W The Michigan Daily WeekentIMa $I, 1L.~....~ TL.f. .....,4.-n,, ,'nhupwS_ F1ICMR 48 - The Michigan Daily vveeKen magaine - inursuay, oZ 21 State of the Arts "You know, the times were very turbu- lent - they were also very exciting and sort of vivid," Kasdan (here pic- tured in his yearbook photo from 1970) told the Daily last month. "My college experience was great at Michigan - a great time. And it was a great time to be at Michigan." Coutesy of the Mi,:iganensan Get Involved in the BIG CHILL Continued from Page 2B recognized a change that took place in Ann Arbor during the late 1960s, Beaver said, including a growing openness about sexuality and people's emotional lives. The University's ubiquitous role is crucial to the movie, he said. "You can only see it as a kind of Michigan film," Beaver said. Its University legacy would be even more prominent if one original scene had been included - "a flashback scene that was supposedly taking place in the Oakland Street area," Beaver said. "It would have even more defined this film as the quin- tessential University of Michigan film." Fox was present during the scene's Atlanta filming. She said crew members found a residence that "really did look like an Ann Arbor house," and remembers a nervous Kevin Costner pacing back and forth in an old leather jacket, preparing for a scene that would never be shown. "I still drive by that house sometimes and look at it," Fox said. As a student, Kasdan lived in East Quad and won several Hopwood Awards for his creative writing. Kasdan will speak at the Hopwood ceremony on April 20, 1999, and his wife Meg currently sits on the LSA dean's visiting committee. Barbara Benedek co-wrote the movie's Academy Award-nominated screenplay with Kasdan. She said Kasdan approached her with specific ideas about the movie's storyline following his atten- dance at the funeral of a contemporary. "He knew the scenes and the general framework' said Benedek, who attended New York University. "We got together and we talked for a few days, and talked about anything that interested us and taped the conversation. We had 50 or 60 pages of transcript" They let these conversations sit for about a year, Benedek said, before reunit- ing to write the script. She described writ- ing the movie as an "exhilarating" creative experience, one that remains a high point in her career. Although Roger Rapoport never met Kasdan when he was a student here, Rapoport said the movie encapsulated the generation's experiences. "Obviously, the friendships were the centerpiece of everybody's college expe- rience, probably just as important as the education you get," Rapoport said. "But the backdrop was a little more dramatic, I think, because of the political events of the time. A lot of people felt they had gone through a lot together. I wouldn't call it an accident of timing, but the tim- ing was rather significant." After graduating from the University in 1968, Rapoport co-authored "Is the Library Burning?", a book looking at stu- dent activism. An article Rapoport wrote for The Michigan Daily about the first teach-in of the '60s is included in a recent Library of America anthology of the best reporting of the Vietnam War. Being in Ann Arbor during what he termed "the last big war" shaped Rapoport's perspectives of the world. "You felt like you were an eyewitness in history about all the key things that were going on," he said. "You really were feel- ing the pulse closer as a student." But the changes that came with gradu- ation proved jolting. "This was a group that was very politi- cized and had an exaggerated sense of their potential when they were in col- lege," Kasdan said of the film's charac- ters. "When they went out in the world, they found that it was very difficult." Broder said the issues that drove this group of friends in their youth still linger today. "I can say when we get together, when this group ... gets together, that's still a topic. That's not the only topic, but a lot of our conversations are clearly framed by that shared experience." Some idealism persists in this genera- tion, Benedek said. But, many have lost track of the values that guided them in younger days. Benedek attributed much of this to the demands of parenthood. "I guess I really became chilled," she said. "We're thoroughly chilled. People became parents and their children are now at an age when they could conceiv- ably be rebelling. It makes you evaluate the choices you made" But recently, Fox watched the movie with her 13- and 18-year-old sons, noting that she forgot the prominence of sex and drugs in the film. One son was particular- ly surprised. "He looked at me really hor- rified and said, 'That was your group?"' A couple days later, he came back to Fox, inquisitive and reflective about the '60s idealism. "He felt a real loss. That that was something missing in his life," she said. For all the trauma the accompanied the tumult of the 1960s and the disillusion- ment that followed, Kasdan still remem- bers his experiences fondly. "You know, the times were very turbulent - they were also very exciting and sort of vivid," he said. "My college experience was great at Michigan - a great time. And it was a great time to be at Michigan." And thanks to "The Big Chill," Kasdan's great time - and all the ques- tions that lingered - are immortalized. - Daily Arts Writer Matthew Barrett contributed to this report. On the afternoon of Oct. 15, I opened the New York Times to the Op-Ed page to discover a brilliant piece by Arthur Miller about the causes and effects of the Clinton/Lewinsky fiasco. In his Times contribution, Miller addressed the notion that the recent right-wing witch hunt that has begun in Washington is not unlike the witch trials conducted in the Salem of yesteryear. Recall, if you will, dear reader, the year 1952, when Miller was called before the House Committee on Un-American Activities by Joe "Hands in his Pants" McCarthy to . disclose private and personal details about his political views. While McCarthy was busy stroking his own moral ego, Miller set tactly to work to gain a higher ground. His artistic response to McCarthy's fas- cism resulted in "The Crucible" - a play which not only shoved McCarthy into his own immoral cor- ner, it is one that could have tempt- ed McCarthy's possible hidden desire for Puritan women dressed in black. Imagine a sexually repressed McCarthy leaving the Martin Beck Theater in order to spend a few qual- ity moments by his lonesome in the theater's balcony men's room. Now that's showbiz. In his Op-Ed piece, Miller states: "What is very different now is the public reaction ... Not often does one sinner raise so many so quickly out of their moral slumber." In a country where 60 percent of the male popu- lation engages in extra-mari- tal affairs, the appalled reac- tion of society to Clinton's r r dirty drawers seems morally inconsistent. Christopher TkacZyk But, as Miller Daily Arts Editor explained, the reaction in Salem does not parallel Witch Hunt '98. Congress' seeking of impeach- ment hearings has set this country, back a good 40 years. Not only are the Congressional leaders of this country probing the affair, the public is being strongly influenced by a unanimous media that has plagued Clinton since the beginning accusa- tions. "This did not happen in Salem, where the members of the clergy, who were also the leaders of the community, were strangers to mercy and indeed to common sense, and helped drive the public into a lethal panic," Miller wrote. Based on true events, "The Crucible" tells the story of a single girl whose accusation of a sexual affair with a respected leader of society mounts a mass panic within the small Salem community. Sound familiar? By the closing curtain of "The Crucible," a town is left raped of all moral righteousness. More than a handful of women and one man are dead - all as a result of the doings of one young woman. The moral objective of the citi- zens of Salem is the factor which plagues the need for satisfaction of justice, the same moral belt that has kept Clinton strapped to our public whipping post. It is Miller's belief that our reac- tion to Clinton's hallway shenani- gans and Salem's downfall are a result of unspoken sexual desires. "There is ... a parallel in the sexual element underlying each phenome- - E-Mail Lists LIFE IMITATES ... LIFE? 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