ARTS The Michigan Daily Wednesday, November 20,1991 Page 5 From Bedknob to The Beast Classy Angela Lansbury proves she is much more than Murder by Michael John Wilson O RLANDO -- I was ignorant of Angela Lansbury's greatness until I met her a few weeks ago. If you're as young and oblivious as I was, you're thinking, yeah, big deal, she's that Mrs. Fletcher on Murder, She Wrote. But even after 47 years in show business, Lansbury is probably the classiest, friendliest, most hard- working and, above all, most real person I met during a series of in- terviews promoting Beauty and the Beast, Disney's latest animated mu- sical, to be released this Friday. Dressed in all white on that Sat- urday morning, there was something very comforting and reassuring about Lansbury's presence. There was no trace of the plastic Holly- wood talk-show front that so many other actors put on during inter- views. Lansbury was far above that -just very honest, very real. Speaking of Beauty and the Beast with her London accent, Lansbury even made hype sound respectable: "I almost hate to say this, but I think that Disney is now producing the equivalent of the Broadway mu- sical.... They're the best music and lyrics that we're seeing. We're not seeing anything like this on Broad- way." From anyone else, such talk would sound like vacuous promo- tion, but when four-time Tony award winner Lansbury says it, you have to believe her. She was also a bit surprised by Disney's promotional assault: "I loved the idea of doing the part, but I didn't realize that there'd be all this baggage with it ... sitting around at Disney World talking about the character of 'Mrs. Potts.' Let's face it, it's a minute part, ex- cept that it also involves singing just a lovely ballad called 'Beauty and the Beast,' which I was very fearful (of singing) in the first place ." Despite her fears, in Beauty Lansbury aptly provides the voice of Mrs. Potts, a motherly housekeeper transmogrified into a teapot. The teapot spends much of her time looking after her frisky children, who are, of course, teacups. While the filmmakers demonstrate the true magic of animation by creating lovable ceramic characters, Lans- bury's casting is perfect. Infused into an animated drawing, the reas- suring, maternal feeling that I sensed when she sat at my table truly gives life to the drawing of a teapot. Though not a characteristic role for Lansbury, Mrs. Potts is not completely new to her. She said she drew on several previous parts for the voice: "I thought a lot about (the role of) Mrs. Bridges, in Up- stairs, Downstairs. I thought, that's Mrs. Potts. Also some bits of Nel- lie Lovett from (the Broadway mu- sical) Sweeney Todd, and also a housekeeper we had when I was a child ... I could just see her, you know? This is the thing about actors and actresses - when you're doing a role, you kind of see that person and you become that person. Somebody said acting is 'living truthfully un- der imaginary circumstances,' and that's just about what it all boils down to." But until recently, Lansbury was known for her supporting character parts as bitchy, domineering older women. Her first film was Gaslight (1944); her role as a housekeeper won her an Oscar nomination. After another nomination for The Picture of Dorian Gray (1945), Lansbury remained a respected character actor, but only became a true star after her Broadway hits such as Mame (1966) and Sweeney Todd (1979). Other good Lansbury films include The Dark at the Top of the Stairs, Capra's State of the Union, The Long, Hlot Summer and, of course, Bedknobs and Broomsticks. Lansbury received her third Os- car nomination for her greatest film role in The Manchurian Candidate (1962), where we see her maternal side gone to a chilling extreme. Playing Laurence Harvey's devious mother, Lansbury was only three I'm a little teapot, short and stout .. Angela Lansbury's career has been long and interesting, ranging from The Manchurian Candidate to Murder, She Wrote. However, the versatile actor still expresses a wish to make "a big movie," as in a Pretty Ghost Alone blockbuster. For now, her fans will have to settle for Disney's latest animated epic, Beauty and the Beast, in which Lansbury (pictured at right) provides the voice for the lovable Mrs. Potts (pictured above). The resemblance is eerie, isn't it? years older than Harvey in real life. Mimicking a gruff voice, she recalled director John Franken- heimer telling her that it was "the greatest part ever written for a woman." But after four Tony awards, three Oscar Nominations and a long- running TV show, what's left? "There's one thing I want to do," Lansbury said. "I really want to make one landmark blockbuster movie. I haven't done that yet. Yes, a movie of the year, yes, that's what I want to do.... "It's wonderful to have a career which has included so many differ- ent facets in show business. ... I've done it all in a sense, but I've never had a big movie, and I want that, be- Grapes of Wrath These Days Capitol Ever since its 1987 release, Tree- House, Canada's Grapes of Wrath has displayed an ability to balance rock and folk influences. It pays an overwhelming debt to post-'65 Bea- tles (especially songs such as "Norwegian Wood" and "Rain"). These Days continues in this vein with its melodic mix of acoustic and electric guitars, Hammond or- gan and piano, as well as its gripping harmonies that get their strength from vocalist Kevin Kane's piercing singing. The mostly mid-tempo tracks unevenly convey Grapes of Wrath's songwriting maturity. The songs focus on being away from home - on the road in a band - and the effects that this lifestyle has on marriages. The regret expressed throughout the album is delicately complemented by the depth of the background music, and is further garnished by tambourines, mouth organs and the occasional use of pedal steel guitar. The problem comes when the songs, especially on side two, sound somewhat similar in execution and melodies. This flaw doesn't ruin an otherwise vir- ile album, but merely detracts from its potential perfection. Cuts like "Away," "You May Be Right" and "Days," and, to a lesser degree, "I Am Here" and "Travelin'," wistfully express doubt and insecurity in a '90s ver- sion of the musical experimenta- tions of the late '60s and early '70s bands like the Byrds. To label Grapes of Wrath as retro would dis- count the band's originality. The music is middle-of-the-road alterna- tive, not unlike R.E.M. in attitude. It realizes its potential and exploits it to the fullest. It's a snapshot of life at age 25. - Annette Petruso sufficiently) - from start to finish. The '40s-style "When I First Kissed You" is the album's most surprising track. Cherone delivers alongside sparse plodding piano and a bold bass in Frank Sinatra fashion. His voice is utterly sassy. The song heightens into a whirl of fantastic scene setting orchestration, and the track ends with the sound of a nee- dle spinning on a record, just to give it a touch of the era. Extreme falls short on the heav- ier tracks, where the band just can't seem to get the combinations of ly- rics and music to mesh. Cuts like "Money (In God We Trust)," "It ('S A Monster)," "Li'l Jack Hor- ny" and "When I'm President" seem rather random. The music and lyrics for any of these songs could almost be interchanged without al- tering the impact of the song. The lyrics, however, with the plays on words and the silliness they contain, are successful in showing off the band's fun side. On "When I'm President," Cherone raps, "I remember it well/ I was just about three/ My Dad said, 'Son/ what do you want to be?'/ It didn't ring no bells/ But I said, 'Daddy, I'm a bit too young/ what do you want from me?"' Nonetheless, without these tracks, Pornograffitti would be near- ly flawless. (And, without these tracks, there are still nine from which to choose.) The lone weak point I can cite on the remainder of the album is the chorus of the title track, which is the only time that the harmony of Badger, Bettencourt, Theater review Largo frees oppressed audiences cause that's what I went to MGM (in 1944) to do. I started off big, was very lucky, two wonderful roles, two Academy Award nomi- nations ... but I never realized my potential as a movie actress. Never. I was never given that opportunity... and Beauty and the Beast isn't it." When the right script does come along, Lansbury is set to produce it, having established a family produc- tion company (Corymore Produc- tions) to develop projects for her. Until then, she'll continue doing TV and anything else she can find. "Work agrees with me. I think I'm a bit of a workaholic," Lansbury ad- mitted. And though finding a vehicle for a 66-year-old actor will be tough, she's confident about the prospects. "It will be there," she said. "I'm sure it's hanging around somewhere waiting to be picked up ... I just have to keep myself ready. I feel great." BEAUTY AND THE BEAST opens Friday at Showcase. CHANNEL Z Moronic local television alert: Bonds on ... Nice Guys (9:30 p.m., Channel 7 Detroit), a true meeting of the minds, features everybody's favorite toup6ed anchor (and a heckuva nice guy, we might add) talking at really nice comedian Tim Allen and even nicer football star Barry Sanders. What a nice concept. If you're not so nice, you might want to check out Detroit Channel 20's nightly Slime-O-Rama: Love Connection (11:30 p.m.), Studs (midnight), People's Court (12:30 a.m.) and The Judge (1 am.). Extreme Extreme!! A&M Extreme is more than "More Than Words." With its most recent release, Pornograffitti, this quartet out of Boston has hit on a rather unique sound. Nuno Bettencourt more than lives up to his reputation on guitar, and Pat Badger (bass) and Paul Geary (drums) combine to drive home the groove. Lead vocalist Gary Cherone smooths it over or cuts it up, depending on the need.I The quartet is a recipe for divinity. There's no denying that Extreme has mastered the art of the love song. The genre reappears at steady intervals on this album, in different forms, yet its always right on. "Song For Love," which has re- ceived considerable airplay, is per- haps exemplary as the quintessen- tial love anthem. Universal and dramatic, the lyrics and the music are fluid - necessarily (and THAEAT LIBERTY 7614070 T 0 AE.ATUE DAILYSHOWSBEFORE6PM BI ALLDAYTUESDAY* *e;Iorn Bettencourt Pornograffitti Largo Desolato The Performance Network November 16, 1991 You don't have to have been repressed by a totali- tarian government to relate to the anxiety Professor Leopold Nettles (Troy Sills) feels in Largo Desolato, currently showing at the Performance Network. If you've been so much as severely constipated, you can surely sympathize with Nettles' plight. As a free thinking philosopher in a repressive country, Nettles stands as both a leader for the re- pressed common person and a victim of the govern- ment's harassment - he is trapped in his apartment for fear they may at any time take him away to prison on charges of "intellectual hooliganism." While carrying a frightening political message, Largo maintains a poignantly human feel in its continuous flow of subtle and hilarious wit and in its profound communication of the general anxiety of living. The play consists of a series of encounters between Nettles and the supporting characters. Sills is fantas- tically convincing in Nettles' complicated role. The dry humor, the vacillation and self-doubt, and the ag- onizing frustration under political torture and inter- personal strains is all captured in Sills' performance. We even forget that Sills is much younger than the older man he portrays. The supporting cast of friends and governmental interrogators, all of whom continually make demands on Nettles, uniformly conveys the dual humor and tension of the play in genuine performances. Nettles' friend Bertram (David Wilcox, who later reappears as one of two government agents), the kind of character you might expect to have bad breath, is one of the pack of devotees who hound Nettles with expectations and criticisms. Wilcox's timing and subtle understanding of his comic roles plays excellent foil to Sills' Nettles. "You don't doubt that we all like you?" Bertram screams repeatedly during a tirade against Nettles' inactivity. Mill workers Sidney and Sidney (Jonathan A. Smeenge and Ron Miller) present a kind of wacked out combination of Newhart's "brother Daryl and other brother Daryl" with Estragon and Vladimir from Beckett's Waiting for Godot. The pair eventually takes over Nettles' apartment with gifts of boxed paper. Vaclav Havel's script is a sure winner, as an engag- ing political and philosophical treatise, as excellent farce, and as a portrait of feelings of existential angst; and director Philip Kerr collaborates with a professional cast to capitalize on all of the script's strengths - its dramatic tension and its subtle humor. -Austin Ratner Geary and Cherone is anything other than magnificent. Extreme redoes old ideas in new ways; the result falls short of inno- vation, but it is definitely different. It's often difficult to tell if the band is being serious or sarcastic. But, regardless, Pornograffitti offers more than a mouthful to chew on, dance with, laugh about or kiss to. -Kim Yaged U,,,11, ActvwUry an aspirng singer? dancer? comedian? film/video maker? actor/writer? whatever? MDENT WITH [. m83D BILLY BATHGATE (Ini MY OWN PRIVATE IDAHO IfA COUPON COMBO! - ; Present this coupon when purchasing a large popcorn and receive one free large drink Fre Large Drink Expires 11/28/91 Do you want $100?v Audition for Starbound, U of M's annual talent competition on Dec. 4, 5, &7. Sign up at UAC, 2105 Union, or call 763-1107 for info Starbound Auditions 'I L 1e', L E U E B UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN MEN'S GLEE CLUB Jerry Blackstone, conductor and the OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY MEN'S GLEE CLUB !Tit Ekl _I James Gallagher, conductor