ARTS Thursday, September 26, 1991 The Michigan Daily/ Vigo and the skipper too) A grim, bizarre romance breaks ground for the French new wave Page 5 It's never tea for two in DuetforOne I Duet for One Ann Arbor Civic Theater September 19, 1991 L'Atalante dir. Jean Vigo by Rosanne Freed hen a young genius dies, it's tempting to oversentimentalize a tragically abbreviated career. Sure, James Dean was a dandy actor in Giant and Rebel Without a Cause, but so was Dennis Hopper in his twenties. And before Buddy Holly snowballed into an Iowa cornfield, his syrupy'string arrangements were already signaling the shift from "Peggy Sue" to show tunes. But iconoclastic. French film di- rector Jean Vigo was a corpse of a different color. When he died in 1934 at age 29, he left a small- body. of cinematic work so original and full of artistic promise that critic James Agee once declared, "It was as if he had invented the wheel." Vigo's first (and only) feature- length effort was L'Atalante, a supremely weird yet familiar movie that feels like an episode of The- Love Boat directed by Jean-Luc Godard. L'Atalante was the culmi- nation of Vigo's earlier experi- ments with metaphorical and surre- alistic uses of film. He applied his experience to a simple romantic comedy assigned to him by the mo- vie studio. This apparent constraint was.Vigo's saving grace, showcasing his ability both to infuse mundane reality with poetry and to find the lyrical beauty of characters rooted in the gritty natural world. The film begins with newlyweds Juliette (Dito Parlo) and Jean (Jean Dastd) leading a post-wedding pro- cession of relatives and townspeo- ple from the local church to their' new home, Jean's river barge, which- is named L'Atalante. Typical of Vigo's radical approach, we never see the wedding itself, but only its strangely somber aftermath. This gloomy convoy is intercut with the comic efforts of the ship's mate, Pere Jules (Michel Simon), and a young cabin boy (Louis Lefevre), as they prepare the boat for the arrival of their skipper and his bride. Once aboard, the monotony of Juliette's life on the river - cook- ing and cleaning for three merchant sailors - leaves her itchy to jump ship and experience the high life on dry land. Eventually she scratches. Her escape to Paris throws Jean into a lovesick delirium. Juliette fares no better, encountering crime, poverty and loneliness in the big city. Un- able to tolerate Jean's miserable moping, Pere Jules tracks down Ju- liette and returns her to the barge, where she and Jean happily reunite. Vigo transforms the prosaic "boy gets/loses/gets girl" narrative into a transcendent vision of the ev- eryday world that's greater than the sum of its parts. Instead of choosing between realism, fantasy, natural- ism and expressionism, Vigo stacks them all together in a stylistic layer. cake. A shot of Juliette in her shimmering satin wedding dress as she crosses the grimy, drab barge from bow to stern merges the beau- tiful and the grotesque, symbolism and realism, in a quintessential ex- ample of Vigo's unique style. This imaginative way of seeing the commonplace also extends to Lately, spare sets and few players have characterized the lo- cal drama scene. With less spot- light to go around, a play's suc- cess may hinge upon the perfor- mance of only one or two people, creating a tremendous amount of pressure for the actors involved. Nonetheless, these difficult pro- ductions have been popping up ev- erywhere. At the Performance Network, recent small-cast pro- ductions included Beckett's Hap- py Days and adaptations of the lives of Oscar Wilde and Walt Whitman - all plays that hinged on the efforts of one actor. Featuring only two players, Ann Arbor Civic Theater's pro- duction of Tom Kempinski's Duet for One continues the cycle of these bare bones productions. All of the action takes place in six counseling sessions in the office of Dr. Feldman (Peter Bellanca), a psychiatrist whose role is little more than that of tour guide, tak- ing us on a walk through the troubled mind of Stephanie (Wen- dy Susan Hiller). Duet for One also features the added pressure of a very deep script. From Stephanie's nearly hysterical exclamations of "Blo- ody well shut up!" to her despairingly calm admission that she's having an affair, all of her statements are completely realis- tic. Kempinski is obviously fa- miliar with psychology, as well as with the mechanics of the counselor-counselee relationship. All of these factors add up to a play that is extremely difficult to produce well. Even when it's good, one wonders if it could have been better. Hiller's burden - to plumb the depths of Kempinski's text almost singlehandedly - is an awesome one, and she carries much of it well. Stephanie's hap- pier, more nostalgic moments are her best. During one of the play's most memorable moments, Stephanie de-scribes how she met her hus- band; in another scene, her de- scription of the couple's violin duet and the extended metaphor with which she describes their lovemaking - "heavy chords and plenty of changes" - exuded an amazingly genuine joy of life. Similarly, Stephanie's other posi- tive reminisces are excellent. Her memories of winning awards as the "youngest player ever" show a rare and irresistible vitality. But despite her talent, the huge demands of the production made for some inconsistencies on Hil- ler's part. The play called for drastic changes in mood - from the happy nostalgic, Hiller was often expected to abruptly be- come harried and agitated. Most of the time, she accomplished this switch very well; at the begin- ning of the fourth scene, for ex- ample, Hiller actually looked de- bilitated, physically paler. She changed into an open-necked swea- ter that displayed her tensed neck muscles, as well as part of her bra, matching her mood with a harried and agitated appearance. And Ste- phanie's, envy of her husband, along with a hysterical insistence on being a performer, "not a fuck- ing teacher," also worked well. Nonetheless, Hiller's earlier scenes, when she was on the defen- sive, were her weakest. Her more controlled denials, and her rejec- tions of Dr. Feldman, were often See DUET, Page 8 Jean Vigo directs Dita Parlo and Jean Dant in L'Ata/ante. Please ignore the resemblance to Eraserhead, John Turturro in Barton Fink and the subway guy in Ghost. This one's an original. U4 inhabit every conceivable shipboard niche. The effect is both funny and disconcerting - there's a sublimi- nal dreaminess to the whole film, as if we're watching it projected in that mental multiplex wedged be- tween sleep and consciousness. But L'Atalante is more than a Vigo transforms the prosaic ."boy gets/loses/gets girl" narrative into a transcendent vision of the everyday world that's greater than the sum of its parts. Instead of choosing between realism, fantasy, naturalism and expressionism, Vigo stacks them all together in a stylistic layer cake imposed over a sleepless Juliette, tossing fitfully in her Paris flat. (Is this moviedom's first version of safe sex?) Simon - the Walter Matthau of French cinema - goes hilariously over the top as the gruff and worldly Pere Jules. Witnessing Juliette's sad alienation on the ship, he attempts to entertain her with a crude yet tender burlesque of his primitive tattoos. Making the sweet, subversive L'Atalante, Vigo quite literally gave it his all: he died of lung dis- ease just a few weeks after the film's Paris premiere. Although the film was horribly recut by the stu- dio and shown only sporadically, its influence can be seen in the work of the French New Wave (especially Francois Truffaut), Renoir, Fellini and Polanski. But Vigo's ultimate claim to fame is his own poetic mas- tery of cinema's magic possibilities. L'ATALANTE runs tonight through Sunday at the Michigan Theater. k t I .14 Vigo's technical work. He places the camera at odd angles and the characters in surprising arrange- ments, filling the frame with star- tling details, like the bizarre seafaring trinkets in Pere Jules' cabin or the litter of kittens which grab bag of avant-garde tricks. Like any mainstream movie, its artistry works in seryice to the emotional expressions of the characters. You'd be hard pressed to find a more erotic scene than the one in which ,a rest- less Jean, alone in his bed, is super- who what where when ri: a the Improv, but it's something. from one of his most recent pro-N1w, Manton has been in the grueling jects, Presumed Innocent, and dis- S r stand-up comedy business for less cussing the long and tortuous road than two years, but already he has from rough cut to final print. Be Mon Labatt's Pitchers: $5.00 been featured on MTV and several sure to come and ask him what it Tue Bud Light Pitchers: $3.50 clubs around the country. Manton's was like to -work with Miss Piggy. Wed Pint Night: 75o off pints comedy routines focus on relation- ships and the news. What a novel Thu Long Island Iced Tea: $3.25 idea. Chances are if you like Richard Save the LP! Fri Happy Hour 'til 9:00 in the Lewis or Garry Shandling or Dennis DAILY ARTS Underground. $1.00 off all Miller, you'll love Manton. The_ drns, pnts, ne. Chicago based performer extraordi- naire will appear in the Irwin Green r.....--....--....-. - ""..-- . r- Auditorium. Be there or be a rhom- ( ) " ( "- ( ( (2" ( (" "( bus. 1 V V V V v v v v v Y Whaddaya mean you've never heard of Evan Lottman? He's one (C of Hollywood's most respected CIOKES film editors, you loser! His work - includes The Exorcist, Sophie's 1 .c21 Choice, Apocalypse Now, and, yes, 1 Enjoy the Game with The Muppets Take Manhattan.Enhe Lottman will be at MLB Hall #1 I Mrs. Peabody's today at 4 p.m., showing film clips 1 Try our NEW lowfat muffinsill K I Gifts shipped anywhere in US 1 any sin you've Call orders 761-CHIP 0od any--yuve715N.U iest1 arden variety. 75N. Universily 'A44..* a .. al Manton Hillel will welcome the hilari- ous new comedian Spike Manton tonight at 8. So it's not an evening at By comparison, committed is g " a,~ 10.99 Friday and Saturday only OPEN SUNDAYS 336 S. State St. " 761-6207 I U. After Midnight... Since 1948 Like pizza was meant to be" LATE NIGHT SPECIAL- Call after midnight, mention this flyer, and get any pizza with 2 toppings for only $6.95 (plus tax). Only at: U-M Central Campus SAL 1L d- 1.9'l%..h 4 T1 11 A ~TSEX ANDi SPIRIT: A trMITNV 1-%E 121 -MVA NTT% CnT! TT