'Wiz' eases on down to A2 By Stephanie Jo Klein Daily TV/New Media Editor When Steve Best was a senior at Lumen Christie High School in Jackson, Mich., the administration of his mostly *te school cancelled plans to put on "The Wiz" for fear of racial problems P occurring. "People were questioning how the community would T judge it, with a white Power Cent cast in a black show," Best said. But what a difference a year makes. qA idst a decidedly heated debate over a irmative action, Best and 25 other actors, both black and white, will take the stage in MUSKET's colorblind pro- duction of the show that made Stephanie Mills famous. "When I heard that MUSKET was doing it, I was so excited" Best, an LSA first-year student, said. "It says some- thing-about the diversity of the campus. It doesn't have to be just a black play ... h 'diversity, any play can be per- ormd." m on' er; "The Wiz;" based on L. Frank Baum's story "The Wonderful Wizard of Oz," tells the same story of Dorothy and Toto wandering through Oz as one remem- bers from the rainbow days of Judy Garland, but it adds a twist. Instead of the countrified setting of Kansas, the yellow brick The Wiz road leads straight ight and Tomorrow at 8, out of the urban Sunday at 2 p.m. ghetto. $7 for students with CD In the tradition- al version, the yel- low brick road leads to Oz. In MUSKET's staging, you won't see any bricks -moving colored lights provide a high-tech effect of the road, which may not even be yellow. The flying monkeys of the Wicked Witch ofthe West become the Funky Monkeys of Evillene, the sassy witch who won't wake up until afternoon. And the munchkins aren't fourth graders - they'll just be played by students who know how to be silly. Director Lauren Miller said "The Wiz" provides an excellent showcase for student ideals. "It's a very young-feeling show," she said. "A lot of what MUSKET is is what U-Prod isn't ... which is very formal. good and solid. MUSKET is much more rebellious. It's like we're gonna d,- because we love theater!' And 'The \ is really conducive to that. It's fun and there's lots of opportunity for dance." The original Broadway cast eased on down the road in 1975, and took seven Tony Awards along with them to the Emerald City. It featured music by Charlie Smalls, including songs like "Ease On Down The Road;" the Tin Mans ode to STP, "Slide Some Oil To Me;" and Emerald City citizens gospel and funk-tinged tune, "Everybody Rejoice;" which was made even more popular when a movie version was made. In the movie, Michael Jackson, Diana Ross and Richard Pryor starred as the Scarecrow, Dorothy and the Wiz, respectively. The cast in MUSKET's version has no major rock stars, like the movie did, but Miller said the cast will keep the audi- ence jumping. "Acoustically, it works in the Power Center," she said. "It's more jazzed up. It's a big rock musical." Dancers use soul and talent to create 'Here' By fLucija Franetovic For the Daily A combination of soul and talent will occur tonight through Sunday at the Betty Pease Studio Theater hen five graduate dance students showcase their W ester's work. Jodie Colone, Stephanie Klaver, Amy Martin, Tim Smofa and Joseph Wojczynski have coupled what they have learned during their university education with the feelings and experiences of their own jives. Their pre- sentations will most surely seduce you with emotion- al power and the fresh, interpretive style of the young, aspiring artists. The dances are generally about struggles and over- coming difficulties together. They are accompanied by mixes of all kinds of music: classical, modern, jazz, oken text and blues, as well as a live musical perfor- mance. The concert opens with a piece by Stephanie Klaver called "Are We There Yet?" It explores the act of arrival and the process of getting places, whether they are physical or emotional. "It uses an improvisational structure and deals with space but it is more P R about how you get to emotional places'" said Klaver. Her later solo deals with the Tongl culture shock from West to East Betty and the temple of life. It centers mainly around the idea of per- sonal space and the differences concerning it in the Western and Eastern U.S. mindframes. Live music finds its way into Jodie Colone's "Songs for Sophia" it is an original composition for piano and flute by Stephanie Kosarin. Other components include vocals, drums, photography, special lighting effects and beautifully textured costumes which support the sensual feel of the piece. "I knew I wanted a piece with a lot of textures, like the feel of wind and water," explained Colone. The second half of the concert opens with Amy Martin's "See (No) Evil;" a piece about rape and vio- lence against women and the denial that goes along with it. It starts with an excerpt from a Sylvia Plath poem: "Now I break up in pieces that fly about like clubs. A wind of such violence will tolerate no bystanding. I must shriek." Five women dance in a whirlwind of energy, chaos and confusion until one is left alone. A theatrical solo by Missy Bischoff follows, her gasps for breath and twitching movements imitating a fearful struggle. "The dance continues to alternate solos and group parts, the dancers 'maintaining deliberate focus as they come Five dancers find a direction in "You Are Here." Cramps take pains to preserve rockabilly sound By Ted Watts Daily Arts Writer Once a band has been around for long enough, you start wondering about the normal ravages of time. Does Bo Diddley wear adult diapers? Do the Rolling Stones _ _ _ greet the day with a ff glass of prune ' ice? The Cramps A have been jonesing .Y around for more than two decades; what does front- man Lux Interior plan on doing when he loses his teeth and gets paunchy? "We can buy new teeth. That's why I'm saving up,' said Interior in a recent interview. YThat time is not yet upon the Cramps, ovever. Seemingly younger than their years, their conservation of an older music has preserved their own attic por- traits. "When we started out it seemed like no one outside of some middle-aged old men; who were collecting rockabilly albums like they were stamp collectors had "any clue what rockabilly was" explained Interior. "It was being forgot- q like a bunch of crap .... I feel we ere responsible for a lot of these (rock- abilly) reissues happening. What some people might call trash culture, we're getting that happening, we're getting people to pay attention to the great things that happened in the beginnings of rock'n'roll ... .I feel we had apart in saving a culture that was being forgot- ten." The Cramps do not merely keep dusty *cords in their attics. The real thrust of T the group is, of course, performance. "When I met Ivy we were finding these great records at a time when rock was getting really boring. It was the whole country rock, which was dull, completely swelled. The way you judged ® _it was by how well the guitar player EVIEWV played or some- rhe Cramps thing like that. We Tonight at 8 realized that '60s Clutch Cargo's bands had got into $15 rhythm and blues, but no one was playing rockabilly, so we got into it." The band's newest modern artifact, "Big Beats from Badsville," has been fairly well received, once again further- ing their curatorial instincts. "We recorded it in the same place we recorded the last album. We got braver and threw out the guy, the engineer and turned the guitars up incredibly loud. That's the big difference on this album, the guitars are louder. We didn't answer any phone calls when we were recording it." Interior expanded upon this secretive urge. "When we record an album, no one from the record company is within a hundred miles. It's funny because peo- ple will say to us, 'Oh, we were afraid of this, or Warner Bros. is afraid of that.' It's too confusing. Somebody says the wrong thing to us, sometimes we can't forget it for two weeks so we're just like 'Stay away.' We're too impressionable:' The Cramps have always had a unique image, based on sex but coming across in a trashy, evil way. "It's a com- pletely natural thing. We don't do much besides be ourselves, we don't even talk about what we're gonna wear or any- thing ... . We get described a lot as being theatrical, but that's just our per- sonalities.' One element of this is the names of band members. You didn't actually think "Lux Interior" was a given name, did you? "We started out before punk rock started and we felt you should have a new name for a new life.... If you're gonna be in a bigger than life rock'n'roll band you need to become something new you have to change your name to Godzilla or something." Under that idea, does being the Cramps make Interior bend over, then? "Yes, occasionally. It did in New Orleans recently... In each city there was just a million beautiful people in love with you. What could be better?" zHouse Everyone interested in the SI master's program is invited to learn about the curriculum, 2 - 3:30 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 3 in 409 West Hall. Please RSVP to (kpalm@umich.edu) or 647-7650. Choosing a career path after graduating from college can be a formidable endeavor. You don't want to commit more years of your life to training, only to end up with an uncertain professional future. Before you choose, make sure you talk to the people at Prudential Securities. The name you know. Rock Solid. And a solid choice when it comes to a Flafieal 1 Advisor Training Program.r Build your future on solid ground. 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