have glided over it, simply and effi- ciently. Instead I sat watching list- less, monotoned actors reading her work to me, laboriously hammering each word into my consciousness. Nevertheless, credit must be given to Annemarie Stoll and arwulf arwulf who, with their glimpses of Parker-understanding, made the pro- duction bearable at times. Arwulf's facial expressions were worth a thousand words and were the only feature of the play that gave life to Parker's words. The repartee between these two actors in a vignette enti- tled "The Sexes" was terrifically real- istic of the everyday banter between couples. However, even here the re- ality went on too long. Ironically, What Fresh Hell? be- gins with Ms. Parker's observations of what most people say after a night of theater: "Thank God that thing is over!" Indeed, I exclaimed those words after the curtain call for What Fresh Hell is This? x -Jenie Dahlmann Minimalist Mother Take an All-American Fourth of July picnic, a pilot with exceptional peripheral vision, two hard-headedly willful pragmatists and a bare-bones set that begs for allegory, and you get the Basement Arts production of Sam Shepherd's Icarus' Mother. If you don't like to think about drama in a critical kind of way, this production may not be for you. The action is stripped so bare that it's re- ally impossible not to attach some kind of higher meaning of your own to the goings on. It's surprising, and rather daunting, as the curtain opens. Virtually all of the action centers on nothing but a plane that we only hear about. Even more bizarre, the actors don't have costumes - they're dressed like everyday students. Furthermore, there really isn't any kind of a set, just a blanket and some simple props that are supposed to represent a picnic. The characters are as spare as the set; they split up into two clearly de- fined factions. They are flat types with obvious tags: Jill, Pat and Frank, who have this natural human- ity about them - they want to run, listen to the waves and squish sand between their toes. Bill and Howard, on the other hand, are analytical, practical types, seeing the beach in terms of a dictionary definition rather than something to be experienced. The average viewer may be puzzled by the group's confusing attempts to signal the plane above them, but Shepherd clues us in with a compelling monologue by Bill that really defines what this whole struggle is about - while the pilot might want to look around, and take in his surroundings, i.e. really live , and appreciate life, he is not able to. By the end of the play, the audi- ence is left with the feeling that the fake schedules, scientific explana- tions and made-up orderings that humans imposes on themselves and on others, can't take the place of feeling, and emotion. This feeling is enhanced by an optimistic ending, ironically featuring the plane See WEEKEND, page 7 This Is Elvis dir. Malcolm Leo Lind Andrew Solt "How close is the image to the man?" asks the reporter. "It's, it's, it's," stammers Elvis Presley, a lit- tle bit heavier, a little more vulnera- ble, during a press conference to promote his early '70s comeback, "It's very hard to live up to an im- age. I'll put it that way." Like it or not, Elvis Presley was the King of Rock 'n' Roll. Yes, his crown should have been shared with Black pioneers who were feared and suppressed by a bigoted America, but this does not change the fact that Elvis was an incredible entertainer, a talented musical innovator, and one of the coolest individuals on the face of the planet in the late 1950s. Anyone who insists on maintain- ing the uninformed fallacy that Elvis was simply and plainly a racist sucker who stole the soul should rent the extensive 1981 documentary This Is Elvis, which attempts to de- flate the overbearing myth eclipsing the real achievements of a poor white kid from Memphis who had the balls to play the music that he loved. (Bigger balls, incidentally, than a certain overrated rock band whose recent cheap shot at every- one's favorite 13-year dead target took more clever marketing strategy than chutzpah.) This Is Elvis is far from perfect, its biggest flaw being the obnoxious voice-over narration by an Elvis im- personator, resulting in lines like, "Most people thought of me as a wild rock 'n' roll singer, but I also liked doing ballads" and "I really wanted to be a good actor." At times, the film also paints an overly glossy picture of Elvis' life; the technical advisor was Colonel Tom Parker, Elvis' manager and/or Sven- gali, depending on whom you talk to. Nevertheless, the film achieves its admirable and difficult goal of humanizing a monolithic pop-cul- ture icon, largely through clips that document the frightening transforma- tion of a boy to a legend to a sideshow freak. We see Elvis the Hip Rebel in a '50s TV interview, coyly dodging allegations (with a guilty smile on his face) that he smoked marijuana "to work himself into a frenzy" before live shows. We see Elvis the Ridiculous Sell- Out making an average of three atro- cious films a year during the '60s, each taking only about four to five weeks to shoot and earning him a cool million. We see Elvis the Fat Drug Addict, obviously fucked up, nervous, and sweating like a pig, the Elvis bad jokes are made of, only now it's not that funny because it's real. He's finally escaped from his film contracts and is making a well- intentioned - but for the most part pathetic - attempt at a comeback during the '70s, prophetically singing "My Way" ("Now the end is near/ and so I face the final curtain"), just like Sid Vicious will a few years later. The whole problem with die-hard Elvis critics and fanatics alike is that they only see the image, not the human being. If you are a member of the former camp, then Elvis was just an ignorant, sideburned, redneck puppet cornball who O.D.-ed while sitting on His throne, while the lat- ter fringe group of disciples insists that the King of Man has tri- umphantly risen and will one day sing again. Either way, you're miss- ing the point. - Mark Binelli WRITE FOR ARTS!!! CALL 763-0379!!!! I I 11 V r ii Saint Louis University's Academic Year in Madrid COMPLETE CURRICULUM: English, Spanish, Liberal Arts, Business & Administration, TESOL, Sciences, Hispanic Studies SLU In Madrid Is a member of AA/EOE Graduate Courses offered during Summer Session THERE ARE TWO SIDES TO BECOMING A NURSE IN THE ARMY. And they're both repre- f= sented by the insignia you wear as a member of the Army Nurse Corps. The caduceus on the left means you're part of a health care system in which educational and { career advancement are the rule, not the exception. The gold bar on the right means you command respect as an Army officer. If you're earning a BSN, write: Army Nurse Opportunities, P.O. Box 7713, Clifton, NJ 070.15. Or call toll free 1-800-USA-ARMY. ARMY NURSE CORPS. BE ALLYOU CAN BE. Apply NOW for Spring, Sumner and Fall More than 1,000 students in the Program. Saint Louis University in Madrid Bravo Murillo, 38 Edificio Gonzaga, Pianta Baja Madrid 28015 Spain Tel: 593-3783 Contact: Saint Louis University Study Abroad Coordinator Admissions Office 221 North Grand Blvd. St. Louts, MO 63103 Toil-tree tel: 1-800-325-6666 I. ae urcmr s a STUDENTS: "If our hair isn't becoming tyou you should be coming to us." 6 Stylists-No waiting'- DASCOLA STYLISTS opposite Jacobson's 668-9329 J~KANL& A1.1 L I M I T E . DI ir4t licxt icga c Aaic } 3 Day "Dress for Su Idealfor Students- Look your best when interviewing! Ideal for Business People- Look your best every single day! Men's 100% (U.S.A.) Wool and Wool Blend Suits FACTORY DIRECT PRICES REGULARLY $350 - $499 n ~U T -41 Q- .46 99 mu t Interested in ADVERTISING? 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