The Michigan Daily -Monday, March 29, 1993- Page 9 Dance concert moves 'Upward' by Jen Slajus Let's just say that when I close my eyes, I can still see the blotches from the fireworks. Gina Buntz andMaureenJanson' s MFA Thesis Concert, aptly entitled "Upward Mobility," soared this weekend in the intimate Studio A Dance Theatre and left the audience reeling with delight. While most damn spectacular dance performances make me feel all nasty with Director Amelio, in true neo-realist style, chose untrained actors to tell the story. Broken images evoke emotion Upward Mobility Studio A March 26, 1993 regret for not taking dance classes as a child, this one pushed further. Its intense artistic energy inspired radical creativity. The evening began with Gina Buntz's choreographed suite of dances, "African Chill." Overall, it was an amazing and thorough exploration of personal pulses. Tucked in a corner spot of light and dressed completely in black, a heady narrator, Betsy Pugel, read the intellectual celestial season- ings which wove the six dance movements together. Rather like a Socratic mediator, she poignantly complemented their individual, raw ritual rhythms. Guest artist Denise H. Bey, an "uh-huh!" jovial West African dancer from New York, opened and closed the suite with colorful sparks. She served as a most gracious and fascinating host. Beginning with her own post-colonial adaptation of a folkloric mask dance, "Nia," Bey humor- ously shattered the Wall of Propriety between dancer and audience. Hidden under abright, multi-colored, striped cloak with an attached cool-mannered mask, she wagged her bootie, belly-whooped some spiritual thanks to the ancestors and curiously inspected the audience by sticking her guised face in, well, our faces. All to the rousing beat of two African drums. This oh-so happy, life-energy beat returned in the final dance, "Lamban." Wearing a heavenly fluid, sheer, ivory- firey gown, Bey played a brief duet of Share-The-Fuschia- Scarves with featured dancer Linda Spriggs. Then she se- duced the crowd, not to mention the drummers, with her smiling, spinning rounds and her whimsical gestures of thank you. Undergraduate Alexandra Beller jaw-dropping-wowed this reviewer with her "Sweet Birth and Beautiful Dance." Reciting a love poem, she eloquently provided her own music and so her own bodily pulse to Buntz's sublime, swallowing choreography. Lines like "Pieces of me float down to look likeawoman" and "Yourmouth slides overmy skin, and I think I will rain" underscored her graceful body translations. In the mere act of rolling herself up from the floor, she skillfully controlled every centimeter of her body in order to articulate the fluid pulse of a blood beat. Maureen Janson rocketed to a new dimension of modern dance with her high impact solo, "All the Conversations." Loosely based on a series of telephone conversations with friends and family, it poignantly expressed Janson's frustra= tion with a life fragmented by so much role-playing. Thi dance was an intriguing collage of stark extremes, in terms of both movement and sound. All of her movements, or lack thereof, seemed to be fueled with angst. She often stood with, her back to the audience. On one of these occasions, she stripped away her veil of a top, tore flesh from her side and mindlessly offered it to the heavens. She climbed the back wall like an alien insect, struck sudden, porcelain angel poses, arrowed out of the floor like an upside down bicycle, and carefully squatted across the stage. This awesome inner bleakness exploded in Janson's choreographed group piece, a clever social commentary called"800thLifetime."Ann Arbor actress HilarieRamsden, garbed in a stunning red party dress, hilariously framed the dance with absurd theatricality: an emotional breakdown, seemingly over a piece of chocolate. The dance was a poignant, humanist study of people. Janson captured the reality of people as fake, bitter, narcissis- tic self-worlds through a multitude of witty dance phrases. Yet, Janson positively worked to get past traditional and confining views. In one segment, a woman repeatedly tried to run and jump onto the back of a man. Finally, she gave up - and ran past him! (Yeehaw!) Janson chose exceptionally strong dancers to carry out her power moves. Men carried men, and women carried both . men and women. (No. They wouldn't let men carry them!) These dancers - three men and three women, including Beller - were amazing, though, by the end, they did get out of sync a bit, but only because the dance was so demanding, in terms of both length and athleticism. The piece ended with all the dancers repeatedly running full speed towards the audience and then crashing into an invisible barrier and being knocked backwards onto the floor - until one woman discovers the chocolate trail set by Ramsden and picks it up, looks at it and smiles at the audience. by Camilo Fontecilla It's good to be reminded that in the real world there are children who are poor and unwanted. How could one forget? Maybe it's because every time a kid appears on the silver screen, his parents make atleast one thousand grand a year. Hillary has got to love this film, Stolen Children Directed by Gianni Amelio; written by Gianni Amelio, Sandro Petraglia and Stefano Rulli; with Enrico Lo Verso, Valentina Scalici, Giuseppe Ieracitano. although an American version certainly doesn't seem possible any time soon. Child prostitution is, undoubtedly, a taboo subject in our (or any other, for that matter) culture, and making a film about it an even touchier issue. That's why we haveForeign cinema to turn the harsher realities of life into art. Isn't it nice to have someone else do the dirty work for you? Well, it pays off because it probably turns out better in the end anyway. Or try watching "Point of no Return." Gianni Amelio claims he steered his film away from moral themes and that he centered it completely on the indi- viduality of the actors. The script was forever evolving, depending on the moods of the leading actors, as well as those of the director himself. Maybe that's why this film feels so intensely personal. It burns right off the screen because every character is acutely real, intoxicatingly so at times. Antonio (Enrico Lo Verso), a young member of the Italian national guard, is assigned the delivery of two children to a foster home in another city. The chil- dren are the hostile Rosetta (Valentina Scalici), 11, and the sultry Luciano (Giuseppe Ieracitano), 10, who are ren- dered homeless after their mother is imprisoned on charges of using Rosetta as a child prostitute. The audience is left with no doubt on the veracity of these RECORDS Continued from page 8 As with her previous Kurt Weill work, the result is often dazzling. Her stripped-down version of Dietrich's "Falling in Love Again," for example, genuinely lets you hear it again for the frst time. Listening to Lemper trans- form these songs, it's actually hard to remember how Dietrich and Piaf did them in the first place. Occasionally, the personality does overwhelm the music, as Lemper tries a little too hard to come up with a com- pletely fresh interpretation. The synth- popped, WNIC-ready versionof"Want to Buy Some Illusions" that closes the disc is especially unwelcome. But for the most part, Lemper's unsentimental, immeasurably seductive performances areworthy. Now ifwecouldonlyseeher inperson ... -Michael John Wilson Southgang Group Therapy Charisma Records Combine the self-gratifying ...-n,,gI of i fl1 n' Rnse with charges. The opening minutes of the film show the nameless mother bribe Luciano to go out and play justbefore a middle aged man arrives at the doorstep asking for Rosetta. Antonio's patience with the chil- dren crumbles as he discovers that their quiet inaccessibility becomes magni- fied by his attempts at friendliness. But he must grin and bear it, for Rosetta will not be accepted at the religious child home due toherscandalous background. The next step is to travel with them all the way to Sicily, where they will be taken in at a home for special children. During their long journey, Antonio slowly builds a relationship with the children that soon exceeds the bounds of his required professional detachment. This plot cries out melodrama. But, sentimentalism is almost painfully ab- sent, and the relationships portrayed here are extremely raw. Sure, there are a few tender moments, but most of the film relies on the glum conditions of the characters to imbue it with a heavy- heartedness strikingly reminiscent of great Italian film in the forties and fif- ties. It is almost documentary-like in its flat realism, but has too much of a personal style to be categorized as'such. Amelio escapes emotional shallow- ness by letting the character's actions, and not their words, be what weaves their bond. It would have been easy to make the helpless Rosetta break down because of her woes, and then have Antonio emerge asa soft-hearted shoul- der to cry on. But it is external factors that precipitate their coming together: the spontaneous visitto Antonio's sister in the town he grew up in, or the day spent at the beach teaching Luciano how to swim. Without trying, they be- come attached to each other more than they ever really wanted to. Following the example of his Italian neo-realist predecessors, Amelio prac- tically pulled his actors off the street. Valentina Scalici demands so much at- tention on screen, it is hard to believe cliche instrumental bridges. Any formularockbandcan getlucky. With their screamy lead singer, kick tom drummer, grungy guitar guy and long hair the guys in Southgang have all the elements needed to be the world's next one hit wonders. However, to ask for more out of them than grungy little riffs and power ballads would be ex- pecting too much. -David Pava Cleveland Orchestra Christoph von Dohnanyi, conductor Mahler: Symphony No. 6 London Records "There is only one Sixth," com- poser Alban Berg reputedly remarked, "notwithstanding the 'Pastorale."'The greatness of Mahler's "Tragic" sym- phony is rarely disputed, but nonethe- less it must be considered as one of the most difficult of all symphonic works. A piece of intense raw emotional power, the sixth tempts conductors to overemphasize the score's drama, of- ten at the expense of the symphony's structural unity. Leonard Bernstein's cataclvmic Vienna recordin ishv far she is merely a child. She has an air of; precocious maturity, exuded through steel eyes and tight lips, that makes the part fit her like a glove. But Lo Verso's attitude stands up to her own, and his fascinatingly exotic looks give him a huge range of expression that helps him slide atease through the immense mood swings he experiences in the film. But one cannot forget Giuseppe Ieracitano; his Luciano is trying so des- perately to cling on to his childhood that blocking out his surroundings seems to' Amelio escapes emotional shallowness by letting the character's actions, and not their words, be what weaves their bond. be the only solution. A blank look car- ries him through the first half of the film, but then he becomes so vivacious it is almost surprising he could ever have been quiet at all. Florence Darel, last seen in Eric Rohmer's "Tale of Springtime," also makes a short but incisive appearance as one of the two French tourists who briefly join Anto- nio and the children in their travels. Amelio's camera seems to be fond oftightperspectives.Inhallways,rooms, roads and train stations, everything is situated at a sharp angle. The same can be said about the film in general. Apart from a couple of soft points, "Stolen Children" is hardly ever uplifting. Like a Greek tragedy, destiny plays a stron- ger part than will power, and for those who expect will to overcome adversity, this may come as quite a jolt. But one cannot shun this film for it. The help- lessness it wraps its audience inis, after all, more than justified by the affecting immediacy of its broken images. STOLEN CHILDREN is playing at the Michigan Theater. piece can be a cohesive, musical sym- phony rather than amaelstrom of seeth- ing emotions. This is not to say that Dohnanyi lacks emotional impact; His perfor- mance of the heart-wrenching Adagio is the most genuinely poignant I know, and without any trace of the saccharine aftertaste common in other recordings. The interpretation allows the symphony to speak naturally and truthfully, and this recording's overall effectiveness is second only to Klaus Tennstedt's tragi- cally out-of-print EMI recording. -Kirk Wetters Atanas Conscience of the City Number Five Atanas wants to be a social com- mentator on the scale of Jackson Browne. Thanks to a surprisingly slick production, Atanas' music nestles com- fortably between Michael Bolton and Marc Coehn instead of Browne or Bob Dylan. With the help of a savvy pro- ducer, Atanas could record a pleasant, accessible album, but "Conscience of the City" isn't it. The smooth yet slight single "Feels Like Love" shouldn't run Write for Smer Arts Sfor informtoon writing for music, fine arts, books, theater or film, carl 763-0379