S'Mh At Hal the Princess Woweel Even if you think love stinks, you can still go out this Valentine's Day. No sappy pink and red decorations will be found tonight at Rick's, where three very loud, very local, very cool bands will be playing their hearts out. Asha Vida, Godzuki, and Princess Dragon Mom are going to crank out all kinds of crazy noises, and they promise not to play any love Pa, songs. Odors open at 9p.m. and cover is $4. By all means, Tuesday, February 14, 1995 Comedy night brings laughs to all kends Jil By Eugene Bowen Daily Arts Writer With recent, racially-charged is- sues like the firing of the three Black dental workers and the capture of the alleged serial rapist cropping up on this campus and in Ann Arbor, it comes as no surprise that many of the University's Black students have found little to laugh about as of late. But, thanks to the Laugh Track and Viewpoint Lectures divisions of the University Activities Center, Satur- day night saw the spread of a little bit of happiness. It was on this night that stand-up comedian Dave Chappelle graced the stage of the Power Center bring- ing a healthy dose of Def Comedy Jam-like humor to a racially-mixed audience of some 250 people. Chappelle, who played the part of Achoo in the summer '93 flick "Robin Hood: Men in Tights," has been seen on HBO's Def Comedy Jam twice. He also gained a cache of adoring fans when he appeared on the Arsenio Hall Show (before it was canceled, of course) and the David Letterman Show. He was therefore more than ready to fulfill the hopes of a crowd looking for a few laughs. That's exactly whatChappelle gave the crowd, but not before University senior and fellow comic, Horace Sand- ers, warmedthecrowd up with his zany, on-stage antics. His routine included .everything from car troubles to women always being right tofatpeople."There's nothing to be embarrassed about if you're fat," Sanders told the crowd. "I used to be 380 pounds." "Okay," Sand- ers quickly admitted, "I'm lying." Sanders' craziness is already well- known among many on campus. Few comics could relate being shot ii the leg to Grey Poupon commercials and signs from God, but that's what this aspiring law student did SaturdayA. Dave Chapelle Power Center for the Performing Arts February 11, 1995 Sanders' 30 minute-long routine warmed everyone's funny bones, and it was Chappelle's hour-long routine that set them ablaze with laughter. Yet his humor was not solely meant to make people go into hysteria (al- though that happened often). Chappelle joked in a way that made everyone laugh, but also had them thinking ."A terrorist has never taken a Black hostage in the history of the world," Chappelle said, divulging the crowd in a bit of trivia. "You'll never see a Black person reading one of those damn letters on the news; Blacks are poor bargaining chips." Chappelle then began to act out a terrorist calling the White House and telling the U.S. President that he is hobiing some Black people hostage --ionly to get the phone hung up on him. Chappelle was also qui ck to make sure that the audience's white popu- lation didn't think him anti-white. "I like white people. I .like you a lot," he said. "That's whir I feel it's my responsibility to let you know what other Black people are saying about you." He warned w hites of an upcoming Black revolutieon. But he also tried to calm them telling them not to worry even though it's going to happen next week. After a mo- ment of reflection, Chappelle ac- knowledges the impossibility of such a revolt. "If there was a race revolution, Black people would not win. Not if we keep trading in our guns for concert tickets.2' Of course, sex eventutally had to come into Chappelle's apt. He asked embarrassed members of the audi- ence about when they lost their vir- ginity saying, "Don't be shy; we're all friends here. Everything said here stays here." Chappelle, rnow 20, ad- mits that he first had sex at age 12. "But then I went throughaseven-year drought," he said. "I got no sex all through high school. Back then I was the masturbation champ." Neither Sanders' nor Chappelle's routines were shocking orout-of-the- ordinary. Anyone familiar with the structure of Black comedy routines would have felt right at hcune at the Power Center. These two comics' acts were nevertheless fresh. Sanders' lists of stupid questions and his constant "lies" and Chappelle's various im- personations and improv acts added a spice to an already tasty menu of comedy. Both Sanders and Chappelle are powerfully funny comics whose raw- humor flava, mingling in with a re- freshing sense of conscientiousness, took their acts to an entirely different level of humor - a level of humor and honesty that few comics can take their entire audience to. Although the students who sat in the audience are now returning to their everyday lives of classroom drudgery and ever- present racial tensions, at least now they can say that they carry a little bit of humor with them. This sense of humor, while not able to erase the real-life problems specific to Black students on this campus, makes tack- ling those problems a little easier. 'Vanya' walks on the Great White Way Malle's latest movie utilizes theatrical techniques What a pathetic loser dork that Adam Sandler is. 'Billy Madison'. By Prashant Tamaskar falling in Daily Arts Writer teacher, and Although the cast of Saturday Night schemes of Live has boasted several talented per- formers over the last few years, most of them have had far from stellar movie careers. With the exception of Mike Myers andDanaCarveyinthe"Wayne's World" movies, all of the films that the SNL players have acted in have been commercial and critical failures. How- ever, continual failure has not prevented A other SNL members from trying their own silver screen stints, the latest being Althoug Adam Sandler. And althoughSandler's it fits into t new movie "Billy Madison" is rela- and thus, ui tively superior to the aforementioned is true to it disasters, it in itself is a disappointing amusingseq film. the awkwa Sandler plays Billy Madison, the old in sch spoiled 27-year old son of a millionaire scenes are hotel entrepreneur, who got through ball with his school because his father bribed all of he returns t his teachers. Although Mr. Madison attended si would prefer to have Billy run his busi- Speedwago ness when he retires, he considers hand- Unfortui * ing over the position to his top assistant, of these mc the malicious Eric Gordon (Bradley merous mis Whitford). However, Billy strikes up a Toomucho deal with his father that would give him being funny the job, if he completed grades 1-12, by orin some w himselfin 24 weeks. The restof the film characters. deals with Billy going through school, son" rests If no Ms~e me, 'puke too. flunks the love with his third-grade shc d trying to ward off the evil tha f Gordon. It's Billy Madison Directed by Tamra Davis with Adam Sandler t Showcase and Briarwood gh the plot is fairly moronic, he overall tone of the film, nlike so many other movies, self. And there are several quences, mostly dealing with rdness of having a 27 year ool. The funniest of these when Sandler plays dodge s first-grade class, and when to the high school he hasn't nce '84, wearing an REO on t-shirt and a jean jacket. inately, there aren't enough oments to neutralize the nu- serable attempts at humor. )fthe movie relies on Sandler y by talking in astupid voice, way reprising one of his SNL The fact that "Billy Madi- completely on Sandler's funny test oulders is no surprise, considering t he is one of the writers of the film. not a stretch to say that v4h better iting in certain areas, this could have en a fairly decent movie. No other performer in "BWly Madi- n" adds significantly to the film. In- ad, they pretty much pave'the way r Sandler to do his thing. In fact, the ly other actor to provide any supple- :ntary comedy to the movie is Chris rley, who plays a small role. Al- >ugh he doesn't get much notoriety, rley's routines always seem to be sher and more entertairing than ndler's. Yet again, another recent Saturday ght Live cast member has proved it the group belongs solely on TV, dnoton the silver screen. Atk)astthis m isn't based on an actual S1L skit. >wever, as long as the show remains pular, movies starring the cast are vitable. But after watching the epi- des that have aired this season, we uld be finally seeing the end.of SNL -formers earning feature roles. By Sarah Stewart Daily Arts Writer Film has a lot in common with theatre: Among other things, both fields rely on capable actors, writ- ers and directors for their success and both aim to please the audi- ences they are able to attract. None- theless, most filmmakers are not in the habit of staging a play, filming it without adaptation for the big screen and selling it to moviegoers. Louis Malle, the director of "Vanya on 42nd Street," a film based on Andr6 Gregory's stage production of Chekhov's "Uncle Vanya," is the exception - he takes a sizable risk in turning theatre into film but ends up succeeding. Basically, "Vanya" is a run- through of David Mamet's brilliant English adaptation of "Uncle Vanya," sans a real stage, sans any costume changes, sans almost ev- erything except an extraordinary group of actors and an intelligence that avoids making it the equivalent of videotaping your favorite Broad- way production. In the film's open- ing scene, we catch up with the actors on their way to the perfor- mance, follow them into the aban- doned theatre in which they'll per- form and sit in on their mingling and small talk. When the camera focuses in on a conversation be- tween Larry Pine and Phoebe Brand, we think we're still watching the pre-play festivities until the camera subtly rotates to reveal a small group of spectators; the play has started right under our noses. "Uncle Vanya," the play within the movie, is the story of an ex- tended family under one roof. The washed up Professor Serebryakov (George Gaynes) and his young, radiant wife Yelena (Julianne Moore) are at its center, surrounded by a motley crew of miserable friends and relatives, drawn into Yelena's idleness by her magnetic attraction. Everything about this household, including the dynamics of the relationships within it, spell out the frustration of being unable Vanya on 42nd Dircte by Street Directed by Louis Malle with Wallace Shawn amd Julianne Moore At Ann Arbor I & 2 to change one's station in life. Tied down by their misery, the characters are left only to talk while we listen, and listen, and listen, soon realizing that what we're seeing on the screen was originally meant to be seen on stage. Yet it's easy to be completely drawn in by the discus- sions that tackle profoundly deli- cate issues without sacrificing hon- esty. For those viewers who feel that their efforts go unappreciated or long to admit that they're un- happy, Vanya's (Wallace Shawn) confessions and frustrations might verge on therapeutic. Although viewers of "Vanya" will not experience the visual privi- leges of the theatre - the sensation of knowing that they are in the same room with the characters, experi- encing, on some level, a spontane- ity or uniqueness in what's happen- ing in front of them - the superb quality of the acting comes close to hiding the fact that something is lost in the translation from stage to screen. Shawn and Moore, who are both outstanding in their respective roles, are at their best when they're to- gether. At times, Vanya is Yelena's most vocal admirer, giving Shawn an opportunity to play the theatrical part of the fool - in one scene, he's playfully eager to deliver her roses but ends up walking in on her only intimate moment with his rival ad- mirer, the country doctor (Pine). In other instances, his tenderness out- shines the bumbling Shawn of "The Princess Bride," as he strokes Yelena's cheek even when the ten- sion in her face is painfully visible. When she's not moving away from him, Yelena's response to Vanya is most often laughter. And her laughter, as Moore delivers it, contains everything from honest amusement to hysteria to pity. Moore's appearance throughout the film is as striking as the role de- mands, giving the impression of an untouchable, wanting so much to be touched, and making Yelena a sur- prisingly sympathetic character. Watching Moore, Shawn and ev- eryone else in "Vanya," we come as close as we can to watching real people diving so deep into charac- ters that they are able to remain real people. " " r ns. uw. Write for Daily Arts Call 763-0379 for more information MICHIGAN STUDENT ASSEMBLY. WINTER '95 ELECTIONS March 22 & 23 POSmONS AVAILABLE: MSA President & Vice President (Elected together as a slate) 4,::4cN.. ~ *';~' 'A;t . MSA Representatives in: SEIM ANLJM a =IMF m -Imv t=