The Michigan Daily - Friday, March 4, 1994 - 9 .Forget £By MELISSA ROSE BERNAR On an anniversary, FTD tell to "say it with flowers." Bu University of Michigan Mu Theatre (MT) program has chos say it with song. flowers celebrate 10 years with Harnick DO s you t the sical en to This season marks the 10th anniversary of the distinguished program, and they will celebrate with the music of Sheldon Harnick, one of the most accomplished lyricist / composers in musical theater history. This Saturday, they present "An Evening With Sheldon Harnick," in which MT students will perform songs by Harnick, with musical director Jerry DePuit at the piano and choreography by Debra Draper. Harnick has spent most of his career paired with composer Jerry Bock, with whom he wrote "Fiorello!," "She Loves Me" and "The Apple Tree," to name a few.Of course, he is most famous for "Fiddler on the Roof." What most people don't know about Harnick is his involvement with the MT program here, which gave birth to this celebratory performance. In the program's 10 years, they have staged two of his works - "Dragons" and "A Wonderful Life," the latter being a world premiere. "(Harnick) came out and worked with the casts, saw all the productions and collaborated with us. They were very exciting times," explained MT program director Brent Wagner, who emcees the evening along with Harnick. "To make a real event out of the 10th year, we thought it would be fun to do a tribute to his work, to include the shows that he has done here - and that would be a great educational opportunity for the students, to meet him and work on his work." This is actually the second such "evening" with Harnick, the first being March 19, 1989, the program's fifth year. That spring was also the aforementioned performance of "Dragons." Wagner has invited all of the program's graduates to attend, and also extended a special invitation to the University of Michigan Friends of Musical Theatre, an Ann Arbor-based donor group. "While (the event) is open to the public and we certainly encourage people to come, we mean it as kind of a special gift for the 'Friends,' who have stood by us in the last 10 years and given their support to the program," Wagner said. The evening will be a combination of discussion and performance. Wagner and Harnick will be seated on stage, and will discuss Harnick's work. As each show is discussed, students will perform song(s) from that show. "(Harnick) will talk about how a song was written, or what he was trying for when he wrote it," Wagner explained. "In the case of 'Fiddler,' a little of its background, or maybe what's happened when he's seen 'Fiddler' around the world. What it's like to have 'She Loves Me' on Broadway right now, 30 years after it first appeared on Broadway and to have it be so successful now." Wagner stressed that not only will the evening be immensely enjoyable listening, it will also be an education for the performers. "It's fabulous for the students to look at the works he wrote... because I think they're very well-written and his work particularly related to lyrics is among the best," he explained. "So I think it gives students insight as to how words are written for songs and how characters are developed." Approximately 75 students will perform - the whole program save a few who had rehearsal conflicts with (ironically enough) the MUSKET production of "Fiddler," which goes up the last weekend in March. Songs from "Fiddler," "She Loves Me," "A Wonderful Life," "Dragons,' "Fiorello!," "The Rothschilds," "The Apple Tree," "Free to Be ... You and Me" and other scattered numbers will be featured. As a special treat - brace yourselves, now - there is a good chance that Harnick himself will perform "If I Were a Rich Man" from "Fiddler." "I talked to him on the phoneearlier this week, and he said he'd be happy to give it a try," Wagner said happily. "He's used to performing his songs for directors or whoever as they were written, so I think if we could give him enough encouragement, he just might do it." Certainly Harnick the writer needs no encouragement. He has to his credit a Pulitzer Prize ("Fiorello!"), two Tonys and two New York Drama Critics Circle Awards (for both "Fiorello!" and "Fiddler"), two Grammys ("She Loves Me," "The Merry Widow") and two Gold records ("Fiddler" and "Free to be ... You and Me"). And as we speak "She Loves Me" is selling out Broadway's Brooks Atkinson theater night after night. So get a comfortable seat, turn the lights down low ("Gently does it, / Try to preserve a romantic atmosphere"), and spend an evening with Sheldon Harnick and his songs. Besides, flowers die, and Harnick's music is seemingly eternal. AN EVENING WITH SHELDON HARNICK will be presented on Saturday at 8 p.m. at Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. General admission tickets are $10 ($6 students) and can be purchased at the League Ticket Office. Call 764- 0450. bond QUALITYDRY CLEANING AND SHIRT SERVICE 332 Maynard St. across from Nickels Arcade 668-6335 Though you may not guess it from this picture, this is Sheldon Harnick, a big-time Broadway lyricist/composer. John Zorn charms Ann Arbor with his unprovisational integrity By PETER MADDEN "That's about as perfect as it gets, but we'll jack you off for about 10 more minutes." John Zorn's fleeting John Zorn's Cobra Michigan Theater March 1, 1994 words upon taking the stage for a second encore at the Michigan Theater on Tuesday night underscore what Cobra is all about. The 11 musicians on stage had not come to Ann Arbor to participate in a masturbatory musical display, as Zorn's self- effacing humor suggests. Rather, the premise of Cobra rests, as Art Lange states in his liner notes to the Cobra CD, on "a social condition which makes of the musicians a community," and Zorn's current ensemble responded majestically. Cobra is a game-theory piece based on a war game of the same name. Zorn functions as "prompter" of the ensemble, utilizing adizzying number of cue cards and body signals to generate the performance. There is no notated music; the players are responsible for the notes and sounds generated. What makes Cobra a truly successful exercise in collective improvisation is that, while the players generate all the musical ideas, Zorn is always in control of the structure. Tuesday's performance consisted of six versions of Cobra and two encores. Zorn compiled a seemingly incompatible array of two guitarists, two percussionists, acellist, aviolinist, an electric harp, an electric bass, a keyboardist, a sampler and a sound effects man. Yet there was method in Zorn's madness. Though earlier pieces suffered from a slight lack of improvisational inspiration, the excellence of the ensemble and the logic'of Zorn's instrumentation became apparent throughout the course of the performance. The scatological squawks and screams of Chris Cochrane's guitar in contrast to the plaintive stagger of Marc Ribot's guitar lines demonstrated Zorn's effective choice of two opposite styles on the same instrument. The inclusion of two traditionally classical instruments provided for some luminous moments of beauty, as well asjarring the audience's preconceived notions of how the cello and violin are "supposed" to function. Cobra, intentionally, has the effect of quelling listener expectation through the hyperactive quality of the pieces. The sudden changes of tempo, style and instrumentation leave no time to savor the moment, because before you knew it a hauntingly beautiful vibraphone solo became a violin being plucked by a toothbrush complemented by sound bytes of the. Looney Toons theme. Some of the most stunning sections of the performance came when musicians formed guerilla squads (complete with green headbands). These trios could ignore Zorn's commands and carry on their own sonic discourse. At one point, a trio of cello, violin and marimba were literally encircled by a musical phrase being passed around the ensemble, musician by musician. Tactics such as these evoked spatial characteristics of the music which were astounding to the audience member. It was difficult not to feel frustrated by the absence of Zorn's alto sax or 'Eercise Room Study Lounge T VLounge Computer Room " LaundryjFaciities 24 hour Attended Lobby Game Room Yleat and'ater Included 1 the lack of featured space given to any one musician, yet it is a tribute to Zorn's artistic integrity that he shuns the fetishization of individual musicians. In turn, he presented Ann Arbor with a unique experience: a truly collective improvisational performance. CHECK OUT OUR LOWIILO'W#IL'OWl MAYmMAY- RATES I r - m m m m m mm-m -- -- -- -, 5th AVE. AT LIBERTY "The Accompanist" PG 761-9700 I "The Snapper" R I "What's Love Got To Do With It" R Call forshowtimes i - BARGAIN MATINEES $3.50 BEFORE 6 PM I - STUDENTS WITH ID $4.00 EVENINGS j ~ FREE 32 oz. DRINK: wihpurchase of a large popcorn ($2.65 valu) LPresent this coupon with purchased ticket thru 33194 The National Theatre of the Deaf presents 0 Universiy Towers Apartments 536 S. Forest Ave. Ann Arbor, MI 48104 761-2680 Dylan Thomas Under Milk Wood University of Michigan School of Music Friday, March 4 Contemporary Directions Ensemble: An All-Sofia Gubaidulina Program " Concerto for Bassoon and Low Strings (Jeffrey Lyman, soloist) " In the Beginning Was Rhythm, for seven percussion " Quasi Hoquetus, for viola, bassoon, and piano Rackham Auditorium, 8 p.m., free Saturday, March 5 An Evening with Sheldon Harnick Celebrating the U-M Musical Theatre Program's 10th anniversary, Tony- and Pulitzer-winning lyricist/composer Sheldon Harnick will share entertaining moments from his career, and students will perform highlights from his shows. Tickets: $10, students $6 (764-0450) Mendelssohn Theatre, 7:30 p.m. Sunday, March 6 Faculty Recital: Siglind Bruhn, piano " Hindemith: Ludus Tonalis " J. S. Bach: Preludes and Fugues from the Well-Tempered Clavier, works from Sinfonias and Inventions Recital Hall, School of Music, 4 p.m., free Monday, March 7 University Choir & Chamber Choir Jerry Blackstone and Theodore Morrison, conductors * Dvorak: Songs of Nature, op. 63 * Nyberg: South African Trilogy The Fifth Annual Pre-Med Students' Symposiurm "Being a Part of the Changing Medical Profession" Featuring Keynote Speaker Dr. Susan Hershberg Adleman Saturday, March 12, 1994 10:00 a.m. - 3:15 p.m. Michigan Union "...... 1L5/tLW 4[!IC".IJL["_i in