10 - The Michigan Daily - Weekend etc. - Thursday, November 10, 1994 "The Front Page" Wednesday, Nov. 16, 8 p.m. Friday, Nov. 18, 8 p.m-. Saturday, Nov. 19, 2 p.m. "Arms and the Man" Tuesday, Nov. 15, 8 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 17, 8 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 19,.8 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 20, 2 p.m. Tickets $42, $38, $34, $10 students All performances at the Power Center Call 764-2538 'The Front Page' shows the grit, guts, glory of 1928 Shaw was a man up in 'Arms' * ARMS Continued from page 1. not a serious anti-war play." The comedy is not, however, present at the expense of Shaw's phi- losophy. While "Arms" may contain numerous intriguing plot twists and turns, they exist solely to serve Shaw's statements on society. Shaw's plays, while often extraordinarily funny, bit- ingly satirical and casually engaging, are simply vehicles for his own philo- sophical yammerings. "Like any Shaw play, there's not a lot of plot," Mezon conceded. "This is a chance for Shaw to explain what he feels is important about our view of romance and war. "(As he usually does), he's attack- ing false ideals - religion, power, money, war. If (the characters) open their eyes and see what's really real around them, then they can go on living in a constructive way." Being an early Shaw play, the so- cial/moral implications of "Arms" are not too overwhelming for an audi- ence. Compare "Arms" to "Major Barbara," which is a veritable three hours of thick and often repetitive sermons. Despite the turn-of-the-century moralistic tone, Mezon feels that the concept is not too far beyond the reach of a contemporary audience. The message, he feels, still rings true. "That's the reason Shaw is still done so much today. That's the rea- son people are still laughing at Shaw 100 years later," he explained. "Even though we're living on the informa- tion superhighway, we're none the wiser (than they were in Shaw's day)." Mezon is particularly excited about bringing the play to a young crowd. "It's like watching a student audi- ence watch 'Romeo and Juliet.' They love it. It's about young love, about what young people think true love is all about." And whether Bernard Shaw would have liked it or not, you can expect an evening full -of laughter and philo- sophical bytes. FRONT PAGE Continued from page 1 necessarily 1-2-3-4 in that order; sometimes it's 1-2-3-4 but it's all together. It's a little like music - you've just got to let that wash over you," Munro described. As for the tone of the piece, Munro classifies "The Front Page" as a black comedy. "It shows the darker, uglier aspects of ourselves ... and at the same time tries to make us laugh at it. I think by laughing it brings us closer to being aware of the things we do to each other, and I think being aware of it makes us sort of responsible for it," he said. "'The Front Page' wants that un- easy response of laughter and hor- ror." To obtain what Munro calls "that uneasy response," the piece features a host of well-drawn but morally repre- hensible characters and fierce, cruel, politically incorrect language. Many modern productions of "The Front Page" take the liberty of cutting the offensive language, seemingly in an effort to recreate the mood of the period without presenting the audi- ence with any unpleasantries. How- ever, Munro is not shying away from the language. "It's politically incorrect, the lan- guage is quite ferocious. The charac- ters in the play - some of them are racist, some of them are misogynist, some of them are just plain assholes. "But then the thing to remember about vile language is that it always exposes and demeans the people who use it, not the people it's used against ... (The language) is there to show how hard we can fall as human beings when we find ourselves in a society that doesn't care about its individu- als, that is unable to provide any kind of spiritual aid or social condition* that make people want to help each other and have compassion for each other." As for cutting the play, Munro could not imagine doing anything of the kind. "It is so tightly put together ... The dialogue and everything is so tight; it's a kind of diamond structure. You can't get in to play around with it,so you pretty well have to meet itor its own terms," Munro explained. If the dialogue is what makes "The Front Page" so down and dirty, it is also what dates the work. Munro, however, is confident that a 1994 au- dience - especially a college crowd - will receive "The Front Page" for all its grit and glory. "If it's dated I think it's because it still smacks of being politically in, correct ... It's very cruel but it's ver@ funny. "It's been very well-received (at the Festival) because it's not some- thing an audience receives very often. And there's a furious pace which I've tried to put the brakes on a couple of times,just to give everyone a breather before we have to move on again." Fasten your seat belts for "The Front Page," folks. "Hopefull (you'll) have a bit of a rocky ride,' Munro said knowingly. CAN HE MAKE A GENIUS OUT OF YOU? I V SAY THAT LISTENING TO MOZART BEFORE TAKING A TEST CAN ACTUALLY BOOST YOUR SCORE BY EIGHT OR NINE POINTS. NO, THESE AREN'T THOSE UKRAINIAN SCIENTISTS RECENTLY ABDUCTED BY SPACE ALIENS. THEY'RE RESPECTED RESEARCHERS FROM THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT IRVINE, WHO REPORTED THEIR FINDINGS IN THE BRITISH SCIENTIFIC JOURNAL NATURE. CONTROLLED STUDIES FOUND THAT STUDENTS WHO LISTENED TO TEN MINUTES OF MOZART BEFORE TAKING STANDARD IQ TESTS SIGNIFI- CANTLY OUTPERFORMED THOSE WHO LISTENED TO RELAXATION TAPES. YOU'LL FIND AN AMPLE DOSE OF MOZART ON "MOZART MAKES YOU SMARTER." IT FEATURES ELEVEN OF THE COMPOSER'S MOST INTELLECTUALLY - STIMULATING (LITERALLY) MOVEMENTS, PERFORMED BY SOME OF THE WORLD'S GREATEST ORCHESTRAS AND MUSICIANS. SONY CLASStCA. CAMPUS BARBER & BEAUTY SALON *Evening Hours *No appointments [ "Serv I. va3 j .Y i rices for men and women .15% off all products with this ad through Nov. 30 U I, 0 3O4S S tuta Strmmt "*ANdanmrm Soontli ni Libfmwty "9:95-3450 I t I i