"Wild Strawberries" Is playing at Michigan Theater. Ingmar Bergman's 1963 film analyzes a lonely professor's flashbacks to his past. Swedish with English subtitles. 4:10 p.m. Lru I Read Breaking Records for a review of Sleater-Kinney's latest release, "The Hot Rock." Monday February 22, 1999 Pilm critic Siskel dies at age 53 Los Angeles Times CHICAGO - Gene Siskel, who along with partner Roger Ebert brought film criticism to the masses with their weekly television program and ingeniously concise thumbs-up, thumbs-down rat- ing system, died Saturday at the age of 53. Wondly referred to by fans as "the skinny one" to distinguish him from his portly cohort Ebert, Siskel underwent surgery in May to remove a growth from his brain, but quickly returned to the syndicated "Siskel & Ebert at the Movies" TV show and to his four other jobs, as film critic for the Chicago Tribune, TV Guide, "CBS This Morning" and WBBM-TV in Chicago. Then, earlier this month, he announced he was taking time off to rest and further recuperate from 4 surgery. But, in characteristically sly humor, predicted a swift return: "I'm in a hurry to get well because I don't want Roger to get more screen time than I. Also, this experience will give me a chance to work out my left thumb - the stunt double." He died at Evanston Hospital, north of Chicago, surrounded by his family. "Gene was a lifelong friend, and our profession- al competition only strengthened that bond," Ebert said in a statement. "He showed great bravery in the months after his surgery, continuing to work as g as he could. As a critic, he was passionate and exacting. As a husband and a father, his love knew no bounds A native of Chicago, Siskel earned his bache- lor's degree at Yale University in 1967 and returned home and began writing for the Tribune Derided by some students of film as easy, pop criticism, Siskel once defended the program as "the distillation between the two of us of 39 years of writing about movies." Genteel, but with a cutting sarcasm, the balding, wiry Siskel was as outspoken and opinionated about movie-makers as he was about movies. He criticized the Oscars as overrated awards, suggesting Academy Award nominations were for sale to the filmmaker with the biggest advertising budget. He suggested film critics were more qualified to pick Oscar nominees than members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. After all, he said, the critics have seen all the movies. In 1995, he took on anti-Hollywood politicos, lambasting then-presidential candidate Bob Dole for a major speech Dole had delivered in Los Angeles accusing Hollywood and music labels of marketing "nightmares of depravity" and "main- streaming deviancy" "No one on Planet Earth has knocked American movies more than me - 52 weeks a year, 26 years," he said. "I wish movies were better - more than you. You go to one movie a month, I go to six a week." But, he said, Dole was practicing disingenuous politics when he blamed movies for serious cultur- al problems. "When it diverts the national agenda from the real problems, when the same person is saying 'Cancel the violent movies but let's make sure we have plenty of assault weapons' - that's sinful, isn't it?" Siskel is survived by his wife and three children. Mose Allison plays the blues the way they were meant to be played. Alli*son brngs". back old style of blues Gene Siskel was well-known for his film reviews. in 1969. He first hooked up with Ebert, film crit- ic for the rival Chicago Sun-Times, in 1975 on the public television program "Sneak Previews." In 1982, their program went into syndication, and the two began joyfully bickering and bluster- ing their way to fame, at the same time largely molding popular movie criticism, moving the once-esoteric genre from the arts pages of news- papers into millions of living rooms . Cirque' melds story with physical magic WAdlin Rosli Daily Arts Writer Cirque Ingenieux is a rare specialty for those who enjoy theater performances. The show is one that seamlessly melds a storyline with amazing physical circus-like performers. These include two muscle bound men who balance on each other in positions that defy gravity, contortionists and a tailor character who seems to be taunted and befriended by usually Cirque Ingenieux Center for the Performing Arts Feb. 23-28 inanimate objects. Jason McPherson, the actor/performer who plays the tailor, took some time to talk to The MIchigan Daily about his character and the plot that ties the show together. "In the beginning of the show my char- acter is the tailor in the real cir- cus, an eighteenth-century cir- cus. He's the clown character in the show. He's a dysfunctional character who makes costumes for everybody and he makes friends with the main character, a girl who is fascinated with the tinely helps each other improve a lot. "The cast was picked from performers from Russia, Mongolia, Poland and Canada to name a few. Neil Goldberg, the mastermind behind this whole show, was looking for more oddity things, people who have been doing cir- cus acts which have been done for hundreds of years but with a twist to them. "I was basically working on these routines where I would animate objects and they would come to life on me. One of these is a coat which I animate and it becomes a character in the show which constantly boss- es me around, a very dominant and tyrant character. Another one is a bug character and he's a dysfunction- al little thing. You kind of have to see it, he has to hold his face together basically, if he doesn't do it just right his face falls off and he has to try to put it back on" He then continued, "I did the tour basically to learn and when you have these incredible hand balancers from Poland, watching them every night and also get- ting to work with them during warm ups (teaches you.) Everybody supports and coaches everybody else. My handstands have improved immensely from hanging out with these guys, my flexibility has improved with help from the contortionists. These are people with incredible movement and dance ability, (something) which is a big part of clowning. From last year's tour and this year's tour I can really feel myself progress just working with this cast of 22 talents." In the tradition of great comic characters, McPherson shared that portraying a clown-like char- acter is not an easy task. "It's a challenge for me. My job is to stand out in front of the audience and make them laugh for the next few minutes. It is the balance of creating a routine as well as playing your charac- ter. In this show there is no fourth wall. (This is) circus. Later on in the show things change, the little girl falls into a fantasy world and all the characters that she meets in the circus come back much more fantastic. And that's when they start doing their rou- tine in the real style of the sho, which is more fantas- tic and dreamlike. The images are much stronger and it really takes off in the imagination." The show consists of an international cast of per- ers proficient in unconventional roles - a cast ich McPherson said gets along very well and rou- Jawbreaker' borrows from o. By Bryan Lark Daily Arts Writer Teen comedies of late have been so focused on channeling John Hughes * other composers of pitch-perfect Jawbreaker At Showcase '80s angst go unrecognized. "Jawbreaker," the debut come- dy from writer- director Darren Stein, takes the road less trav- eled by invoking the unsung, twisted bril- as realism - how could it be, taking place at a high school named for Ronald Reagan? Beyond its setting, the premise itself is absurd, as the director likely intended. "The Flawless Four," as the film's ultra-trendy and impeccably- groomed Heathers are called, gener- ally rule Reagan High, neglecting class and judging the lower ranks, while choosing not to eat in the cafe- teria, as they might be judged on something as superficial as the food they eat. The girls' extracurricular activities include pulling elaborate pranks for birthdays, but their fun goes awry when the target of their faux-kidnap- ping scheme gets asphyxiated by an enormous version of the titular candy. A cover-up ensues but also goes haywire when wallflower Fern Mayo (Judy Greer) happens upon Courtney (Rose McGowan), Julie (Rebecca Gayheart) and Marcie (Julie Benz) nonchalantly prepping the corpse for imminent discovery. But instead of silencing Fern for r good, they keep her quiet 1 her what has been the c plot device of many a te - a total makeover. At that point, "Jawbrea undergoes a makeover, sh a sharp-tongued, if deriva get-away-with-murder st schizophrenic messc romance, ribald sex humo ous meditation on the horr school politics. But if high school popu ever a bitch, her name McGowan, an effervesc anti-Barbie as the Courtney Shayne. Rebecca Gayheart, wh4 be the Noxzema girl, als strong impression as th Julie, the sugar to Courtr spice. Sadly, these lovely I largely all the film has t the other performances ar Stein's predictable script, too obviously borroN "Carrie," "Clueless"a "Rebel Without A Cause." Worthy influences Courtesy of Cirque Ingenieux Jason McPherson puts on an impromptu magic show for Ekaterina Fedosseeva. unlike other theater shows where there's a fourth wall, where people are doing their play of their story and the audience is just looking at it and not being totally involved. This show is different. Speaking not only about my act but all the other acts, there is no fourth wall. There's a definite energy between us and the audience. That's the circus aspect of the show where a symbiotic relationship exists between us and the audience." Id teen flms by offering "Jawbreaker" still cannot rise above alling-card its inevitable debt to "Heathers," en comedy despite the welcome infusion of some '50s style and sensibility, in ker" itself the capri pants, cardigans, drive-in ifting from movies and diners that populate the ative, let's- film. atire to a This style, however, is the rare bit of gushy of inspiration in "Jawbreaker," which r and seri- also strikes comic gold with the cast- ors of high ing of Pam Grier as impossibly tough and impossibly named Detective larity were Vera Cruz. e is Rose Mainly, though, "Jawbreaker" ently evil looks to "Heathers" for inspiration. to-die-for Still, Stein could have chosen a much worse movie to idolize, mak- o'll always ing "Jawbreaker" at least passable. o makes a But before Stein makes another e regretful film, he should be reminded that ney's scary even "Heathers" genius Lehmann can make mistakes - he made ladies are "Hudson Hawk," after all. BJohn Uhl For the Daily Around the turn of the century, a new sound was being developed in the region of the Mississippi River delta. Spread by itinerant African Americans who wandered through small towns making a living by playing this music in local juke joints, this sound is now called the blues. As African Americans moved in great numbers northward and to larger cities, this music moved with them. In its new urban environment, the music developed a more solid structure and stronger sense of melody. It also found its way into the evolution of America's other unique musical cre- ation, jazz. This past weekend, with the help of bassist Dan Kolton and drummer Tom Brown, the pianist/singer/composer Mose Allison related his 72 years of life experiences to Bird of Paradise audi- ences through his interpretations of this music. Born in Mississippi, Allison encompasses the ideas of the original blues masters, who hailed from his neighborhood, into his own work. This was evident Friday, as he played numer- ous songs written by Southern blues legends Robert Lockwood, Buddy Johnson and Willie Dixon. Allison, who began his professional career play- ing with jazz greats like Stan Getz, Zoot Sims and Bob Brookmeyer, showed the more sophisticated side of his music through complicated piano solos and constant interaction with the other two members of his trio. Allison reeled off about 20 songs. during the hour-long show. Quick, to- the-point renditions were subtly fused together in a seamless assemblage of tunes. Occasionally during song shifts he gave a brief explanation of the origin of the last or next piece, but would never stop playing as he spoke. This business-like attitude asked the audi- ence to consider the music as a whole, rather than the individual segments that made up the set. For many jazz musicians, the blues is a preset chord progression, a structure .Midterms getting you down? Quit all your Classes and just write for Daily Arts. For more information, call 763-0379 and ask for less or Chris. upon which to base improvisation and a starting point for individual expression (although, depending on the musician, the blues can mean much more). This holds true for Allison, whose solos depended upon building an intensity and complexity over a simple back- ground. In one particularly fine instance, he began by circling lithe eighth-note patterns into a sort of fren- zy. Layering a series of repeated tremo- los and rich chords upon this mix, he built the solo into a foreboding thun- derstorm. Yet, just as the rising left- hand block chords implied some kind of resolution or climax, he backed away from the summit and started building again. This brand of weaving tension characterized the whole show, as Allison moved from a speedy technical piece, through a bluesier stomp, to a lolling swinger and back. Most people know the cathartic nature of the blues. It allows a musician to exercise his frustrations, confusions, and joys through the manner of song. Allison does not have a technically articulate voice, but one that swings soothingly with a distinctive and approachable quality. As he sang con- fessions of lost love, newfound love, confusion, sorrow, pride, survival and worldly knowledge, the audience could listen and laugh with a discerning sym- pathy. A large part of this is the honesty of the blues, and specifically the sincer- ity of Allison's renditions. "Not your hoochie coochie man, not your seventh son," he sang in reference to two Willie Dixon tunes, one of which he had played earlier in the evening, "just another middle class white boy, out tryin' to have some fun." Allison was not born into the type of impover- ished life that many associate with the classic blues stories. Nor does his music follow directly in the tradition of Willie Dixon, Robert Johnson or Bessie Smith who lived these stories. But his ability to cleverly poke fun at his non- traditional blues background illustrates the quick wit and intelligence that make Allison's blues his own. GRADUATING STUDENTS Consider a lucrative career in commercial real estate sales. We're a local company, looking to hire a self-starting, business- oriented graduate with a good sense of humor. I have 32 years in real estate, yet keep an open, mind and respect for the abili- ties and opinions of younger agents. Sound interesting? Call Gary or visit our web site. Gary Lillie & Associates ! Realtors 663-6694 www.garyIi11ie.com fiance of Lehmann, cre- ator of "Heathers." And like its predecessor, "Jawbreaker" gives audiences a taste of the glamorous and often murder- ous lives of a high school clique, but, crossing the line into mediocre davation, is ultimately too bland for apposedly black comedy and more. than a little hard to swallow. 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