The Michigan Daily - Weekend etc. Thursday, March 11, 1993 Page 1 'Don't Tread On Me' Respect (ri-spekt) n. 1. Admira- tion felt toward a person or thing that has good qualities or achievements, politeness arising from this. 2. Atten- tion, consideration, showing respect for people's feelings. It's 3:30 in the morning, and we've been driving all night. We're on our way to glorious New York City, de- termined to make this cold, sunless Spring Break a fun one none the less. After spending many hours in such close proximity, it's difficultnot to have that bonding moment, where everyone has let their defenses down, and feels like they can safely share anything with each other. Like on this frigid, February evening. We'd gone through the "most em- barrassing moments," "first kisses," and the like. Then, it moved to relat- ing our first girl / boyfriend experi- ences. My turn came, so I launched into the story of "Mary" (of course it's not her real name), the adorable little one I fell for at the tender age of fourteen. It was simple enough - the front porch courtship, a few nervous phone calls and finally asking if she'd be my girlfriend. But over the few weeks that "Mary" and I were "going steady," I noticed something oddly cold and distant about her. Whenever I tried to hold her hand or show any sort of affection, she'd stiffly draw away from me. So I was less than surprised when she unceremoniously dumped me. Yeah, my fragile, pre-pubescent little heart wasbroken, butIwas OK (sniff). But it was the aftermath of this whole affair that I had pushed out of my mind until that night cruising to New York. A year after the fact, my best friend "Jane" (and a close friend of "Mary") confided in me what ex- actly had gone down with "Mary." A harsh reality that stung like a knife in the stomach. It seems that "Mary's" apprehen- sion towards affection stemmed from her being brutally (and repeatedly) raped by her uncle. And even worse, becoming pregnant from one such attack, and having an abortion, unbe- knownsttoanyone butherself, "Jane," and now me. The weirdest sense of pain, confu- sion, and sickness engulfed by entire being. How could anyone be so dis- eased, so heartless, so utterly unfeel- ing toputsomeone through suchhor- ror? What in the world perpetuates such blatant disregard for another hu- man being's basic rights? And what made it even worse was the intrinsic realization thatthiswasn't an isolated incident. That this sort of garbage happened all the time. My young mind wasoverwhelmed at such arevelation about the societal hierar- chy that we are forced to live in. Now, at the twilight of my illustri- ous college career, I feel a bit closer to understanding where all of this shit stems from. It's a simple matter of fear. Fear disguised as prejudice and hatred. In America, it seems to be focused on us "minorities" - Afri- can-Americans, Jews, Arabs, homo- sexuals, etc. And women. There's a set of code words and actions used to help keep certain peoplein theirpredetermined"place." Like having "Straight Pride Day" (who cares that heterosexuality is re- inforced 24-7?) Or putting a "Pussie Rd" (women are merely genitalia to be walked on) sign in your window. Rubbin salt in already gaing Fanta with Frank i by Darcy Lockman A ctor Frank Whaley has seen the new Crystal Pepsi, but he's never tasted it. He does not want to. "I really prefer Fanta," he explained. Hmm, Fanta? While his taste in carbonated bever- ages may be questionable, Whaley's acting track record is anything but. At the no-longer-so-tender age of 29, Whaley has 23 movie roles and various stage credits under the proverbial belt. Since filming "Ironweed" in 1987, he has gone on to appear in acclaimed pictures like "Field of Dreams," "Born on the Fourth of July," "JFK" and "Hoffa," just to name a few. Whaley currently co-stars in Holly- wood Picture's latest release "Swing Kids," based on a non-fiction group of rebellious teenagers in Nazi Germany. Whaley plays Arvid, a seventeen-year- old with a lame leg and alove for the big band music of the late '30s (swing). Arvid's world comes down around him as his friends join the Hitler youth, and his country acts out against every prin- ciple in which he has ever believed. When the Nazis try to take away his music, Arvid sees no reason to live. Solution: suicide; exit Whaley. "When we first started reading through the script in rehearsal, there was a lot of debate over whether or not Arvid should kill himself. There were people involved in the production who didn't want him to. There were others, myself included, who thought it was very important to the story. In the build of the character, Arvid had nowhere to turn. They stripped him of everything. When they finally started to strip him of hismusiche felt thathe wascompletely outside. There was no place for him, and he truly didn't belong,"said Whaley. While "Swing Kids" takes an inside look at Nazi Germany, it was not the history that drew Whaley to the film. "There's this other thing it's about, these swing kids, which I found incredibly interesting when I read about them," he said, "I had no idea there was this kind of counter culture, this kind of love inspired by Western swing music." Although Whaley does not actually play the guitar himself in Arvid's scenes ("But it looked like it was me, didn't it?"), he is no stranger to music. "I love swing music. I'm actually a drummer in my own band called the Niagaras, a very popular band (laughs). But I tell you, I have a real appreciation now for swing music, especially early swing. It's such great life-affirming music. I can see why when people like these kids heard it, they would just become en- raged, and want to dance. And that swing dance, it's almost dangerous, it gets to a point of frenzy. It's like slam dancing, only with more finesse, and the moves are more choreographed." Because he plays a person with a disability, Whaley did not get to swing in the film, much to his chagrin. "I really wished I had gotten to dance.Especially when I got over there and Bob (co-star Robert Sean Leonard of "Dead Poet Society") and Christian (co-star Chris- tian Bale of "Newsies") were doing the classes and stuff like that. They had a month and a half before shooting, and they were doing the stuff six hours a day, eight hours a day. I would go over and watch and just wish like hell that I While Whaley did not have to learn to swing, he did have the difficult job of learning to walk as if he had a disability. "I worked with somebody on a few different limps," he said, "We decided that his disability specifically was one hip that was higher than the other. He was born that way, sort of with like a club foot. So I watched tapes of people moving around and walking with that specific disability. I started walking like that even when I wasn't shooting. I got used to doing everything on one leg:" Aside from either learning to dance or to limp, the actors in "Swing Kids" at first also faced the task of learning to speak with German accents. However, because of the near impossibility of getting the entire cast to speak consis- tently in the same German accent, it was decided early on to shoot the film with plain old American pronunciation. "Early on in the rehearsals we tried to do German accents, but we all sort of sounded like Hogan's Heroes," said Whaley, "But Barbara Hershey and (Kenneth) Branagh came in and de- cided they wanted accents. So what are we going to do? Tell them no, you can't do an accent? So those two speak with German accents. The best thing would be for all of us to speak perfect German and have it subtitled, but then three people would come to the film." Of the filhn work Whaley has done, "Swing Kids" is the movie of which he claims to be the proudest (his honest tone assures that he is not just saying this because he's trying to promote the new movie). "I think it's the best film work thatI've done. I'm also very proud of 'Hoffa.' It's a brief role, but very challenging. Danny DeVito and I had to pace the character because he became so important at the end, we couldn't give away that in fact he was the killer. So the way we did each scene leading up ders Jimmy Hoffa (Jack Nicholson). Whaley said, "We were doing the mur- der scene the last week of shooting (in Chicago) and it was when the basket- ball (NBA) finals were going on. We would shoot at magic hour, at 7:00, half an hour every night with that light, and Nicholson was in a hurry to get to the ball game, every night. If I didn't get it right the first time, I was blowing his entire evening. So there was double pressure on me: to be good in the film and also enable Nicholson to get to the basketball game. Before I started the film I had all these daydreams about Jack coming overand saying 'Hey, why don't you go to the ball game with me?' Absolutely not, he'd blow by me and I'd be on the ground. There was one night where I could not get the scene right, and I was never more nervous, sweating terribly." Though Nicholson's hurry to catch the Bulls managed to shake him up abit, big names generally no longer intimi- date Whaley. "When I first started out (with Nicholson and Meryl Streep in "Ironweed") I was terrified. I couldn't even breathe. But it gets easier and easier. I've started to think of myself now as more of a peer, rather than a kid. I'm much more confident in my abili- ties, in my instincts," he said. Confident though he may be, ego- ridden Whaley is not. While he has worked with Hollywood stars such as Marlon Brando, Kevin Costner, Tom Cruise, Meg Ryan, Matthew Broderick and Barbara Hershey, Whaley does not yet consider himself a movie star ("But I would like to be one, someday."). In an un-movie star fashion, Whaley, who lives in New York, isnotafan ofthe California moviedom mecca. "I hate Hollywood," he said, "Well, I don't like the way they do things there. It seems they've forgotten how to make movies. w l i I -i-