s Shor is a success in national 'Fiddler' By MELISSA ROSE BERNARDO Miriam Shor is a lucky woman. A '93 graduate of the Department of The- atre and Drama, she made the big move to the Big Apple in April. She started the audition cycle, and got her first job -in the very first show for which she auditioned. "Of course, I didn't hear right away," she notes. At any rate, she is a member of the chorus of the national tour of "Fiddler on the Roof," now at Detroit's Fisher Theatre. She also un- derstudies Hodel, the second eldest daughter. But still - a job within a measly few months of moving to New York. "I am very lucky to have gotten this job. I know that," she says solemnly. Landing the national tour of "Fiddler" was not in Shor's plans. "I expected to work for a couple of years without getting a job. I thought, I'll pay my dues ... I'll be this bohe- mian actress wannabe. So it really dis- rupted my plans when I got this job." Detroit is the first stop on the tour, the site of the show's world premiere in 1964. From here it will go onto Boston, Philadelphia, Chicago, New Haven and numerous cities in both California and Florida. Shor believes that life on the road is treating her well. "I really like the people in the com- pany, and I haven't seen a lot of the country, so I'm pretty excited to go traveling around and get paid for it." In addition to seeing the country, she is also working with some very gifted actors, including Theodore Bikel, who plays Tevye. "(Bikel) is wonder- ful. I don't really interact with him a lot on stage, but he has a lot of knowledge of the show, obviously since he's done it over 1000 times." She adds, "He's very kind. You can go up and ask him any question you want, and he's very approachable, very personable." Shor also has her own personal ties totheshow. "I'mJewish, soI've known these songs since I was born. 'Sunrise, Sunset,' Sabbath Prayer,' 'Tradition,' they're all songs I've been singing since I was two feet tall," she says. "(Plus) I'm of Russian-Jewish descent, so I feel like I could be playing a distant relatives of mine. The experiences onstage actually happened, so I find them doubly moving," she explains. Shor is convinced that her experi- ence at the University helped her land thisjob, and will continue to help her in the future. "I thought I would be totally unprepared going to New York," she recalls, "But at the auditions I felt fine. I was open to whatever was thrown at me." And strangely enough, she found the auditioning process to be easier in New York than at the University. "(In New York) not everyone knew who you were, and if you didn't make it, it wasn't a huge deal. To go to an audition and hear 'thank you very much' and never hear from them--that's normal in New York." While atthe U,Shor'sperformances encompassed a wide variety of plays, musicals, University productions, stu- dent shows and original musicals -- MUSKET's "Cabaret," the Theatre Department's "As You Like it" and "The Butterfingers' Angel," and David Kirshenbaum's "Better All the Time." Though her degree was in straight theater, Shor's interestinmusicals never abated."Iwas always interested in MT," she says, "and even though I wasn't in the program I still thought I could do it anyway." Obviously, she has proven that. Nevertheless, Shor's first job as a non-student actress has not thwarted her ambitions. She is taking it all in stride. "I don't particularly want to be this huge diva star," she claims. "I just want to make money enough to live and not wait tables ever again. And I don't mind ifI have a lapse and I have to wait tables again. I'm 23 years old; I'm young, I have time. And it's a part of being an actress." Being in New York, she has en- countered "a ton" of actors from the University. "Everyone's working, making money, getting jobs, doing what it is actors and actresses do," she says gratefully. As for all the actors still at the University, she offers some encour- agement. "Go for it. New York seems like a very scary place, but it's like any other place. It's very large. But you'll be fine. "When you audition, go in, have fun and don't second guess yourself. And don't second guess them. Just do your bit, leave the room, and go on to the next audition," she offers. "Just trust yourself." FIDDLER ON THE ROOF plays through October 2 at the Fisher Theater in Detroit. Performances are Tuesday through Sunday, and tickets range from $27.50 to $47.50, with student discounts available for select performances. Call (313)872- 1000. e U alum Miriam Shor ('93) in "Fiddler on the Roof" at the Fisher Theatre Oasis Definitely Maybe Epic/Creation Hailing from the Manchester stock that gave us the Smiths, Oasis' singer *am Gallagher and his guitarist/song writing brother Noel, have nurtured a creative tension that, at its most intense moments, has manifested in fist fights and harsh verbal attacks against each other, a la the Kinks' Davies brothers. Along with their bandmates, they have trashed enough hotel rooms to rank the five-piece up with the likes of Keith Moon. What's more, they have the dacity to proclaim themselves "the w Beatles." So, we know that these rapscallion lads have the aptitude for controversy and the proper arrogance of a band looking to become a mover and shaker in the business, but what about the music? Fortunately, they've got something here. Specifically, ten brash overdriven fdes to love, youth and the excesses of rock 'n' roll stardom, topped off by a cynical but pleasant acoustic ballad about the love-hate nature of relation- ships. Noel Gallagher's lyrics are always straightforward, sometimes clever and hardly ever dull. "I know a girl called Elsa / She's into alka-seltzer I She sniffs it through a cane on a supersonic train / And she makes me laugh / I've got her autograph ..." Liam sneers on "Supersonic," evoking their chief in- fluence and icon John Lennon at the height of his White Album-era surreal- ism. Oasis's sound is as much MC5 as it is the Beatles though, and despite the fact that a good deal of the songs are raucous all-out jams, the album draws merit from its refusal to depreciate into abatch of half-baked riff-rock-every song really is a song, and the enthusi- asm of the young band comes through strong on nearly every track, particu- larly "Rock 'n' Roll Star," "Live For- ever," "Cigarettes and Alcohol" and "Slide Away." Of course, Oasis doesn't cut it as the next Beatles; the five-piece has neither the collective song-writing and vocal abilities nor the multi-instrumen- tal skills and abundance of unmined recording and production techniques ahead of them that the Fab Four did. No sweat though - they have a passion- ate, charismatic vocalist in Liam and a capableguitaristand songwriterinNoel. What's more, the band has a work ethic uncharacteristic of modern music in the past five years: Noel has already written a wealth of new material and Oasis has promised to release a new single every three months. So, while "Definitely Maybe" may notmean what "Meet the Beatles" did in '64, it is an impressive debut from a band that's not likely to be forgotten. - Thomas Crowley Various Artists The Acid Jazz Test Moonshine Music Acid Jazz is a hybridization ofjazz, technosoul and rap, which when mixed together correctly, raises all of the in- cluded musical genres toan unexpected level. Not concerned with pleasing any one musical form, Acid Jazz juxta- poses differing musical genres and cre- ates a music that can be as complex as it is danceable. "The Acid Jazz Test Part I" is a collection that gives a fairly represen- tative view of what American Acid Jazz is. 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