The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, October 1, 1991 -Page 7 Don't mess with my Kura: A new comedy with disease, apple pie and Mary Lou, too he Purple Rose Theatre September 29, 1991 As the familiarity of autumn stress provokes a need for relaxation, the Purple Rose Theatre offers a suitable remedy. Kuru, a new comedy by Vermont writer Josh C. Manheimer, provides its 100-seat audience with light-hearted fun. The intriguing play, which takes place in a hut in New Guinea, is filled with quirky characters who say very peculiar things. Dr. Arthur Roman, portrayed by actor Arthur Pearson, is researching a fatal disease called Kuru. He resides comfortably in a hovel, cleverly eecorated with hand-made furniture and jars of human organs. At the play's beginning, Arthur is unexpectedly visited by his former fiance, Mary Lou Anderson (Connie McGrail), a cooking instructor from Iowa. Adding a hu- morous dimension to the tropical environment, Mary Lou unpacks skillets, an iron and a fresh apple pie baked by her mother. This grown-up Marcia Brady-type has come to the jungle, only to find that Dr. Roman has married a thirteen-year-old native, Mokina, played with sparkle by Maria Csoka. Director T. Newell Krin has staged the nlav with fascinating interac- tion between the characters, and their moments come alive through the effective choreography. Pearson is credible as the tight-lipped intellectual who speaks as though he has been "chewing the encyclopedia." The history of his relationship with Mary Lou is tricky, which makes for clever scenes between the two. McGrail is fully committed to her role, as she wails to Pearson in a believable fit of rage, "You were the only man I ever met that didn't drive a pick-up truck!" Although the play triggers a constant urge to giggle, it also tiptoes around the intricate issues of death and cultural differences. A friendship develops between Mary Lou and Mokina as they set out to teach the village people to cook. Mary Lou, startled by Mokina's fear of a solar eclipse, reassures the girl by telling her, "My people are petrified about running out of toilet tissue." Manheimer's script bubbles with such insightful comparisons and details, and the actors work well together to tickle its audience. Kuru is the third play produced by the Purple Rose Theatre Company. The atmosphere of this Chelsea theater is both professional and exciting, an enchanting spot for family-style entertainment and comfortable lilac seats. Other plays will be produced following Kuru and, hopefully, the remainder of the season will be equally entertaining. Kuru runs at the Purple Rose Theatre until October 27, with performances on Thursdays through Saturdays at 8 p.m., and Sunday matinees at 2 p.m. -Elizabeth Keiser BARKER Continued from page 5 "You know," he says, reflecting, "there's a book about me coming out next week called Shadows of Eden, which is biography, plus bibliography... I went through the book and I thought, all the real important details of my life are actually in the novels. Every single ob- session, all my taboo stuff, all the private preoccupations, all the fears, all the hopes, are there. Maybe they're encoded, maybe they're presented as allegories, but they're there. And the rest of it is just husks. But, we live in a world that thinks about people in terms of numbers, that thinks of authors in terms of thirty million copies sold. Simple, trite ways to classify people." Why is he so careful, so protec- tive, of that imaginative, creative process? "I think the imagination is the only truth," Barker says. "And every other experience, the pain one suffers, the people one loses, the people one gains, the loves one has, are folded into the texture of your imagination, and reconfigured, and transfigured, and made over as metaphor, in order to achieve, hopefully, some universality, so that it doesn't be- come some trite listing of events. When you write, you hope that fantasy will make the material sing, and make people say, this is happening in my soul, too. This is happening in my spirit, too." He takes a deep breath, and laughs tiredly. "And each book you fail, and you go on to the next one." W RIT E F OR T HE M IC HIG AN DA IL Y 764-0552 I . 'B'IG TEMIF SOCCER i; o I THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN vs. MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 2, 1991 4:00 PM MITCHELL FIELD * (on Fuller Road between Central and North Campus) Arthur Pearson as Dr. Arthur Roman, Maria Csoka as Mokina and Connie McGrail as Mary Lou Anderson are the entire cast of Kuru, a new comedy by Josh C. Manheimer playing at the Purple Rose Theatre. THE MICHIGAN DAILY 764-0552 LIVE JAZZ-Every iuesday & Wednesday 10-12 p.m. in the Underground Na COVER __a______ Tuesday, October 1 " John Selenes . Wednesday, October 2 " John E. Lawrence 'g bea ieader introduce over 1000 students or parents to the U of M work on a diverse and exciting team run workshops and presentations It's Time i RA AL 0° o/ S naS ,e~etings I 0gS sber Xst 51 tusa6XeS c tobe lo 2 we'er eex nake new friends and tay in Ann Arbor for the summer ualifications nrollment in fall 1991 and winter 1992 ood academic standing t least sophomore class level ompensation oom may 3 to august 14 "oard june 1 to august 14 stipend 2000.00 ,reftat'o r applica~tins are available at: residence hail front desks campus information center (cic) north campus information center -he office of orientation 30 11 student at Livil&c.$ b i din To Play! summer i 992 Flag Football CoRec; Fraternity; Independent; Women; Residence Hall; Sorority; Graduate/Faculty/Staff Mon. & Tue. Sept. 30 and Oct. 1 " 11:00 am - 4:30 pm * IMSB (606 E. Hoover) Cross Country Run All Campus * Wed. Oct. 2 (Deadline) " 4:30 pm * IMSB Ice Hockey All Campus " Wed. Oct. 9 " 11:00 am - 4:30 pm * IMSB Wrestling All Campus; Fraternity * Wed. Nov. 13 (Deadline) e 4:30 pm " IMSB Ice Hockey - Winter I All Campus * Tue. Dec. 10 (Deadline) 4:30 pm * IMSB Basketball CoRec; Fraternity; Independent; Women; Residence Hall; Sorority; Graduate/Faculty/Staff Thur. & Fri. Jan. 9 and 10 * 11:00 am - 4:30 pm " IMSB Visit your Intramural or Recreational Sports Department and sign up today!. General Motors is proud to be associated with your campus intramural recreational sports and activities. with student comedians