Is 'Sound of Music' still sweet, By MELISSA ROSE BERNARDO The hills are alive with the sound of ... Marie Osmond? Yes, Marie is the latest in the trend of '70s pop stars hitting the stage, and is headlining the national tour of "The Sound of Music," playing Detroit's Fisher Theatre The Sound of Music Fisher Theatre March 10, 1994 through March 27. And much to everyone's chagrin, the perky country- pop star brings a little life to the old Rodgers and Hammerstein musical, making it bearable and even at times quite enjoyable. It is a syrupy story, undoubtedly Rodgers and Hammerstein's most tearful musical. And it has more depth than "Chokelahoma" and "South Pathetic," the other old-fashioned American-as-apple-pie musicals for which the pair is famous. You know the songs - "My Favorite Things," the title song, "Climb Every Mountain," "DoReMi," "Edelweiss," - and you'll want to sing along (just like the woman behind me did). Maria Rainer (Osmond) is a Postulant at the Nonnberg Abbey with a penchant for song. And she's too fond of climbing mountains. But the Mother Abbess (Claudia Cummings) looks on her fondly, and not wanting her to rush into a life of poverty, chastity and obedience, sends her to be a governess for the von Trapp family. Captain von Trapp (Laurence Guittard) runs his house like amilitary base, and Maria dubs it her challenge to bring music into the lives and hearts of the seven children. The Captain is (conveniently) a widower, and Maria unconsciously brings something else into his heart. Basing it on the real-life story of the Trapp Family Singers, the love/ family motif is underscored and threatened by the historical period. The Nazis have invaded Austria, and the von Trapps will not comply. Eventually they are forced into exile. Most people's most vivid memories of "The Sound of Music" are of the Academy Award-winning film version (five of them, including Picture), starring the effervescent Julie Andrews. But it all began as a stage musical, with the airy Mary Martin, and won seven Tony Awards. Osmond lacks the lightness of Andrews and Martin, but endows the role of the Austrian nun-turned- governess with a certain earthy charm. Her youthful face is picture-perfect: vitality dances behind her dark eyes, and when she smiles, sparks fly. She does marvelously with the songs considering her limited vocal range - most notably "The Lonely Goatherd" and "My Favorite Things - but her approach needs some fine tuning. She hits too many notes too hard, especially when two notes are more than a third apart; she needs to ease into those jumps rather than attacking them. Her acting suggests training at the Soap Opera Institute of Technology. Osmond's Maria always appears to be on the verge of some colossal emotional breakdown. She has a lovely speaking voice, and it is a shame to hear it quiver with such melodrama. This overacting only works in one scene - when the Mother Abbess orders a frightened Maria to confront her feelings for the Captain -and is obtrusive elsewhere. But Osmond is at her best when she is with the kids. And after all, the little darlings are the focus of the show. (Rodgers and Hammerstein are renowned for their habit of creating drama by bringing in hoards of children.) Her Maria clicks with the seven kids quite well,and her maternal instincts come flooding out. For what little he does actually sing, Laurence Guittard sings the Baron well; his "Edelweiss" was particularly nice. But one must wonder where his British accent came from because: number one, no one else in the show has an accent and number two, he's Austrian. The kids are as good as they can be expected to be. Vanessa Dorman is a lovely Liesl, and makes the most of "Sixteen Going on Seventeen" with an equally charming Rolf (Richard H. Blake). And Lisbeth Zelle will steal your heart as little Gretl. syrupy Getting back to the grown-ups, John Tillotson steals the show as the kooky Max, the eternal uncle who never hesitates to invite himself into the von Trapp household, especially for meals. Claudia Cummings does thejob with "Climb Every Mountain," though her operatic training detracts from the sheer drama of the song. The sets are about par for a road tour- better than your middle school production but nowhere near as spectacular as they could be. The interior of the von Trapp household was nicely done save the peach-mint- gold color combination. And the show could do without the painted background. When the family braves the mountains in the end, with the nuns reprising "Climb Every Mountain," it is supposed to be awe- inspiring. But when you see that they're climbing a painted backdrop, it loses something. The production is rather stiffly directed by the lyricist's son, James Hammerstein. He needs to give a little bit more freedom to all the actors - especially Osmond andGuittard, who seem stifled by their characterizations and therefore have little chemistry. Once you get past the initial shock of seeing Osmond's name on the marquee (and that horrid picture of her and her guitar on the front of the playbill), the show will charm its way into your heart. It's not a fabulous show, or by any means a fabulous production; it's just ... sweet. 0 Marie Osmond stars in "The Sound of Music." But don't let that scare you. T1HE SOUND OF MUSIC plays- Boulevard, Detroit). Tickets range through March 27 at the Fisher from $25 to $47.50. For specific Theatre (301] West Grand days and times. call 872-1000. 'Naked' forces viewers to take closer look at life By SARAH STEWART Film is fantasy, to some directors. But not to director, Mike Leigh. "Naked," his newest film, is realism Written and directed by Mike Leigh; with David Thewlis, Katrin Cartlidge and Lesley Sharp. at its best, showing life at its worst. It forces its viewers to look twice at everything, including themselves. The characters of "Naked" imply that everybody has something to hide and that even Johnny (David Thewlis), the central character, might be someone you know. Johnny's from Manchester, and the first thing he does when he gets to London is look up Louise (Lesley Sharp), a former girlfriend. He needs a shave and a shower but fits in quite well with the dark, witch-like appearance of Sophie (Katrin Cartlidge), Louise's roommate who entertains him until Louise returns from work. When Louise returns, she asks why he's in London, is denied an answer and spends the rest of the evening alone in her room while Johnny and Sophie get to know one another with the help of Johnny's fondness for sadism. The next day, Sophie becomes too much for Johnny to stand. In a masterful scene, Leigh shows a pathetically obsessed Sophie traipsing close behind Johnny, back and forth between two rooms; his frustration seems justified, and he finally storms out of the house. After these initial introductions, the dynamics of the film remain basically the same throughout, as Johnny travels the streets of London, imposing himself on almost anyone he happens to meet. At this point, any semblance of a plot has been abandoned. But there's obviously no room for plot in this long spout of philosophical spewing, sexual perversion and Johnny's bait of comical niceness. In fact, that bait is what keeps "Naked" fully-clothed. In many scenes, the audience falls into believing that this time won't be as cruel as the last. Some of the most probing dialogue comes from scenes between Johnny and Brian, a future- loving building security guard, but then it all crumbles when Johnny and the oft-admired woman in the building across from Brian's provide a peep- show for the unsuspecting guard. Thewlis does a superb job maintaining all aspects of Johnny complex character and comes to embody the nursery rhyme favorite, "When she was good she was very, very good, but when she was bad she was horrid." Thewlis is just as good at humorously reciting Johnny's beloved trivial "facts" as he is at displaying the cruel, perverted side of this occasionally nice guy. Nothing in "Naked" is pretty, as Leigh exploits the extreme unattractiveness of the characters with close-ups and places them in equally tormented settings. The sex is brutal and wholly unromantic, and in the context of a somewhat random subplot involving Sophie and Jeremy (Greg Cruttwell), their landlord, it is disgusting; it is even more than Sophie likes and provides a backwards reality check for those who had forgotten, in the course of the film, that not all relationships thrive on violence. Amidst the visual unpleasantries is Johnny's preoccupation with the end of the world but almost no clue to what such deep thought has to do with the scum-infested parade on screen. It's up to the audience to figure things out, and like it or not, "Naked"'s truths are unavoidable. NAKDi showing at the Ann Arbor & 2. We Make the Road by Walking Myles Horton and Paulo Freire Temple University Press It's a long way from Recife, Brazil to Brazil, Tennessee. Thepeople seem far away from each other culturally, spiritually and physically. And while there is not road that connects the two towns, two men have connected themselves by constructing their own thoroughfare to each other. "We Made the Road by Walking" is the story of two educators who came together to "speak" a book. Paulo Freire of Brazil and Myles Horton of Tennessee draw strength from their differences in character and respect each other's radical ideas on education. The book they speak in turn speaks to its readers, delivering a message of empowerment so potent that it cannot be ignored. The power of this book lies in its technique. Horton and Freire, after hearing of each other's ideas through conferences on education and readings, speak to each other with such candor and respect that the reader wants to hear more from both men. A third party mediates their discussion and directs questions toward both men to give the book a focus. While the ideas are deeply rooted in social change and theory, the book is in no way an academic treatise on how to save the world. Instead, it is an inspiring account of two men and how they mobilized to aid their own communities through empowerment. Myles Horton was born the son of a poor mountaineer in the foothills of Tennessee. As a child, he read voraciously until he no longer could find books. "I was always getting in trouble for reading in school," Horton recalls, drawing on his own personal What other computers will run tomorrow ry a P'P ' ,: .d: < ~ 4 S experience to critique the dogmatic approach of education. Horton shows that children are not taught to want to learn to read, write and think critically. Withoutproper stimulation, theyoung students of today will be lost. Myles Horton wanted to change the destitute situation ofhis neighbors, who lived in extreme poverty and received little help from the federal government. However, he did not want to hand them anything. The improvement of the community had to come from the community itself, Horton believed. In 1929, Horton established the Highlander Folk School in Monteagle, Tennessee to educate community leaders on their own problems and to help them find their own solutions and methods of solving them. The Highlander School became the only place in the South where Blacks and whites could sit together and discuss their differences and problems. Horton brought together the leaders of the civil rights movement, the labor union movement, the anti-nuclear movement, and other movements under one roof to discuss community-based solutions and collective grassroots action. All the staff at Highlander took risks simply in teaching, and the Highlander school was padlocked for a time on charged of exhibiting communist tendencies. While Horton was working in the South, Paulo Freire was mobilizing the population of Brazil. Born to middle class parents in Recife, Freire was educated at a prestigious school and lived better than his working- class friends. Yet he still experienced hunger, poverty and despair during tough times. Freire eventually made a career for himself as a renowned educator and became a politician. In certain circles, his politics had rendered him persona non grata in Brazil. When the government was ousted, however, he was exiled from his home indefinitely. Freire had to work on changing the situation in Brazil through his writing, from outside the country and the community. His theories on education were outlined in several books, including the famous "Pedagogy of the Oppressed," Like Horton, he believes that change must come from within the people's hearts because they are the only ones who understand their own suffering. The conversations illustrate the compassion and humility of both educators better than an auto- biography could, since it is the interaction between the two that really clarifies the ideas and communicates the personalities. The book is inspiring P~ot er Ucwunow, 810, ,8 Aowe M acintosh W0116,6 Power Macintosh runs today I I ni iY~ ur~r~v 'FMT-1U ~~-r i ~ ~r~ . i r-u i ~.i ,v i- r~zIi fa-I w~a~..lalu i~ lamZ~aY,! ~id Z I I I Itrrwi LIU A&1I1 I.IzIm r Einn aitgh h ir aintnsh chmnut*E* ~ers witha PnwarPG. I IFILFUUUI;lll! I-UVVCI IVIOtAIRU3II. tIlC 111 4 MOLr111LVZ3,11 4V111F.1ULCI..-1. Yv/lI1.I-VVV I il i q I PowerPC" technology is changing the face of personal computing. And so are Power Macintosh" computers-the first members of the Apple' Macintosh family to include PowerPC microprocessors. Power Macintosh computers deliver the raw processing speed once reserved for network servers and high-end workstations-making them ideally suited for graphics, Apple AV technologies, and computation-intensive applications. They also work with System 7" software, so Macintosh users can get going right away with no additional training. With Power Macintosh you can run your current applications without changing a thing. Just double-click and go. And with SoftWindows software. vou can run DOS and Windows applications. as well. But that's just the beginning. There are dozens of Power Macintosh applications designed to take full advantage of the RISC technology built into every PowerPC chip-and developers are writing still more. And right now you can choose from three Power Macintosh computers-the affordably priced Power Macintosh 6100/60, the mainstream 7100/66, or the 8100/80, our most powerful Macintosh ever. Of course, the PowerPC advantage won't be limited to just Power Macintosh computers. Apple is bringing out PowerPC upgrades for many of its most popular Macintosh computers. So stop in today and see the future of computing Power Macintosh. The future is here. INTENSIVE FOUR- AND EIGHT-WEEK RESIDENT SUMMER INSTITUTES FOR ADVANCED LEVEL BACCALAUREATE, POST-BACCALAUREATE, AND GRADUATE STUDENTS, AND RETURNING ADULTS Chicago's Studio 1994 Study at a renowned arts institution in the heart of Chicago in: painting and drawing, computer imaging and animation, video, art history, photography. and filmmaking. rat~r_,n a i /or nn-- 1 7 0U1 U1Am t