ARTS TeMcia Dily uesayMarh ,9 Page Etch-a-Skitch Before there was Branford, before there was Doc, Skitch Henderson con- ducted the Tonight Show orchestra. Decades later, Henderson is still tour- ing, now with an Orchestra he founded, the New York Pops. They'll play a program of film music at Hill Audito- rium tonight. This isn't Alan Menken and John Williams, mind you; Henderson has chosen classic tunes by Berlin, Bernstein, Loesser and oth- ers. Showtime is 8 p.m.; tickets are $16 to $28, with rush tickets available at the Union ticket office. Call 764- 2538. Bon Bons BonJovi will be appearing tonight with The Jeff Healey Band at the Pal- ace of Auburn Hills at 8p.m. Tickets are $22.50 (p.e.s.c.). Guitarist Richie Sambora promises that the band will be playing "all the hits that you want to hear and a bunch of new stuff." Look for Kristen Knudsen's full interview with Sambora and a review ofthe show in Weekendetc. this Thurs- day. Broadcast News We seldom listen to the radio, but on Mondays in March on WUOMt provide a rare opportunity. Marian Stolar hosts a series of recitals and concerts by University faculty and staff. Next Monday, for example, Dickran Atamian will perform Mussorgsky's "Pictures at an Exhibi- tion" and Prokofiev's Sonata No. 6, and on March 29, Erling Bengtsson does Schoenberg's "Verklarte Nacht." Tune in and tape 'em for posterity. Broadcasts are at 8 p.m. on 91.7 FM. Schizo Fest Ingmar Bergman's "Through a Glass Darkly," is playing tonight at the Michigan Theater at 7 p.m. The film, which won an Academy Award for BestForeign Film, tells ofaschizo- phrenic, well-played by Harriet Andersson, and her family who spend the summer together. Call 668-8397. Simpson exaggerates herself in her work by Joshua Keidan When Mona Simpson wrote her first novel, "Anywhere But Here," she started with an image: "A woman putting a kid out by the side of the road. I wasn't even sure if it was a boy or a girl." That kid gradually became Ann Stevenson, the heroine ofboth the highly successful "Anywhere But Here" and its sequel, equally acclaimed, "The Lost Father." Simpson described Ann as "sort of an exaggerated version of myself." Ann, like her creator, begins her life in Wisconsin, moving to California, and then on to New York. In Simpson's words, "I wanted to make it discernibly not me, but also someone with enough qualities I could identify with. The feelings are autobiographical. I mean, my mother liked ("Anywhere But Here") and she probably wouldn't have if it was autobiographical." Adele, the mother in "Anywhere But Here," is hardly a character for which you'd want to be the model. She's a woman of somewhat sublime insanity, whom the reader alternately laughs at and suffers with through the course of the novel. "Anywhere But Here" tells the story of Ann and Adele as they move from place to place always managing to live beyond their means. "The Lost Father" picks up where the first novel left off, with Ann in medical school. As the title indicates, this time around Ann pursues her father, who left her and her mother when she was a child. Her search begins to consume all of her time and money, leading her to the brink of losing everything she has. "The Lost Father," while not as comic or as immediately accessible as "Anywhere But Here," has a dark intensity which makes it the stronger book. Of the novel's darkness, Simpson said, "It sort of came out that way. I worried about it, but I also liked it." Beside the difference in tone, the circumstances surrounding their writing also separate the books, at least in the mind of Simpson. "With the first one, it was hard in a way, because I was working several jobs, and I didn't have much time for uninterrupted work. Writing "The Lost Father" I had more time, but then I was nervous because it was my second novel," she said. If she was nervous about her second novel, it was due more to her own expectations than outside pressure. "Writing is a solitary thing, soI think a writer's life is less pressured than most -nobody really tells you what to do." Currently, Simpson is writing full time, six to eight hours a day ("but it's not that I'm exactly writing all that time"), in addition to teaching a writing course at Bard College. Having time to write, she said, is the best part of success. Before the publication of "Anywhere But Here," she'd worked at everything from acupuncturist's assistant to freelancejournalist."I had thisidea thatI wouldbe areporter to support my fiction - then I had to get a job to support my journalism." Explaining her book's focus on the parent/child relationship, the 35 year old Simpson said, "Part of it is being relatively young. I think in a way I didn't have perspective on adult life. Also, I think that childhood is one of those areas where life has changed so much, family structures are so different, say, from the Victorian era. Writing about childhood is a good way to get at those changes." Currently, she's working on a new novel, "A Regular Guy," about three men in their twenties. She described it as being "more about adults." She said, "It's going pretty quickly, which is unusual for me ("Anywhere But Here" and "The Lost Father" each took four years to write). I think I'll finish it about a year from now." Will Ann Stevenson reappear in her fiction? "Maybe, but not in this next book." MONA SIMPSON will read fromi her work today at 7.30 at Borders. Admission is free. Living Colour: mad as hell music geniuses who combine hard rock with an Afrocentric sensibility. Living Colour lIid'Stain by Scott Sterling Living Colour is madder than hell, and they're not gonna take it anymore. Pulling no punches, "Stain" explodes with louder-than-life monster riffs and seething, iconoclastic rag- ing like never before. Living Colour Stain Epic Revamped for '93 with underground legend Doug Wimbish (Tackhead, Sugarhill Gang) replacing Muzz Skillings on bass, Living Colour have turned up the torque machine big time. Where in thepast they were often too smart for their own good (average head-bangers had trouble keep- ing up with L.C.'s frantic time/meter changes), songs on "Stain" rip straight-ahead passages like a post post-mod Helmet with a real vocalist (Corey Glover's voice is more confident and controlled than ever). Tracks like "Go Away" feature hard as hell grooves that blaze right to the point. The directness of "Stain" can also be attributed to pro- ducer Ron St. Germain (Bad Brains, Soundgarden) twid- dling the knobs instead of Ed Stasium, who produced L.C.'s first two efforts. While "Vivid" and "Time's Up" percolated with a defi- nite Afrocentric buzz and p.c. sensibility, "Stain" disposes of any and all "alliances." This record is all about radical individualism, to the point ofhostile isolation: "I'mnotdown with this one/their motives are much too severe/ and thatone / they're much too serious/I don't plan to make thisa career," Glover roars on the crunchy cocoa-pop "Leave It Alone'.; This theme is also in the blithe "Bi" ("Everybody wants you when you're bi / looking at the girls /and eyeing all the guys"), where ambiguous sexuality is analogous with not being "either or" in other situations. Other highlights include the grinding "Mind Your Own Business," that angrily shakes its head at stupid, mindless gossip, and the ethereal ballad "Nothingness." Musically, Living Colour is still killer; Vernon Reid is the only guitar hero that matters in the '90s (Although Rage Against The Machine's Tom Morello is right up there), and the Will Calhoun/Wimbish rhythm section could kill a herd of elephants at forty paces (Check Wimbish's crazed run at the end of "Go Away" and try to keep up). Dreads and shoulders above the rest. " Hollywood legend Lillian Gish dies Actor's seventy-year career spanned generations of change by Aaron Hamburger Lillian Gish died Saturday of heart failure in Manhattan. She was 99 years old. Gish, a legend who during her 70- year career performed in silent as well as talking films and Broadway. Not only was Gish known for her talentas an actor, but also for her spirit and dedica- tion to her craft. Gish appeared in over one hundred movies. Abandoned by her father as a child, Gish moved with her mother and two sisters from Ohio to New York City, where she began to work on the stage. Introduced to director great D. W. Griffith by Mary Pickford, Gish began a collaboration with Griffith that re- sulted in 40 films. Gish established the tradition of the Hollywood starlet, along with her sister Dorothy, and luminaries like Mary Pickford. She collaborated with Griffith on the silent classics "Broken Blos- soms," "Intolerance," "Orphans of the Storm" and the landmark Civil War epic "The Birth of a Nation." She also ap- pearedin the silentclassics"The Wind," "Way Down East" and "The Scarlet Letter." In "Birth of a Nation," Gish estab- lished her screen persona, the pure, ear- nest virginal waif, often orphaned or cruelly separated from her loved ones. With her fragile porcelain beauty, Gish won the hearts of American moviego- ers. Gish derisively referred to her roles as "ga-ga babies," yet at the same time, Gish's characters had a strong indepen- dent fire that allowed her to overcome impossible odds. Throughout her life, Gish witnessed the transformation of film from one- reel black and white silents to the two- hour color and sound films we know today. Yet unlike many of her early contemporaries, Gish wasneverleftout in the cold. Though Gish often scorned the ad- "Camille," "Life with Father" and per- forming opposite Sir John Gielgud in. "Hamlet." Her most recent film appearance was her critically acclaimed perfor- mance opposite Bette Davis in "The Whales of August." The grace and quiet strength she brought to her role exactly embodied the qualities that made her such a legend. Gish received an honorary Oscar from the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences in 1970 for her ex- traordinary body of work. 1'z : }hr's M E NE E . '' n <>.>n t as ?itsv:.? x;:,..a _ a....... . .,. . 0