8 - Th Michigan Daily - Monday, March 14, 1994 Bush Women more than dancers. By RONA KOBELL If an audience had to classify Urban Bush Women, most would agree that they are dancers. Yet the dance troupe's performance at the Power Center last Friday proved that Urban Bush Women Power Center March 11, 1994 these talented women do more than just dance. They chant, sing, speak and teach while their agile bodies leap across the stage. The combination of African music and cultural dance generates a theme of slavery in exile and eventual redemption in a land of their own. The dancers begin with boisterous chants about hope for freedom and leaving their Babylon, or exile. When the chants become melancholic croons, the lead dancer begins hunching over in agony, as if she is being worked to death. The talent and versatility of Urban Bush Women create a sense of spirituality in the audience. The initial lethargic movements of the workers subtlely transform into quiet meditative breathing and become loud again with chants of anguish and despair. Throughout the performance, the dancers' bare feet pound of the hard wooden floor as a reminder of the harshness of their labor. The theme changes in the second act, entitled "A Dance ... Batty Moves." Maia Claire Garrison gave a solo performance that demonstrated a rare elasticity of movement and gracefulness. Her body seemed propelled by the drum beats but not dependent of them as she glided across stage with a spiritual energy that was not so obvoius in her first number. The intensity dissipated as the Urban Bush Women launch "Girlfriends," a piece that mimicked the cattiness and arguments of what appeared to be four best friends. The dancers chronicled the friendship in the form of music and dance through loud stomping, clumped gossiping, dramatic crying and finally, boisterous laughter. While drama replaced much of the dancing in this portion of the performanceeach movement seemed carefully chosen and calculated. The energy of the last act synthesized a message with powerful movements. As the dancers trembled, a narrator read a poem about a handsome homeless woman on a busy m street corner in New York. I can see myself in her ... caught in the intersection of reduced resources and reverberating rage." the narrator bellowed. All bodies moved to a syncopated beat with bold strokes, their bare feet creating an eerie echo throughout the room. The dancers moved with an urgency that seemed heavy yet graceful. They were communicating first with each other,@i then with their audience. The Urban Bush Women did not speak their politics with words until the final act. But they did not need to verbalize what their bodies said with a strength of their own. Through their love of African folklore and their connection with the past, the Urban Bush Women touched the audience. -Leonardo DiCaprio, Johnny Depp and Juliette Lewis all search for the answer to "What's Eating Gilbert Grape?" Gilberts noour Chronicling the Holocaust denial By JOHANNA FLIES Family can be a pretty big deal. Do you love your mother, do you hate your mother, do you want to marry your mother? Is your little sister really annoying enough to run over with a truck or is she just trying to find her place in the cosmos? Feeling trapped by obligation while at the same time expressing extreme loyalty and gratitude is a What's Eating Gilbert Grape Wtten by Peter He irected by Lasse Hlaltrom; with Johnny Depp, Leonardo DiCaprio and Juliette Lewis. familiar filial contradiction. The desire to run far away from home while still yearning for the security that comes with certain acceptance and love is the struggle explored in the film "What's Eating Gilbert Grape." Hiding out more than living in a house outside of small town Iowa, the Grape family is slowly tearing itself apart. Routine revolves around 500-pound Momma who tries to dictate her life and her children from the couch on which she permanently sits. Gilbert (Johnny Depp), her eldest son, is forced to take on much of the responsibility for the family, most notably the care of his 18-year-old mentally retarded brother, Arnie (Leonardo DiCaprio). Baby-sitter, playmate and best friend to Arnie, Gilbert's only escape is his affair with a married woman until Becky (Juliette Lewis) comes to town. Becky, a "worldly kind of girl," awakens Gilbert not only to his problems and pain but to his desire for a confidante and sincere love. Though Gilbert and Becky's relationship is important unto itself, it more importantly serves as a catalyst to the examination of Gilbert's place in his family and of the complexity of the Grapes' relationships. Gilbert's affection and devotion to Arnie is ebvious yet it is also clear that Gilbert feels trapped in his r 'e a father figure. By the same token, Gilbert loves his mthcr but knows that her hold on her children is smothcin them. Becky gives Gil bertthe ~Freedom to remove himsel f rm the numbness and reserve which he uses to protect himseV. allowing him to understand the importance ofni.s fami ly. d his struggle. Depp's~ ability lo maintain a studicd steadiness while revealing G ilbert's hel p s ness an d conusion makes this performrwnce one o f his s mngt i.et Giibrt's rages and asions re as o ern s are to relate to. It is, however, DiCapr' pci 1rmane asArnie that deserves the highest praise. He is so convincing in portraying the honest and brutal emotions of the child-like son that he becomes the focus of nearly every scene he is in. His shriekin hugh and hwing cry instinctually make you grin and wine in rspons. .DiCaprio's talent is amazing and unarguably desen ag of the Academy Award for which it was nmin ated The intimacy ol both aald town ie ad personal relationships are we'II explo e in this film while its pace and humor work weli to engage the audience. Whether it be great writing, directmu aUnng or, more likely, a combination of the three, 5Omethin vv has worked to make these characters so real that hcir contradictions are perfectly reasonable and their compiexities absolutely natural. Even Lewis's vibrancy is not overdone and, thankfully, her character does not become Gilbert's sole inspiration. Instead, he and the rest of the Grape family each find resolution and are able to come out of hiding into a bigger world. Their problems do not simply disappear, but they learn, especially Gilbert, not to let those problems eat them alive. WH'ATS EATING GILBERT GRAPE is playing at Showcase. By RONA KOBELL Almost every junior and senior at the University remembers that fateful day when Bradley Smith and His Committee For Open Debate on the Holocaust printed an advertisement denying the Holocaust in the Daily. Many people may even remember the organized protest the following day which mobilized thousands of students to write condemnation letters to the Daily. Faculty and students alike debated the constitutionality of printing such blatant lies, and student editors fielded criticism from human rights groups and Jewish students. Yet in the wake of all the controversy surrounding the ad, few people critically examined Smith's presentation of ideas and his carefully chosen rhetoric. Holocaust denial was never given much credibility, and Smith and his cohorts did not win too many converts. But the ad, which appearedin other college publications across the country, served as a wake up call to the world that Holocaust denial was grooming itself for an intellectual audience and garnering support from university communities. Deborah Lipstadt, professor of religion at Emory University and author of "Denying the Holocaust: the Growing Assault on Truth and Memory," chronicles the history of Holocaust denial and the process by which it has gained legitimacy in America. Lipstadt, an intellectual, fights the new academic rhetoric of deniers with potent choice words of her own in a well-written and timely treatise on Holocaust denial. In the first chapter, Lipstadt answers the question: does writing a scholarly book on Holocaust deniers implicitly legitimize their ideas? Clearly, Lipstadt was reticent to write the book at first. However, she explains that, with such intellectuals as Arthur Butz of Northwestern University and acclaimed French professor Robert Faurisson jumping on the denier's bandwagon, the time had come for a confrontation of the individuals and their ideas. "Those who have not experienced the sting of the Holocaust or the sting of anti-Semitism may find it difficult to understand the vulnerability it endangers in the victim ... This book is, in part, the convey the pain that deniers inflict. In writing it I have often found myself angry with them despite the facts that they live in a strange mental wonderland and that neither they nor the nonsense they spread are worthy of my anger. Although we do not take their conclusions seriously, contradictory as it may sound, we must make their method the subject of study." One of deniers' methods includes calling themselves revisionists, thereby camouflaging the virility of their blatant lies. The term revisionism, connotes a legitimate school of history 6 which began after World War One and would not espouse Holocaust denial. Bradley Smith, Arthur Butz, Robert Faurisson and others "revise"' the story, the players, the numbers of the dead, the testimonies, and even, the confessions of the Nazis indicted at Nuremberg. In fact, Butz reasons, away the problematic detail that Nazis. did confess at Nuremberg and after@ by claiming that they were tortured: and coerced into doing so. While some of Lipstadt's rhetoric; is embroiled in historical details, her; work is easily understood and clearly~ written. Her academic approach does not give the deniers any credence; rather, it shows the intensity of their anti-Semitic beliefs and the racism behind their scholarly masks. For any reader concerned not just with history but with human rights, Lipstadt's "Denying the Holocaust" offers much. DEBORAH LIPSTADT will speak at Hillel's Green Auditorium tonight at 7:30p.m. 'Three Sisters' shows human I By NICOLE BAKER Human nature tends towards perversity. If that is true, then Anton Chekov's play "Three Sisters" is the perfect symbol of the perversity and Three Sisters Ann Arbor Civic Theatre March 10, 1994 irony of human nature. Chekov's dark comedy gives a rather satirical view of people and relationships. The lyrical properties of the production emphasized the conversational twists with in the text. Energetic and humorous, Ann Arbor Civic's production keeps the audience involved, moving through the rich text with smooth efficiency. Trapped in their life in a provincial Russian town after their father's death, the three sisters long for a better life in Moscow. While they never get out, they manage to keep their dreams alive regardless of the circumstances. Olga Sergeyevna (Mary Anne Nemeth) is the oldest sister. As a 28- year-old school teacher she considers herself a spinster, but longs for a family of her own. Nemeth's Olga is well-healed with the stately elegance that she uses to run the family, although she reverts to childish antics. Masha (Kathleen Davis) is the middle sister who is trapped in an unhappy marriage and wishes for love. Davis' Masha is vivacious, sarcastic and utterly enchanting with a mischievous sense of humor. Irma (Leigh-Ann Danner), is the idealistic younger sister. She dreams of working in a meaningful job, only to find drudgery as she goes from job to job. As Irina, Danner is charming and sweet, with little coquettishness. nature's irony Underlying all their own personal- dreams is their desire to return to Moscow. To distract themselves from the realities of life, they spend their time flirting with the regimental officers and avoiding the verbal darts of their overbearing and obnoxious sister-in-law, Natalya. Natalya (Adrianna Buonarroti) is unrefined, vulgar and pushy - the perfect target for the sisters' wit. Buonarroti's Natalya has no sense of etiquette. While denouncing others for indecency and vulgarity, she blatantly carries on an affair. Solyony (Erik Schark) provides the audience with the cynical and dark side of our nature. Observing with detached amusement the antics of those around him, his sardonic sneer hides his feelings. His ironic wit serves to pointout the quirks in human nature while maintaing the cynical facade. Leo McNamara gives a truly stellar performance as the doctor-drunkard- newspaper philosopher who chooses to ignore the world around him. There is a little bit of us in each of these characters that draws us into their lives anddreams. "Three Sisters" is a complex tale of relationships and life, showing how human differences are what make life interesting. THREE SISTERS plays at the Ann Arbor Civic Theatre (2275 Platt Road) through March 26, Thursday through Saturday at 8 p.m. Tickets are $8. Call 971-AACT. EUROPE BY RAIL We speciaize in student and facuty travel to Europe! EURORPASSu 25 5-Day Flexipass EHKUPRUU $188 .. .t~ C1. I I