10 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, December 9, 1994 A welcome 'kiss' of Pinter By SHANE MICHAELS Harold Pinter is alive, on stage and ready to confuse (and sometimes even delight) in the RC Players' "Kisses and Chaos: An Evening With Harold Pinter," continuing for a final two shows this weekend at the Resi- Kisses and Chaos: An Evening with Harold Pinter R.C. Auditorium December 2, 1994 dential College Auditorium at East Quad. The evening is comprised of two one-act plays by Pinter, "The Lover" and "The Dumb Waiter." Both hold true to Pinter's trademarked absurdism which tends to make one laugh and look at your company in bewilderment at the same time. The first play, "The Lover," is a hysterical look into the workings of a dysfunctional marriage. Erin Crowley and James Ingagiola play Sarah and Richard, a couple requiring the use of a peculiar game to maintain a healthy love life. Crowley and Ingagiola attain per- fect chemistry, first confusing the audience into wondering how this quirky and tempestuous couple could possibly hold a loving marriage to- gether, and then forcing the audience into gales of laughter when the reality of the situation is revealed. (Just the entrance of Sarah's lover makes the entire evening worthwhile.) Ingagiola makes for a captivating Richard, initially all too accepting of his wife's unfaithfulness, then slowly but surely revealing his contempt for the situation. Crowley is equally profi- cient, vacillating smoothly back and forth between a typical subservient housewife and flamboyant adulteress. The set, while an adequate back- drop to the scene, is not in any pleas- ing perspective and seemingly hap- hazardly designed. Possibly this is to accentuate the ambiguity of Pinter's script, but more likely it is simply a poor design. After intermission, Sarah and Richard's apartment has been re- placed by three or four tall, white flats, and two beds. The scene is now set (and a little better placed) for "The Dumb Waiter." This Pinter one-act begins in a shroud of ambiguity. The two men interacting on stage, Gus and Ben (played by Nicholas de Abruzzo and Scott Horstein) are equal parts anxiety, apathy and out-right tom foolery. Straying from traditional plot ex- position, Pinter allows for only the most minuscule bits of information for the audience to gather from the characters' interactions. Through this puzzle work, we discover that Gus and Ben are in fact hit-men who are waiting for their next assignment in the kitchen of a restaurant. The entire length of the play is barbed with tiny plot twists that con- fuse and are never fully understood. It is not, in fact, until the very end of the play that characters themselves fully understand what is occurring outside of the kitchen. And of what the char- acters know, the audience knows sig- nificantly less. U U Harold Pinter is at his best in "Kisses and Chaos" and "The Lover," playing this weekend at the RC Auditorium. Like "The Lover," "The Dumb- waiter" displays fine acting from both players. Horstein's Ben is a sufficient straight-man to the whimsical antics of Abruzzo's Gus. The audience was captivated as Gus paced around the stage playing mindless games to pass the time, while Ben sat reading the paper, on the verge of exploding into a rage from his partner's annoying habits. What the acting makes interest- ing, the script weighs down in its long and arduous haul towards a fuzzy conclusion. The audience began to grow restless as the plot became too repetitive and frustratingly mysteri- ous. But right when one would be ready to lose interest in the gangsters' strife altogether, Pinter pulls the car- pet out, leaving the audience ques- tioning their previous conclusions and attempting to decipher the play's fi- nal moments. If there is anything that one can be sure of when the house lights come up at the end (and with absurdism like Pinter's, there's never much to be sure of), it's that Harold Pinter wants his audience to question reality - to question what are perceived as facts and to realize that truth is hard to come by and less so what we think it should be. The only other certainty of the evening is that one has witnessed some truly quality acting, and while absurdist comedy can be frustrating, it can also take you for quite a ride. KISSES AND CHAOSAN EVENING WITH HAROLD PINTER will be performed tonight and Saturday at 8 p.m. in the Residential College Auditorium in East Quad. Tickets are $5 ($3 students). Call 213-1758. University of Michigan School of Music Thursday-Saturday, December 8-10 Dance and Related Arts Concert Betty Pease Studio Theater, 8p.m. Tickets: $5 (763-5460) Thursday-Sunday, December 8-11 The Three Sisters, by Anton Chekhov Theatre and Drama Production; John Russell Brown, director Trueblood Theatre, Frieze Building Thurs.-Sat., 8 p.m.; Sun., 2 p.m. Tickets: $12, students $6 (764-0450) Friday, December 9 Symphony Band and Concert Band H. Robert Reynolds, Gary Lewis, Dennis Glocke, conductors; Deborah Chodacki, clarinet " Olivier Messiaen: Ascension for brass " Leslie Bassett: Fantasy for clarinet and wind ensemble " Music of Holst, Barber, Hailstorck, and Wagner Hill Auditorium, 8 p.m., free Classic Cabaret Joan Morris's class in cabaret performance offers an hour-plus of entertainment: old jokes, new skits, and songs old and new 2528 Frieze Building (corner of State and Washington), 11 p.m. Saturday, December 10 Arts Chorale Jonathan Hirsh, conductor " Britten's A Ceremony of Carols and Schiitz's Christmas Oratorio " Works by Scheine, Hand, Praetorius Hill Auditorium, 8 p.m., free Classic Cabaret Joan Morris's students offer jokes, skits, and songs old and new 2528 Frieze Building (corner of State and Washington), II p.m. Sunday, December 11 Michigan Chamber Players School of Music faculty perform: " David Baker: Sonata for Tuba and String Quartet (Fritz Kaenzig, tuba, with Stephen Shipps, Andrew Jennings, Yizhak Schotten, Sarah Cleveland) " Poulenc: Trio for Piano, Oboe, and Bassoon (Louis Nagel, Harry Sargous, Richard Beene) " Bartok: Sonata for Two Pianos and Percussion (Katherine Collier, Anton Nel, piano; Michael Udow, Paul Harkins, percussion) Recital Hall, School of Music, 4 p.m., free Campus Band Damien Crutcher, conductor Hill Auditorium, 4 p.m., free Brass Ensembles Charles Daval, director Recital Hall, School of Music, 7 p.m., free Tuesday, December 13 University Orchestras and Chamber Choir: Mozart Requiem Donald Schleicher, Theodore Morrison, conductors * Mozart: Overture to Don Giovanni * R. Strauss: Don Juan " Mozart: Requiem Hill Auditorium, 8 p.min., free Dance Composition Classes Showing Betty Pease Studio Theatre, Dance Building, 2:30 p.m. Wednesday, December 14 Centennial Organ Recital Faculty and students celebrate 100 years to the day since the dedication of the University's revered Frieze Memorial Organ * Welcoming remarks by Marilyn Mason, University Organist, and nmmn tn n TLM'c nriprinal ran by Prf TamPe o Wikie Butt Trumpet Primitive Enema Chrysalis Records How in the hell did this happen? One of the least self-indulgent, most obnoxious punk rock bands gets snatched up by amajor label, no doubt as part of the Green Day/Offspring explosion that's sweeping the nation, and the band laughs it all off. Not that the whole idea isn't one big joke - how any exec at Chrysalis could see dollar signs in the shapeof five crude, unpolished punks who play raw, three- chord rock, less civilized than the Ramones, could garner a whole "Un- solved Mysteries" episode for itself. And Butt Trumpet no doubt real- izes the joke, but Butt Trumpet fails on any level to entertain with their slop'n' roll and lyrics like "Wanna be decapitated/Thinking's way too com- plicated / It just makes me irritated / Do you have something serrated" (from "Decapitated"). Vaguely chuckalicious but very low on the humor food chain. Although I have to admit that it's been awhile since I've heard as good a song about killing hippies as "I Left My Gun In San Francisco," Butt Trumpet is merely the Dead Milkmen of the '90s. - Matt Carlson Method Man Tical Def Jam Recordings Horror-core is here. Arguably the first rapper with fangs, Method Man's first solo album "Tical" is ajourney into the rap underworld. Method Man shows that the lyrical versatility that he dem- onstrated with the Wu-Tang Clan was no mistake. Method Man is not the first wayward Shaolin monk - both Rza and Genius have also undertaken out- side projects - but Method Man's album shows why he is the best known of the Wu-Tang Clan. Each song is imbued with equal parts of hilarity and horror. Method Man's lyrics tread the line between seriousness and sarcasm, making his album almost self-ironic. Method Man, though, does not resort to idle boasting; the audience is shown a more caring side of this rapper that was never seen when he was with the Wu-Tang Clan. The album starts with a hilarious and fitting kung fu exchange that reso- nates true to all of the watchers of Saturday morning kung fu classics. The single "Bring the Pain" is true Method Man, recalling back to his earlier solo track with Wu-Tang Clan. Lyrics like "I'll tear yer eyelids off and feed ya sleeping pills" highlight the hyperbolic mixture of violence and humor that Methodman favors. "What the Blood Clot" is another hard-hitting track with an original background perfectly fitting Method Man's free-style rapping. Because most of the tracks are made by Rza, the album often sounds very much like Wu-Tang Clan, but that is a positive. After seeing so many rappers leave behind their group efforts and flailing in their solo ef- forts, it is reassuring to see Method Man produce such an excellent al- bum. He truly proves that there is a "Method" to his madness. - Ben Ewy The Dude of Life and Phish Crimes of the Mind Elektra Grateful Dead spin-off band Phish have teamed up with Phish spin-off "The Dude of Life" for the spin-off album of the year. Well, not really. It's sort of like "90210" and "Melrose Place." The original show had a good idea, and the spin-off took that con- cept and turned it into something evil, "Crimes of the Mind" features a very restrained Phish backing the Dude of Life as he pretends to be Trey Anastasio at a higher pitch. There are no tripped-out instrumentals here. Just short songs with bad vocals. Granted, the Dude gets points for versatility. He demonstrates his tal- ent for bad '80s rock wailing on "The Revolution's Over," and then moves right into his bad '80s rock ballad "King of Nothing." The smooth de livery of such lyrics as "I am the king" of nothing / The emperor of empti- ness," are almost enough to make you cry. Almost. "Lucy in the Subway" puts a spin on the Beatles' "Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds." "Lucy's in the subway with daffodils / she lost all her dia- monds / and she sold all her pills,", sings the Dude in an attempt to dragi even pillars of rock history like the Beatles down with him. The high point of the album is the piggy-backing of the songs "Family Picture" and "Self." The former is a "can't we all just live peacefully to gether on this earth?" plea. "It's really plain and easy to see / The family grows like a fungus on a tree / There's always room for more / In this family bash," the Dude of Life wails. "Self," however, features the lyr- ics, "This is not the era of roses, peace and love / I must admit I'm the only, one / that I'm thinking of." Wow, feel. the torment of confusion. Basically, "Crimes of the Mind" stripped away everything that was good about Phish's playing and set it See RECORDS, Page 11 .. . . . . . . . . . : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -: ; : : : } : .} " : - : : :I } } . ." : ' 1 'Y r " :r .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... ... ... .... ... ... .... ... ... .... ... ... .... ... ... .... ... .... ... ... .... ... .... ... ... ....... .... ... ... ;"":.,I:i .l~ :::::::::...::::............ . . {:i .. . .. . .. . .. . ..''.. .. . Io r {4 1 Save o itres f~ Method Man Daid~vft AfW IPRWADN 1 Coffee a CappU "m. 1:30 6:45 SUNDAY IS FAMILY DAY 2 ADULTAmD 2 CHILDREN oNL r $5.00 r'.. _ . I &W A i ALL. A.*f - I I