1OA - The Michigan Daily - Monday, January 11, 1999 Dutch film deftly handles shaky topic There's no song business like Bernadette's sultry business By Ed Shoflasky Daily Film Editor Have you ever looked at your family and thought that they were dysfunctional? Ever wondered if there could possibly be a family more screwed up than your own? Welcome to the world of "The Celebration." This ironically titled Dutch drama, like the sexual scandal of this past fall's "Happiness," focuses on the 60th birthday party of the family patriarch Helge (Henning Moritzen). What seems like what's going to be a festive occasion turns into an utter disaster when the oldest son, Christian (Ulrich Thonisen), reveals a long hidden family secret. His revelation about his father's treatment of him and his dead twin sister sets the three remaining siblings against each other. The hip, violent and adul- terous Michael (Thomas Bolarsen) and the loner sister The Celebration At The Michigan Theater with an A f r i c a n American boyfriend, H e 1 e n e (Paprika Steen), feel the need to choose sides with either their father or Christian. Compound- ing this is the fact that the waitstaff has stolen the work, but also the use of a hand- held camera. While this approach might seem amateurish at first, it brings a great deal of personality to the film. Like "The Celebration" itself, the camera work is unstable and jarring. The brilliant use of the simplistic approach gives the audience the feeling that they are actually attending the party them- selves. As such, it gives them the uncomfortable feelings that the guests themselves are feeling. In addition to the main story revolving around the party, "The Celebration" has a lot of backsto- ry that develops the characters to the point where you can under- stand their behavior during the party and the additional stresses beyond Christian's revelation. Michael is initially barred from the party because of his alco- holism and his extramarital affairs. To show his stability, he brings his wife Mette (Helle Dolleris) and his three kids. This doesn't stop him, however, from abusing his wife psychologically and beating a former lover, who happens to be a waitress at his father's hotel where the party is taking place. Helene too has substance abuse problems and a laundry list of neuroses. She is the only person in the room that knows whether or not Christian is telling the truth during his speeches, a secret she's unwilling to reveal. Beyond his behavior at the party, Christian is having roman- tic troubles. His love life is in shambles, mostly because of his inablitity to let his emotional attachment to waitress Pia (Trine Dyrholm) flourish. It's these intracies that make "The Celebration" so incredibly fascinating. Nevertheless, "The Celebration" isn't an easy movie to watch. In fact, it's incredibly painful to watch at times. This is not a film for the easily offended, the weak of heart or those with a delicate constitution. If you can't tolerate difficult sub- ject matter, stay far away from this film. If you can, however, "The Celebration" is an incredi- bly rewarding cinematic experi- ence. The Washington Post NEW YORK - Bernadette Peters arrives alone at the chrome-fancy restaurant bar, her 5-foot-2 presence announced by the familiar bouquet of ringlets atop her head. Her expectant smile brightens considerably at the sight of a friend who's showed up to surprise her. Nothing in her manner suggests she's somebody spe- cial, but here on this island and in various other outposts of the civilized world she is just that: Perhaps the the- ater's most gifted diva of the last quarter-century. Her voice can thrill you, envelop you and break your heart, sometimes in the space of a single song, and the very mention of her credits - a variable lot highlighted by "Sunday in the Park With George," "Song and Dance" and "Into the Woods" - can quicken the pulse of almost any theater lover. She's just back from Staten Island, of all places, where she spent the afternoon posing with a horse for Vanity Fair. A horse? Of course. After an absence of five years, Peters is returning to the theater with a full-scale, reconceived revival of "Annie Get Your Gun" that is generating a good bit of buzz here and elsewhere. After all, the star musical, a time-honored genre on Broadway, has become something of a rarity in this era of ensemble megashows. She'll test her spurs at the Kennedy Center in Washington, where "Annie" opened Thursday night. True, there has been minor carping that at 50, Peters is a little, well, senior for the part of the brazen young Annie Oakley. But not too much carping. After all, the show's original star, Ethel Merman, revived it success- fully when she was eight years older. And if she lives to be 100, Peters will never be as old as Merman was at 58. Playwright Arthur Laurents has observed that the quality Peters is "experienced innocence." She can be sexy or sultry or coy, but she's never vulgar - and never false. In person, too, she seems the wise child, and the smooth white skin and fetching underbite do nothing to dispel the notion. Ask her about the roles she's played and she casts her eyes skyward and purses her lips around a large, pensive ummmmmm before speaking about them. (Although she's unfailingly cooperative, there's a sense that she'd rather be working than talking about it.) The youthful image comes up in any discussion of her, whether it's besotted fans or critics, who have dis- played a monotonous tendency over the years to com- pare her with a kewpie doll. Still, by age 50, isn't that flattering? "There's nothing I can do, reading about it, about what people's perceptions are," Peters says pleasantly. "There are other things about me besides looking kewpie-doll- ish." She thinks about it. "I'd like people to see me as a woman now, but it depends on the role you're playing." Thirteen years ago, The New York Times wrote of her, "As an actress, singer, comedienne and all-around warming presence, she has no peer in the musical theater right now." Her colleagues are no less effusive. "She's my fave - I adore her," says James Lapine, who directed and wrote the books for "Sunday" and "Into the Woods." "She's a loving, generous person, and car keys of the party guests, pre- venting them from leaving so that Christian can expose his father in front of all his friends. Like the aforementioned "Happiness," "The Celebration" is a film that gets under your skin. "The Celebration" is much more effective in this respect, though, because it's a drama, not a satire like "Happiness." Further unstabling the audi- ence and the picture itself is the Dogma 95 guidelines under which uncredited director Thomas Vinterberg works. Their rules call for not only the director not being credited for his or her Courtesy of Tne Washington rost Bernadette Peters is still shootin' strong. I think it comes through in her performances as well." Stephen Sondheim, who wrote the scores for those shows, concurs. "Like very few others, she sings and acts at the same time," he says. "Most performers act and then sing. Bernadette is flawless as far as I'm con- cerned." She got a lot of jobs, but most of her early shows were unsuccessful. Probably her best moments came in "Mack and Mabel" (1974), in which she portrayed the drug-addicted silent film star Mabel Normand opposite the great Robert Preston. But a strong score and fine per- formances couldn't counteract the otherwise lousy reviews and downbeat story, in which Normand dies of an overdose. The show folded after 66 performances. It would be 10 years before Peters was seen again on a Broadway stage. "I think those were the dark years of New York and of theater, she says. "I think those were the years when there weren't a lot of shows being done. I figured I had to go to L.A. to make more of a name for myself." When she finally did return to Broadway in 1984, it was in perhaps her greatest role: Dot, the mistress of Georges Seurat (Mandy Patinkin) in the dazzling "Sunday in the Park." The show won the Pulitzer Prize, and Peters' radiant performance captivated both critics and the public. She followed that up the next year with Andrew Lloyd Webber's unconventional "Song and Dance," in which she was alone onstage throughout Act I in the role of a young Englishwoman who moves to New York and undergoes various romantic traumas. Though the show didn't thrill critics, it ran, and she took the Tony Award. "'Song and Dance' presented an onerous workload- an adventure that I'd go through every night,' she calls it. "People would say, 'How many songs do you sing in the show?"' she recalls. "I don't know. I don't count them. I'd rather just go out and do it." She laughs. "Try to do it." Sondheim and Lapine's "Into the Woods," an explo- ration of fairy tales, brought her back in 1987 in the role of the Witch. She had some magical moments, particu- larly when she delivered the beautiful and touching "Children Will Listen."It's become one of her standards. Fifty-year-old voices might be expected to be a little on the downward slide. But Sondheim, with whom on* doesn't argue, says, "I think her voice is getting better as she gets older." And from the evidence, he's right. On recent recordings her high notes have grown 'surer, the sound more supple overall. Which makes it all the more ironic that Peters has done so little theater lately. Why couldn't this woman get a job? Lapine puts it best: "What role can you think of that she might have played that's been on the boards?" he asks. "There are just not musicals that are star-driven. And I don't think Bernadette wanted to do just any thing." When asked whether there is any show of the last 30 years that she wishes she'd gotten a crack at, Peters gives another of those small ummmmmmms, and the face scrunches just a bit as it comes to rest on her palm. Suddenly she brightens. "I'll tell you what I'm really glad I gotta do," she says helpfully. "My concerts." They've been mightily successful, those concerts - "Sondheim, etc.," a widely acclaimed Carnegie Hall benefit, is preserved on CD, and a taped London reprise. will air on PBS next spring. And she has said they're now her favorite projects. Of course, she hasn't reallyW answered the question. But this appears to be the way her mind works. She can't control what shows she's offered or the size of her roles or the impressions of people who go to see them. And most especially, the fact that if she'd been born 30 or 40 years earlier she'd probably have been a rather busier Broadway baby. If it's out of her control, she tries not to worry about it. "My years in the theater, the successful years;" she muses, slipping into the past tense, "ended up being 'Sunday in the Park,'"'Song and Dance,'"Into the Woods - I didn't have a successful show until then." She breaks into laughter. "I thought every show closed!" She'll play Annie for "a year, if all goes well;" she says. If not, there are other shows, as well as the concert stage. The discussion turns again to her voice and the strange and wonderful changes that are taking place in it. Peters acknowledges all that but seems more comfort- able discussing other singers, women who are lighting the way for her. "Lena Horne was doing her concert at 65," she point out. And then there's the "amazing" Barbara Cook, who recently made a triumphant return to Carnegie Hall at 71. "I mean, my voice may lose some of its luster" Peters says, sounding not terribly disturbed at the prospect. "But look what I can look forward to, you know? Hopefully, I can keep on singing." I j( 4 k >~ Q~ ~42~'N N\ ~ z&~ ~~§~KV f5'l IA ,i i I I (not in credit cards) 4 Introducing the American Express® Credit Card for Students. Live for today. Build for tomorrow. The American Express Credit Card for Students is a resource you can depend on. 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