ARTS 0 The Michigan Daily Friday, October 16, 1992 Page 8 Sin Josephine Hart Knopf It seems reasonable to expect a lot from a writer who makes continual claim to biblical profundity. Josephine Hart's new novel "Sin," a tale of bit- ter sibling rivalry in modem bourgeois England, postures as a modern Gen- esis but reads like Moses' Passover matzo - thin, bland and half-baked. The speaker-protagonist Ruth - inironic contrast to her compassionate biblical namesake - is a fiery, articulate beauty driven by a ruthless desire to destroy her cousin, who was as a baby taken into Ruth's parents' care. In a stark narrative, Ruth describes her lifelong envy of Elizabeth, whose portion of parental love young Ruth covets and relentlessly pursues. As an adolescent, Ruth steals Elizabeth's playthings; as a teenager, she pilfers sis's clothes; and as a woman, Elizabeth's lovers and husband are the tar- gets. From ragdolls to spouses, Ruth always gets what she wants then casts off the prize, for her pleasure is only in permanent injury to her sister's life. Ruth's seductiveness augments her hawkish lust to facilitate her conquests. As in her first, best-selling novel "Damage," Hart conceives a young woman whose early pain leaves her predisposed to greed and stealth. This time, however, Hart fails to explain the source of her villain's ferocity. There is no reason to believe Elizabeth has ever done anything to warrant this attack; worse, since Ruth appears one-dimensional and vindictive with- out reason, no readerly rapport develops. Hart sends us on a frustrating search for the missing chapter - what have the. Fates inflicted upon Ruth to provoke such hostility? Ruth asks rhetorically (with typical gravity), "What if the Lord had been pleased by Cain's gift? Would Cain ever have disturbed the sleeping monster in him- self?" Cain's murder of brother Abel was prompted by divine rejection; no suc rejection, parental or otherwise, drives Ruth Garton, Hart's kinslayer. Sh is all effect, no cause - a physicist's enigma, a legacy for Jimmy Dean, but a real drag in prose fiction. It is refreshing, however, to see a woman play the libidinous carnivore; the men in "Sin" all snap beneath feminine will. Hart is at her best in con- versation scenes, where she places us behind the mask of a sophisticated socialite who knows others better than they know themselves and will take advantage of every opportunity to exercise this leverage. The reader experi- ences not only the dialogue, but also internal motivations that Ruth articu- lates through her narrative. Elizabeth's husband Charles Harding, a CEO shark who over tea and scones asserts, "We're discussing worldly matters, and in worldly matters I like:to dominate," is reduced to a groveling blueballed fool between Ruth's sheets. Her dictum: "Better to be feared than loved. Best to be feared and loved." A new angle on family values? The grandiose concerns of this book are nothing less than the relation- ship between God and human, the tension of family, and the criterion for personal sin. "Which of us has his desire, or having it is satisfied?" quotes Ruth from Thackeray. "Like Satan before the Fall," she draws from Milton, "I came to hate the very nature of goodness." The entire novel seems simi- larly lifted from monumental English texts. Hart's ambition eclipses her talent, which lies in keen observation of so- cial dynamics. It all comes off like an overblown soap opera that we're watching on stage: Susan Lucci does "Carmen." Don't waste an evening at this event - you can catch it between classes on the afternoon tube. -Mick Weinstein No Heroics, Please Raymond Carver Random House When Raymond Carver died in 1989, at the age of 50, he left behind a reputation as a writer of the first order, built mainly upon his collections of short stories "What We Talk About When We Talk About Love" and "Cathedral." "No Heroics, Please" collects all of Carver's unpublished writ- ings: stories he wrote while in college, a fragment of a novel, poems, book reviews, introductions, "meditations" and "occasions." The result is a work more suited to the aficionado, or student of Carver, rather than to a reader interested in discovering the power of Carver's best work. The stories in "No Heroics, Please" provide a glimpse into the evolution See BOOKS, Page 9 What's so funny? Everyday life by Kim Gaines To live life and to create art: can these two ideas be intertwined into one common theme? Can the human life of mating, domestic squabbles and old age be classified as art? These are the questions tackled by DavidGordon, director and chore- ographer of "The Mysteries and What's So Funny," which will be performed at the Michigan Theater this weekend. A bizarre presentation with con- stant motion and sound, this produc- tion asks whether everyday life and the domestic problems which go with it can qualify as 'art' of any kind. "All of those stories of how to make art and how to make a life to- gether are all intertwined," Gordon said. "The Mysteries" explores these two secrets and how to discover them. Most well known for his depic- tion of art as a defaced 'Mona Lisa,' Dadaist artist Marcel Duchamp captured art in everyday life and ev- eryday objects. Just as Duchamp tried to frame representations of normal life, Gordon explores the possibility of physically framing ex- ceptional, art-worthy moments in re- ality. "A moment or a circumstance is framed so that you give it special at- tention in much the same way that an artist makes something and calls your attention to it by saying 'This is my art' ," Gordon said. One of the everyday families be- ing framed is Sam and Rose, who are shown at four different stages in their life. "They have tried to iden- tify how to have a life together and how to stay together all of that time," Gordon explained. They are now in their 70s and are reflecting on how their relationship has grown and changed. "The Mysteries" combines the talents of three very unique artists and is filled with word puns, con- stant action, exhilarating and excit- ing, scenery and images. Philip Glass composed the solo piano score which runs continuously throughout the show. "There is very infrequently silence behind the talk- ing," Gordon explained. "Most of the time there is music." Visual artist Red Grooms created the unique, versatile and moveable scenery. "The actors are moving ev- erything all the time, creating the scenes and disbanding them," said Gordon. Gordon began his career in dance in the 1960s. Since then, he has formed his own dance company and choreographed various performances across the country. "The Mysteries and What's So Funny?" should be a unique oppor- tunity for students to witness creativ- ity and art at its best; but then, isn't life itself the best kind of art? THE MYSTERIES AND WHAT'S SO FUNNY? will be performed Sunday, October 18 at 8 p.m. at the Michigan Theater. Tickets are $25, $19.50, $12.50 (students) and are available at the Michigan Theater Box Office or charge by phone 668- 8397. The Mysteries and What's So Funny" should fit right in here in Ann Arbor. Philippe Saire's enchanted, ethereal dream by Laura Alantas A lone man, dressed as a bellhop, entered and began to prepare the stage. He turned on the music, an extract from Ravel's Piano Concerto in G, but then forgot his job of set- ting the lights on stage. He smiled to himself and proceeded to dance. This was Puck, the master of Shakespeare's "A Midsummer Night's Dream," and the master of the four young lovers we would soon meet. This was also Philippe Saire setting his piece "The Life and Morals of a Night Chameleon" into motion. This was the beginning of a beautiful dream. The Philippe Saire Dance Com- pany (Mark Berthon, Charles Line- han, Philippe Saire, Julie Salgues and Rahel Vonmoos) invited its au- Companie Phillippe Saire Studio A October 13, 1992 dience on an enchanted trip into the world that exists only at the end of the party. That time when your body is exhausted, but something keeps you going, keeps you moving. For the two couples whose ever-chang- ing relationships the audience fol- lowed, that something was Puck himself. Whether throwing explod- ing caps at their feet or sending a ca- ressing blow or shooting them a look, Puck wound up these charac- ters and put them into action, into dance. As choreographer, Saire adapted two themes from "A Midsummer Night's Dream:" the manipulation by external forces and the desire to imitate. Puck served as that outside influence who, by slightly adjusting one of the four dancers' center focus and thereby changing the direction in which the character traveled, could alter the coupling of the char- acters, and the outcome of the evening. The expressionless faces of the four young lovers reflected the fact that the characters were not acting of their own volition. Only when Puck directed one of the char- acters to seduce another did the lovers look at one another with a de- sire in their eyes. The theme of imitation ran throughout the entire performance. Almost from the moment the two dead-tired couples made their en- trance, they imitated Puck, who taught them combinations, but then quickly retreated to the perimeters of the stage in order to better observe his handiwork. His job was complete once he had them moving in perfect sync. Our exhausted characters, who at points seemed to spend more time lying on the floor than dancing on it, had the ability to mimic one another completely and fully. The limp arms and bobbing heads, like those of a well-manipulated marionette (which they were), all moved in fluid, graceful rhythm with the music. The characters soon, though, started to mimic one another, or the object of their sexual desire. Now, the two couples simultaneously performed the same combinations, or one woman followed the other's steps, or the couples switched part- ners. The versatility of the Company shined during these times when any dancer could easily fall into the steps that another dancer had already started. Quickly, the audience forgot who was imitating whom. The tremendous precision that the Company achieved during the entire performance helped relate the dream-like state that Saire's inspired choreography captured. In addition to the ethereal quality of the move- ments, though, a great amount of athleticism was displayed. Each couple executed many non-tradi- tional spinning shoulder lifts where the woman draped herself around her partner in unlikely positions. At one point, one couple demonstrated a lift which required the woman to run from across the stage into the capable arms of her partner not once, not twice, but thirteen times! When the couple finally moved on to the next section, the audience gasped almost as much as the woman who had made that prepara- tory sprint over a dozen times. r Afh".m w-- WELCOMES: f Tn1 Boo RADLEYS LIVE IN CONCERT OCTOBER 20, 1992 AT THE MICHIGAN THEATER 1 WITH SUGAR I THE BOO RADLEYS Everything's Alright Forever including: 1 LAZY DAY/DOES THIS HURT? 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