The Michigan Daily-Weekend etc. November 5,1992 Page 1 The savior 1 > a ! made me do it H 00 boy. My man's bloomers were in a serious twist, and I certainly wasn't going to get in his way. I mean, I hadn't seen him so worked up since Winona Ryder got engaged to Johnny Depp. "How dare she commit such a sacrilege!" he seethed from behind clenched teeth. "Where does this little bald bimbo get. off ripping up a picture of the Pope?! The Na- tional Anthem was one thing, but this is some deep shit! People have been hung for less, you know," he spat with a sadistic leer. "Hey, why don't we just watch 'Heathers' again?" I suggestedwith a limp smile. "That always cheers you up." "Oh no you don't, Sterling. You're not getting off that easy. I'm not budging until you tell ev- eryone here just where you stand on the Sinead O'Connor thing." Shit. How could I ever so deli- cately get around this one? I hate talking about religion. It's like talk- ing politics; You're bound to piss someone off. But what the hell, isn't that what life's all about? I was therewhenMissO'Connor did her little artistic rendering of "The Pope In Many Pieces." Of course, everyone in the free world (including Madonna - like she can talk. Nice shot with the dog, sweetie) slammed her for what she did, but no one talked about why she did it. While I may not agree with what she did, I can perfectly understand where her rage comes from. I, your faithful hack, had the distinct privilege of attending a "Christian" academy for my four years of high school. (I won't name any names, since I don't need the folks on the corner of Lahser and 12 Mile getting mad and sending the God Squad after my soul.) Dur- ing those four years, I was mentally tortured, humiliated, and basically made to feel like shit, all in the name-of God. God, and His Son, the all-for- giving Jesus Christ, were the Dam- ascus swords that were poised over our heads at all times. "What would He say about the clothes you wear?" I was questioned. "You know that by wearing an earring, you associ- ate yourself with homosexuals, and He doesn't like that." (Hey, I've got no reason to lie to you) So here's thisconfused, messed- up kid, going through the same painful adolescent bullshit that you endured, being told that basically I was headed to Hell in a hand basket because I wouldn't just shut up and be the subordinate little colored boy they wanted me to be. "I think you need to take care of that," my principal winced, point- ing at my poor man's version of Prince's typhoon 'do (gimme a break, I was just a kid). Almost daily, I was sitting across from this junior Pat Robertson, glaring at me underneath a looming portrait of his supplier of divine power, a blond, blue-eyed Jesus. "Perhaps it's God's will that you fail French this semester. I think we need to call your parents again." At this point, I didn't have any cheeks left to turn. But despite their repeated ef- forts to squash any trace of creativ- ity or individuality left in me, I emerged from this institution rela- tively unscathed. Just ask my thera- pist. So forgive me if I don't lustily join in burning Sinead O'Connor CDs and labeling her the anti- Christ. If she endured any of the same hypocritical experiences in the name of God Almighty that I Dress casual, Mandy 's comm' by Melissa Rose Bernardo "Hello. My name is Inigo Montoya. You killed my father. Prepare to die." Who doesn't remember that classic line from the 1987 hit "The Princess Bride"? But no one remembers the name of the man who spoke it so many times - Man d y Patinkin. Barnes of " T h e r.N e w 7 Y o r k Post" him "the greatest >.e n te r - tainer on r-.B r oad - way - period." (Broad- way, you say?) He is one of the most A . r f t enos sing. (What, he sings?) People say that he could revive the American musical theater as we know it. (He's done musicals?) On Broadway, Patinkin won a Tony for his portrayal of Che in the Andrew Lloyd Webber/ Tim Rice musical "Evita," and he was nomi- nated for another in Stephen Sondheim's "A Sunday in the Park with George." Most re- cently he starred in the Tony-winning "The Secret Garden." His film credits include "Alien Nation," "Dick Tracy," and "The Doctor." He has just finished "The Music of Chance," with James Spader and Joel Grey, slated for release in 1993. He is included on "Tenors, Anyone?" a recording with Carreras, Domingo, and Pavoratti, and he has also released two solo albums, "Mandy Patinkin" and "Dress Ca- sual," collections of American musical theater favorites. But where did this tour-de-force performer come from? He began singing as a young boy in Temple, which inspired him to do community theater work. That led him to the University of Kansas where he did straight shows and prepared him for the prestigious Julliard School of Drama. Of Julliard, Patinkin said: "I wanted to leave after I was there for six minutes, but I knew I wanted to get something out of it, and I didn't know what that something was. So I hung in and did the technical work - the breathing idiot work. But I wanted something more." Patinkin eventually got that "something more," citing colleague William Hurt and teacher Gerald Freedman as great influences. "These people taught me a great deal -a very great deal - about the kind of human being I wanted to be and the kind of actor I wanted to be. All of that came together and I finally got a way of working after two-and-a-half years, and then I quit." After doing some commercial and reper- tory theater across the country, he eventually wound up in the New York Shakespeare Fes- tival, under the late theater impresario Joseph Papp. It was Papp that convinced Patinkin to try his idea of a concert for the theater, singing the songs he wanted; the way he wanted. He suggested that Patinkin perform his concerton his night off. So, for six consecutive Monday evenings, Patinkin performed and gave the proceeds to AIDS. The show was so well-received that they continued it on Broad- way and last fall took it on the road. That engagement became the current tour, "Mandy Patinkin in Concert: Dress Casual." Patinkin's musical repertoire is utterly un- predictable, ranging from Irving Berlin to Stephen Sondheim. When asked about how he selects them, Patinkin simply responded: "I look for songs that have stories." he will record in January titled "Shhhh." He has included about 10 of these "quiet songs" in "Dress Casual," interspersed, of course, with his old-standbys like "Over the Rainbow" and his "Pal Joey" medley. He is also working on a Yiddish album, of particular meaning to him because of his Jewish heritage. "These songs all talk to me - they have nothing to do with each other, other than the fact that they each have a meaning ... like a really good thought." When asked if he had a favorite song, Patinkin responded, without missing a beat, "I have many." When pressed, he stuck by his initial response. "No - I'll tell ya - I think the reservoir of material that's out there is so amazing ... I'm kind of stunned by just the songs and what they have to say." As for the format of the show, "Dress Casual" is done on a practically bare stage, with one accompanist (Paul Ford) at an upright piano and Patinkin clad in a t-shirt and tennis shoes. "All of it is, so I can be relaxed and make the audience as relaxed as possible. [In the songs] the intention to me is not the set or the pyrotechnics, but the words that people wrote. These are great songs that live on; the kind of songs that I grew up with that talk to me, and they seem to talk to people of all ages. r% n i