The Michigan Daily - Friday, February 19, 1999 - 9 Network's 'Private Eyes' offers comical sleuthing ly Lauren Rico )aily Arts Writer Just as lies and deceit convolute the ives of the people which they involve, o this phenomena.occurs in the play Private Eyes." We witness the lection of the lives of four people as the deceit of , two characters spins all four into a web of suspi- Private cion, paranoia EyeS and ultimately, Performance revenge. Network Using the Feb. 12, 1999 premise of a play within a play, this performance suc- ceeds in inter- twining the real lives of the char- acters and the roles that they ake on in their professional careers. With the utterance of "Our biggest egrets begin with the most innocent of topes,' the stage is set for the com- ilexiy that awaits the protagonists. Life is simple until Lisa is cast plite her heartbreakingly innocent Lusband Matthew, in a two-character Having lost the excitement of life, he appears to exist on the brink of bore- dom. And what better way to emanci- pate himself from this unfortunate slump than to indulge in an affair with a younger married woman. He suffers from no scruples at the thought of lift- ing the wife of his co-worker from right out under his nose. Lisa is convincing as a woman who, feeling the loss of the exhilaration in her life, strays from her vows in an attempt to fill the void. But as with most egocentric ventures, hers will leave her more alone than she has ever anticipated. Put these two together and it's a sure bet that they won't spend their time playing bingo. As Adrian bluntly pro- poses an affair, he makes no effort to hide his intentions. "It's better to jump than wade in," he states, but once they've jumped, they can't save them- selves from drowning. The loser in this whirlwind of deceit appears to be Lisa's husband Matthew. Although Matthew is not oblivious to the philandering of his wife, his suspi- cions go unfounded due to his fear that she no longer loves him. He instead finds refuge on the couch of a thera- pist, who guides him to the doorstep of his fears. Although his desire for revenge seems genuine, he finds that he simply cannot bring himself to actu- ally hurt the woman that he loves. His fantasies of vengeance remain dor- mant within the boundaries in which they originated, leaving him to deal with his anguish on his own. One does not know how long the charade would have endured, had some outside force not intervened. Itis like- ly that the affair would have fizzled out, leaving Lisa and Adrian to non- chalantly return to their former lives. But Adrian's past lurks up on him in the form of a private eye by the name of Cory. It appears that Adrian, too, has skeletons in his closet. Terry Heck, hilariously delightful as Cory, pulls double duty in this perfor- mance. We first see her as Cory, the conspiring waitress in Matthew's vengeful fantasies. She turns up again later as the disgruntled, ousted wife of Adrian. Posing as a private eye, Heck is pure entertainment every time she waltzes into each scene with her sassy sleuth get-up and heavily exaggerated accent. She later reveals herself to be the wife that Adrian so keenly forgot to mention. But unlike Matthew, Cory actually fulfills her vows of retaliation. Playwright Steven Diez structured his play in a dichotomic fashion to convey the complexity of the charac- ters and the mess in which they find themselves. Each scene's course of action could be applied to the play, or the actual lives of the characters. This element of surprise is revealed just when the audience believes they have it figured out. Like Matthew, we are in constant. limbo, never knowing the truth until it has already transpired. A scene that finds Lisa and Adrian in bed actually turns out to be Adrian demonstrating to Matthew the way in which a partic- ular scene should be executed. This coexistence on two planes of reality, gives the audience the opportunity to observe art mimicking life. Or is it life mimicking art? "Private Eyes" will continue to run throughout February at Performance Network, 415 W Washington. Dates are Feb. 18-21 and Feb. 25-28. Performances are at 8 p.m. Thursday through Saturday and 2 p.m. on Sunday. Tickets are available by . phone (734) 663-0681. Stephen Angus, John NevsIeAndmws and Peggy JohCambe perfonn In "Private Eyes " sketch. The pair, played by Peggy- theater and drama Prof. John Neville- Johns Campbell, and Stephen Angus, Andrews, who fills the director chair respectively, portray a seemingly con- as the amusingly immoral Adrian. tent, married couple, whose lives are Andrews is devilishly fun as the mid- about to be drastically altered. Both dle-aged director who appears to be actors are cast under the direction of suffering from a mid-life crisis. N4aschina returns to Pig for monthly Ann Arbor gig ly Adlin Rosh aly Arts Writer tashina is a rock band. One of the first hi you will notice about them when you see hem live, however, is that they lack that one hing that people associate highly with rock ands: a guitar player. "One of the things we as a group decided on was that there was just way too many guitar play- ers out there as it is and we . might as well not add to Maschina that epidemic in society;' e Blind Pig jovially explained Maschina's singer Seth Tonight at 9 p.m. "Queen Maschine" Hitsky. "Furthermore, we've kind of developed a self-righteousness about playing rock without a guitar!" Instead, a saxophone is used and the results more than cover for the missing strument in their rock sound. Handling the lec trumpet duties is Mark "Bubbles" ;icbenmann who, " plugs his sax through dif- wrent guitar effects, not unlike what Miles )avis experimented with," Hitsky said. The ;roup is rounded up by bassist, Alana Rocklin nd drummer John Maloney. A listen to the group's "Purple Finger Syndrom" solidifies the success the group has had with instrument line-up as the band still manages to produce a full rocking sound. "We've decided to rise to the challenge of cre- ating a sound with what we have. So far I think we've been pretty successful. We even do cov- ers, such as Black Sabbath's 'War Pigs,' that have gone down really well, which we haven't been able to shake off our set since people real- ly like it," Hitsky explained. Another terrific aspect of the group is the amazingly varied vocal styles utilized in the group's music. "Well, I went to the University for musical theater, and I am sure that the expe- rience from that program has been an enormous influence in how I approach performing and how I approach, sort of like, the theatrical nature of how we have been performing as a group." Hitsky tries to go up on stage as a character and not just going up on stage to do a set. "I've been in rock bands for a long time now. I've been in bands throughout high school, so it's a funny mix of styles from pop music that I was growing up with to voice professors in college. Maschina also boasts of an odd recurring theme around fingers. The group's album is called "Purple Finger Syndrom," they have a song called "Feel My Finger" and the group's production company is called "Fingrrr Records." "Well, the finger is a very useful human appendage. It's got many uses, ranging from the musical things it can do, to beyond," Hitsky said. Maschina started out under a different name, and in the process of jamming and coming up with songs Hitsky had said, "feel my finger," and Alana it should be the title of the song. "'Finger' was actually a candidate for a band name for a while, before we settled on Maschina," Hitsky said. The group was originally an Ann Arbor- based band, but has since relocated to Chicago to expand its opportunities. Despite residing in Chicago now, the group never fails to make an almost monthly appearance in Ann Arbor. "We have a good crowd in Ann Abor. We were all originally students from the School of Music at U of M, " Hitsky said. Not disappointing this routine, the group will be making an appear- ance tonight at the Blind Pig. The only unexplained question remaining is, with its bold '80s Metal font outlining it, what does Maschina mean? "Well, Alana picked it. It used to be the name of this Israeli band in the '80s called 'Maschina,' in Hebrew of course, they were sort of a Nirvana-esque band. They no longer exists! So that's how we've managed to get away with it. Supposedly, in Hebrew, 'Maschina' means 'monster of rock,"' Hitsky explained. Mark Kirshenmann, John Maloney, Seth Hitsky and Alana Bass compse the band Maschina. MIeryl Tankard presents 'Furioso' ly Lauren Rice ly ArsWriter % Hitting the Ann Arbor scene this5 veekend is none other than an import rom the land down under. Meryl ankard's Australian modern dance ompany is making its Ann Arbor debut y a leaps and bounds with its perfor- iance of Furioso. Something exciting is in the air - ot it be the dancers? If you didn't get o ill of cupid last weekend, here's our chance to watch love glide through he air. Although the dancers are posi- oned in aloft the stage, that's where the imilarities with the sappy holiday mas- ot end. Most dance endeavors are entertain- rig. Some have us walking away exhil- rated, and others prefer to explore the speets of life which make us uncom- o e. With its passionate music, and exploration of love as both grati- fying and enslav- ing, Furioso Meryl Tankard accomplishes Australian both. Dance The use of Power Center ropes to suspend Tonight and the dancers, while Tarorrw at 8 unusual, furnish- es the production with a dynamic feeling. As Tankard, choreog- rapher and head of the production, xplains, "Most people have been in tiurtesy oripa ave at one point in their lives, so they Dancers from the Meryl Tankard Australian Dance Company perform "Furloso." an relate. The excitement and passion hat comes with a relationship can also traditional vocabulary as a means of neglected or shortchanged. From the ive way to feelings of entrapment. The explaining her dances. "I prefer not to passionate music, the strength of the op help to express the parallel exis- confine myself to such structured defi- dancers, all the way down to the fabric ° f freedom and confinement." nitions; I like to invent the movements, of the costumes, all the bases are cov- Afthough this may be her first time therefore, I cannot simply say that we ered," Tankard said. etting foot in Ann Arbor, she is no use tap and ballet, because it is a com- In addition to detail, the special tranger to the rest of the world. Having pletely different feeling that you walk touches haven't been forgotten. "The oued extensively, written, acted and away with," Tankard said. Not surpris- costumes which are made of crushed rected, Tankard obviously doesn't sit ing, coming from the woman who has silk, are designed in 18th Century style, till for long. Audiences all around the chosen ropes in favor of convention. giving the dancers a timeless look as vo4d have enthusiastically embraced Tankard credits Furioso's success to they soar through the air." he ompany's diverse style. This may the combination of strong dances and ickets for Meryl TankardAustralian e credited to the fact that she doesn't equality among the elements of the pro- Dance Company's performance of -eat formula and latch onto it. Not duction. "Every aspect of the produc- "Furioso" are $16-$32, and can be IT'S 11:59 ON NEW YEARS EVE. 6 YOU0 ES EHERE YOURIDATEIS? 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