ARTS Wednesday, November 14, 1990 Murder, 'The Michigan Daily Melissa Etheridge sings from the heart by Kim Yaged - 'M elissa Etheridge, with a voice --so sexy she incites crescendos of ?" desire from her audiences, sings about pain with an anger that rede- fines bluesiness. After two albums and extensive international touring, she still refuses to sell out. This re- fusal is manifest in the intensity and fervor Etheridge continually invests in her live show. Speaking with her "n the phone transformed me into one of those rapturous spectators on whom she works her wiles. K.Y.: I feel like I know you from listening to your songs, would you say that your songs are you? M.E.: Yes, they're very autobio- graphical, very much so, I find that 9when I write more from my personal point of view, the more people actu- ally can relate to it. K.Y.: Do you see yourself as a feminist writer or musician? M.E.: What are feminists today, you know, what is it? I am a woman with a very strong feminine point of view. I'm just a very strong woman and I want the things for myself that anyone can want and strive for. I think being very powerful and strong in oneself is very important and if those are feminist views then, well, I guess I am. K.Y.: Would you say that your views as a musician or writer are dif- ferent from your views as a person? M.E.: Well, I keep a lot of my views that I have personally out of the music. I have not done that. There's a lot that I haven't incorpo- rated in, sometimes. I've been trying to lately, get in a little bit at a time, but there's enough of a difference, yeah. K.Y.: Do you find yourself having to be a role model for women, or 'otherwise? M.E.: Not having to be, no. I find myself in that position often,which is a strange position, but if I handle what I do with responsibility then I'm sure it'll be fine. K.Y.: How has it been getting easier, and how has it been getting h; anda'? M.E.: It's easier, certainly the quality of life is easier nowadays. Success has been good to me, enough. I now have more time; I can now concentrate one hundred percent on what I love to do. And it's harder 'because the work is harder. It's on such a grand scale now that it's in- tense. It's traveling, for two and a half years I've been travelling, it's ,had. K.Y.: I've read some articles in which you implied that you don't think that you've had real success. M.E.: I do believe I have a long way to go. I have more people I want to reach, I have more things I want to do, more music I want to make. I just have a long way to go. K.Y.: How are you defining success? M.E.: Success comes in steps. You gotta take it in steps and do it that way or else you'll never get it. Success to me is to be able to stand on the step and look around and say, 'Hey,you know, I'm here, but look Page 7 Dershowitz wrote Reversal of Fortune dir. Barbet Schroeder by Mike Wilson S ometimes real life is more in- teresting than fiction. The case of Claus von Bulow is a prominent ex- ample of this. Eight years ago the Danish-born aristocrat was convicted of attempting to murder his wife, Sunny, by insulin injection. This intriguing event was documented in the book Reversal of Fortune by von Bulow's lawyer Alan Der- showitz. The film version tells the story of von Bulow's attempt to re- verse the decision and examines the question of von Bulow's guilt and the legal attempt to exonerate him. Like a good lawyer before a jury, the film immediately eliminates pre- conceptions about the case that were perpetuated in the media. The ac- cepted version of the well-publicized story is presented in the first five minutes of the film. At this point, sympathies do not lie with this cold, rich aristocrat who appears to have killed his wife for more money. Impassioned Harvard Law Professor Alan Dershowitz (Ron Silver) then convinces himself, his student assistants and the audience that von Bulow's appeal is worth pursuing. In a key early scene Dershowitz forcefully tells a doubting student, "I think it's a little more complicated than your moral superiority." From this point on, the film features an unusually effective combination of mystery, comedy and chills. Reversal of Fortune successfully balances entertaining suspense with deeper underlying themes. On one level it focuses on the excitement of trying to win a legal case. Der- showitz's frantic investigations are constantly portrayed as a game. Like any sport, pursuing the case is inherently challenging. comnetitive and fun. Contributing to the amusing atmosphere is the performance of Jeremy Irons. As Claus von Bulow, he is complex yet surprisingly hilar- ious. Known for his serious film roles in Dead Ringers and The Mis- sion, the 42-year-old British actor is virtually unrecognizable as the much older aristocrat with a deeply digni- fied voice. His playful irony is si- multaneously funny and mystifying. "What do you give a wife who has everything? Insulin," he cracks, re- lating the jokes commonly told about him. These jokes keep the audience at a comic distance from the enigma of von Bulow. Though Dershowitz's case is convincing, von Bulow's cold disposition and weird sense of humor instill an element of doubt. The film effectively manipulates sympathies; by the end it is impos- sible to determine what actually happened or who is telling the truth. See REVERSAL, page 8 Incorporating her small town background and her personal point of view, Melissa Etheridge musically expresses her depth in a bluesy-type of style. at all those steps, okay here I go.' And just keep climbing. K.Y.: If you were to release an album tomorrow and everyone loved it and you were selling out shows everywhere, would that be success? M.E.: That's one step, that's a level, that's something. I'd be lying to you if I said that that's not a dream that I have, certainly it is - to go as far as one could go in the performing and entertaining. I don't know how far that will go because I plan, and I will, stay true to myself and what I do. And how commercially viable that is is to be seen. K.Y.: You have a regional tone to your music. How does that relate to you, and how would that be different if you were from somewhere else? M.E.: I think not just where but with whom I grew up. My family was lower middle-class, plain folk from Kansas. The town I grew up in was a small town. It one, enabled my dreams to be huge because, you know, where're you gonna go from there? Everything you can dream of is gonna be huge. But it also gave me a very solid foundation, actually, to take off of. I enjoy things so much because I didn't have them, so when you do have them now I like to feel them all the way. And there's a lot of things that my mother and my father both instilled in me about just quality of life that influences me as much as where I grew up. K.Y.: Is there a progression that you have been following? M.E.: My one path that I like to say that I'm on is just that I want to get better. I don't want to ever stay in the same place. I do want to move and challenge myself. I don't think I want to take great departures from what I'm doing but find out what's good and best about what I've done and retain that and go on. K.Y.: What do you see as having been the changes between your two albums? M.E.: Confidence, a lot of confi- dence. More interaction with the band - me evolving from a solo artist on the first album to a band on the second album. K.Y.: Where are you going from her? M.E.: I'm gonna try to pay more attention to me as a studio artist. I know I'm a live artist. I know I can do that. I've done it, got it down, here I go. But, a studio artist, I'd like to see what I could do if I sit down and really put my mind to it, not just my body and heart but my mind. K.Y.: "Me and Bobby McGee" sounds like it could be your song. M: That is so funny, I just sang it last night. I was at The Central, this little dive bar here, and some friends of mine were playing, and I got up on the stage, and I did "Me and Bobby McGee." I love that song! K.Y.: Are you a Janis Joplin fan? M.E.: Yes, I came onto her when I was about 21 and really found a lot of strength in what she did in that she could get out there and just rip it wide open. And if she could do that then I could do that in more of a healthy fashion. She'll do that, she gives me a lot of inspiration for that. K.Y.: What do you want people to know? M.E.: That it's real, real music. See ETHERIDGE, Page 8 uaus von Bsulow (Jeremy irons) conters with with his lawyer Alan Uershowitz (Ron Silver) in Reversal of Fortune, a movie that lies somewhere between Scandal and that TV movie about the space shuttle Challenger on the list of all-time great movies exploiting real-life tragedies. Sigma Phi Epsilon CAMPUS-WIDE 3-on-3 Basketball Tournament Friday, November 16 $100 team /first prize $50 team/second prize Larry 663-8234 Matt 769-6372 Pre-Christmas Sale litegant efassage with your host Elegant Passage is back! 25% discount on all sweaters November12 -16,... Mondau - Fridau,.lOam - 5m