1* ARTS Comedy Company's timing, delivery sputters Life is Sweet It's an unprecedented night of TV for the Mike Leigh crowd: tonight at 8 p.m. on Bravo, it's a rare chance to catch Leigh's "A Sense of History." 30 minutes long, it's nothing more than Jim Broadbent ("The Crying Game," "Life is Sweet") delivering a monologue as the 23rd Earl ofLeete, aportly man of about70 years. If you don'thave Bravo, find someone who does. Ludwig Fix Need a Ludwig fix? Associate ProfessorofPianoDickran Atamian's got just what you need. Tonight at 8 p.m. in Rackham he'll give an all- Beethoven piano recital. The program includes two of his greatest hits: the sonata No. 8 ("Pathdtique") and the sonata No.57 "Appassionata." Sona- tas Nos. 28 and 31 will be thrown in for good measure as well. Admission is free; call 763-4726. by Melissa Rose Bernardo Since comedy is arguably the most complex of all genres, and the most difficult to perform, Comedy Company did not have an easy task ahead of them in "The Big Show." However, save a PERFORMANCE REVIEW Comedy Company Mendelssohn Theatre March 12, 1993 i . few scatteredhumorous moments, rather than a well-oiled comedy machine, Comedy Company ambled around like a sputtering tinker-toy robot. There were a few golden moments in which the cast exhibited flawless timing and manipulation of the audi- ence, and the result was irrepressible laughter. In "A Restaurant Sketch," cast members attended Merv's Place, and ordered theirmeals in game-show style. One couple played the Newlywed Game, guessing each other's dessert preferences-and (wouldn'tyou know it) the man guessed incorrectly. A party of four bid on a box of Kraft Macaroni and Cheese (The Price is Right), taking suggestions from yelling audience mem- bers. And of course, the girl who won jumped up and down and screamed like abanshee. The couple's amusing banter combined with the exaggerated behav- ior of the four bidders was well-timed and clearly delivered. "Cheese Omelet" provided further enjoyment. Two women (Debbie Keller and Wilandrea Blair) fought over a guy (Bob Gilliam) - an ordinary situation, right? Well, their vocabulary consisted of one phrase: cheese omelet. So the three had to rely on acting ability alone to convey the content of their conversa- tion. Because of their impressive use of repetition, inflection and body language, the audience understood their exchange completely.. However, timing and delivery was not always so well-manipulated. In "A Moving Experience," a dim-witted farmer (Brian Letscher) tries to trick his cows into going to the slaughter. While the lines were amusing ("Holy People!" one cow exclaimed), the sketch crawled along due to poor timing. The cows (Debbie Keller, Lauren Schwarz and Brandon Whitesell), seemingly in an attempt to be cow-like, drawled through their lines dully, leaving huge gaps after cue lines. This overly-prolonged sketch finally ended with Fanner Bob going to the slaughter, which was a mercy kill- ing in my opinion. Other poorly-timed and poorly-de- livered sketches included "Century S ur- real Estate" (a supposed spoof on sur- real art) and "The Labor Day That Al- most Wasn't." Mumbled lines and im- mense gaps after lines made these skits slow-moving and just plain boring. Thankfully, the use of video, inter- spersed with the sketches, provided welcome diversion. "Fatal Connection" was the most interesting combination of video and live performance. Sarah Masters played a young girl hounded by a ruthless telephone solicitor from the Ann Arbor News. The solicitor (Laura Schneiderman) was pictured on a large video screen in the upper right-hand corner of the stage. "I'm a telephone solicitor," Schneiderman snarled, "I know everything." The caller appeared on the screen the exact second the girl picked up the phone. Also impressive was the simultaneous representation of the cast on video and on stage during the curtain call. Some video clips were, however, obliterated by erratic volume control and static. In "The Man Who Enunci- ated Every Thought," I could not hear any of his thoughts. Comedy Company has in the past proved themselves tobe laudable enter- tainers. Regrettably, this time, cheesy music and a few laugh-filled sketches did not an evening of comedy make. The Comedy Company had a few golden moments last Friday. Toradze perfroms with flourish by Jeremy Willians Rachmaninoff's Third Piano Concerto is not usually thought of as "one of the greats," maybe because it does not have an unforgettable melody that distinguishes it. That didn't stop Alexander Toradze and the Ann Arbor Symphony Orchestra from putting together a flourishing and remark- " 1 Ann Arbor Symphony Orchestra Michigan Theater March 13, 1993 ably precise performance this Saturday night. The program started with a seldom-performed work, Stravinsky's Symphonies of Wind Instruments. The orches- tra handled the complex rhythmic passages (reminiscent at times of Stravinsky's "Rite of Spring") well for the mostpart, as well as the complicated harmonic structures. The clarinet andbassoon solos alsoputforth lively interpretations. Unfor- tunately, this piece is not Stravinsky's most spirited writing, so the work was lacking somewhat in profundity and the feeling of progress. The AASO's string section showed why Tchaikovsky's Serenade for Strings has always been a preferred work. It is some of Tchaikovsky's finer writing, butit is often performed with indifference. This was not the case on Saturday night, as the orchestra deftly managed the transition between the lush opening statement and the delicate passages which follow. A careful balance was keptbetween the sections throughout the work, but especially in the precarious Elegie. A playful atmosphere accompanied the Waltz, and the Finale had a vitality which endured throughout the movement. It was obvious from the opening phrase of the Rachmaninoff that Toradze is a superior player. The serene opening (played with exaggerated effect as Toradze looked skyward) rose swiftly in intensity as his attention shifted back to the keyboard. Several powerful passages left much of the audience in amazement, and others feeling sorry for the keyboard. He has a sixth sense of exactly which moments need additional drama, and these moments confirmed his virtuosity. One element of virtuosity is timing, and Toradze's every note in the Adagio was placed so perfectly that there was never a question of his outstanding ability. His capacity for a tremendous breadth of emotion was well suited for this concerto, which requires such a range. In the last movement, the soloist's verve was so overwhelming that the AASO had to work to keep up with Toradze's enthusiasm. Neither the audience nor the conductor Samuel Wong (who pulled out the piano bench at the curtain call) would let him get away without an encore, so for the second time in two years, Toradze has dazzled his listeners at the Michigan Theater. Legacy II: A Collection of Singer Songwriters High Street Records Trying to milk some more life out of the nearly dormant singer-songwriter revival of about five years ago, "Legacy II: A Collection of Singer Songwriters" showcases several contemporary singer songwriters. Windham Hill founder Will Ackerman writes in the liner notes that four artists from the first volume have been signed to major labels, and there is no doubt that visions of multi-album record deals have danced through the minds of each of the thirteen artists featured here. The problem is, less than half of them are ready to record an entire album. Most of the singer-songwriters on "Legacy I1" are embarrassingly ear- nest, spilling their hearts all over their songs. In fact, the only theme linking this surprisingly musically diverse col- lection is an overwrought sensitivity. Both squeamishly sickening high- school poetry ("I believe in the good little children / Hiding in the morning air / If you see the good little children / Tell them I lost something there," Nick Berry's "The Good Little Children") and oppressively verbose verse ("The wind squawks at the river/ The laughter of fish tingles through the current / A mouth forms about a sound / But it's only silence," Frank Tedesso's "What Could I Add to That") are equally repre- sentative of the self-conscious stabs at sensitive self-exploration available here. Theseattempts toprove the songwriter's artistic worth pale next to the natural lyrics of Patty Griffin's "I Write the Book" and Tony Gilkyson's "Joey's Car." Griffin and Gilkyson are also rela- tively musically straightforward, just a guitar and voice, and happen to be the most successful music of the compila- tion. Too often an artist's musical gifts See RECORDS, Page 8 'A Macbeth' assaults audience Anders sustains 'Lodging' by Camilo Fontecilla From the beginning, there is a non- sensical note permeating this farce by Allison Anders thatmakes it quite clear it is treated on a highly satirical level. She pulls out of the Forbidden Trunk of Film every cliche about life in a South- western town, and then combines it Gas, Food, Lodging Directed and adapted for the screen by Allison Anders; with Brooke Adams, Ione Skye, Fairuza Balk. with a dysfunctional family situation of the most melodramatic kind to achieve a powerful but understated critique of the lagging America The trouble is, she often trips on her own intentions. The movie revolves around three women living alone, Nora (Brooke Adams) and her two teenage daughters, Shade (Fairuza Balk) and Trudi (lone Skye). Shade's obsession with the mov- ies of Mexican actress Elvia Rivero (Nina Belanger) serves as a spring- board and reference point for the devel- opmentof the plot. Shade finds amater- nal role model in Elvia, and interprets her own mother's life through the stan- dards set by her idol. Nora has too much trouble keeping her family together to worry about liv- ing up to star status. She gets into con- stant arguments with Trudi about the latter's rather liberal lifestyle, which results in a pregnancy by a young En- glish mineralogist, Dank (Robert Knepper). It all becomes complicated by the return of the girls' father to town (James Brolin). Shade begins to de- * velopastrong tie withhim; she forgives drawn. This gets to be terribly funny, but sometimes it's just not clear enough to tell it apart from actual melodrama. To be able to fully appreciate this movie, one has to be armed with the sharp needle of cynicism. From the father, a quasi-replica of the Marlboro Man, to Hamlet Humphrey (David Landsbury), Nora's found love in the person ofa satellite T.V.installer, all the characters follow a set of extremely predictable behavioral patterns. They are all taken through the most conven- tional situations, in which they end up actually demonstrating themselves to be ... conventional. Watching Hamlet sincerely ask Nora's forgiveness for not satisfying her during intercourse is but a taste of what goes on in this film. And everyone means what they say. There's big acting here, but Anders keeps a tab on it, and so anaturalistic style is maintained through- out most of the movie. For the more inattentive spectator, this could end up seeming a very bad script coupled with some decent actors that are trying very hard to make the best of what they are given. B utthe mood is a crucial element to be aware of; trying to take this seri- ously can only make one cringe. Anders's film is difficult, because it requires the viewer's undivided attention during its full length... Anders's film is difficult, because it requires the viewer's undivided atten- tion during its full length, as well as the constant understanding that it's all a big joke. Some things will remind one im- audience will enjoy it thoroughly. The film has much more going for it than against it, and the more wicked mood one is in, the better it will come off. All the actors give impressive poker face performances, trying to make as real as possible all the bullshit they are speak- ing. Not that this is a negative facet of the film; on the contrary, it's what its effectiveness rests on. A little polishing of the script would have smoothed out the quirks that make the film sometimes bewildering. Al- though Anders purposely blows up the romanticaura of the Southwestern desert in service of her goals, it's still beautiful to watch and adds character toher movie. But she saves her best stab for last: the ending is a modern example of how to wrap up a plot perfectly. Truly a lip- curling "touch." GAS, FOOD, LODGING is playing at the Michigan Theater. by Karen Lee "A Macbeth" is not for those unac- quainted with Shakespeare's Scottish Play, nor for the faint of heart. Adapted by Charles Marowitz, it is based on the principles of Antonin Artaud, a mad- man who had an enormous influence on A Macbeth Ann Arbor Civic Theatre March 12, 1993 the world of drama with his "Theatre of Cruelty." This concept was created as, in short, an assault on the senses of the audience rather than on the intellect. Among other things, it rejected the script as the pri- mary method of expression, empha- sized dream and fantasy, and focused on those unconscious impulses that caused divisions between people and led to hatred, violence and disaster. Director George Popovich, in the transference of his vision from Henry Ford Commu- nity College to Ann Arbor Civic Theatre's Second Stage, created an apocalyptic and nightmarish produc- tion that remained faithful to Artaud's principles. The play started with a twelve- minute "collage" that encapsulated the main events, afterwhich they were again recounted with more detail. In Marowitz's script, scenes were acted in a different order than in Shakespeare's text, and lines normally associated with certain characters were given to other actors. Yet these innovations gave a new dimension to the conventional storyline, bringing previously untapped possibilities to the fore. The Witches' scenes, for instance, rather than being shown only during the first and fourth acts, as was originally written, were interspersed throughout the play, some- times as eerie flashbacks. Even more intriguing was the famous "Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow" speech, said notby Macbeth (Steve Memran) in this version, but by a priest (Jason Winslade) over the corpse of Lady Macbeth (Carolyn Lee Kirby). Popovich's direction took liberties as well with the usual interpretation of "Macbeth." There were eight Witches rather than three, and they were on- This concept was created as, in short, an assault on the senses of the audience rather than on the intellect. stage almost continuously; they ap- peared to serve not exactly as "witches," but as those "evil spirits that tend on mortal thoughts" that Lady Macbeth made reference to. For they propelled the events of the play, sometimes actu- ally giving to the characters the weap- ons needed to act out the various mur- ders. Macbeth even had his own evil spirits, a Second and Third Macbeth (Kevin Walsh and M.D. Petee), who, in an arresting moment, crouched behind Macbeth, whispering to him his "Is this a dagger I see before me" soliloquy as he repeated it after them. Not only was the role of the Witches expanded, but so were the violent lust and the lustful violence that existed in almost every character, for it seemed that those two qualities, in the contextof "A Macbeth," were intertwined. This time Duncan's murder was committed by both Macbeths who, staring into each other's eyes as they simultaneously gripped the dagger, made the act pro- foundly sexual. Later on, during one of his bloodiest speeches, Macbeth pro- ceeded to "rape" his wife. There was, in fact, nothing "pure" about the play until ascene, near theend, when the Macbeths lovingly comforted each other -and then Lady Macbeth collapsed in her husband's arns, dead. Through walkways and platforms constructed all over the theater, the au- dience was given a view up close of the depravity that constituted the produc- tion; an assault on the senses was indeed launched. This was not a play to be liked, or even loved; rather, one was horrified, sickened and fascinated all at the same time. This reaction seemed to be what "A Macbeth" was aiming for, and in that sense, it succeeded. 0 - U * - . ' .. pO LAUGHTRACK' S Under 21 & Looking for Fun? Come to the show on March 17th wearing ppp- I I