8 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, January 14, 2000 Uber-actor Macy conveys boy-scout appeal- Bebe Miller brings her company of dancers to the Power Center this weekend. miller aCe o. hts ower entr By Jennifer Gates Fr the Daily How do we call ourselves?" Answering her own question, Bebe Miller's first, most obvious answer would more than likely be, "dancer and choreographer." Having re-estab- lished her dance roots while a student in a Merce Cunningham master class at Ohio State University more than 25 years ago, Bebe Miller has since gone on to create 47 works and a company of her own. Her string of awards includes two "Bessie" New York Dance and P e r f Perform ance ebe Millet Awards and a Company Guggenheim Power Center Fellowship. The Bebe SJanuar y 15 at 8 Miller Company is coming to Ann Arbor for the first time in 10 years. This performance of "Going to the Wall" and "Rhythm Studies" promises to explore through movement what Miller sees as "thoughts of how we are as individuals.' The ensemble work "Going to the Wall" began with an "idea of race; as an African-American directing a white company, that (race) was on my mind," Miller said. "I wondered, what do they really feel about this situation? As we progressed I'd like to think we were stripping away more of the artifices and superficial- ity. I wanted to debunk the dancer myth and come to a real dialogue." In addition to creating the choreog- raphy that touches on such private, yet communal subjects as "sexuality, personality and history," Bebe Miller also wrote original text for the piece that is combined with music by Don Byron, The Fugees and Nonchalant. "You know," she said, "You dance with your dancers and you sweat with them and they lift you and you lift them and you don't know if they believe in God! Once we find out that we are all different, to a certain extent it's very freeing ... we get to rough places. and then go beyond them" Miller claims to be "always in ser- vice to an idea." For "Rhythm Studies," the idea was dance as "memoir." For Miller's first solo in t0 years, Miller said she asked her- self, "How did I get to be there ? And I kept coming back to rhythm, to beat, as how I chart myself. Later on in my career, I got much father away from the beat" By creating her auto- biographical solo "Rhythm Studies," Miller said she was, "coming around to rhythm again, to a full circle - no, no, there is no full circle, maybe a spiral." Without a doubt, Miller is an explorer, although she hesitates to say that her works are all about iden- tity, fearful that they will then "sound like a sociology experiment." She is, after all, a dancer. Aside from movement as a way to explore "how we call ourselves," Miller likes dance for the simple reason that when watching dancers move, "We hear their breath and see their sweat and they can see us ... we rehearse in perimeters so we can live in a moment." There will be a free public inter- view with Bebe Miller and a show- ing of her film "Three" at the University Dance Building tonight at 7 p.m. Events related to the perfor- mance also include a free public lec- ture Saturday at 7 p.m. in the League Koessler Library on "Identity and Process in Bebe Miller's Choreography." Tie Los Angeles Tunes When William H. Macy's friends come over to his house, they play... cha- rades. It's one of those inside Hollywood secrets. Pals like Helen Hunt and Hank Azaria, Kristen Johnston from "3rd Rock From the Sun," high-powered executives like Jamie Tarses, who until recently ran ABC's entertainment divi- sion, her brother, writer Matt Tarses, director Jon Turteltaub - Macy has them all playing charades. "It's so completely queer, we love it," he says, leaning back in a chair at his dining-room table and turning bright red with mirth. "Turteltaub, he's a god." Unhip? Extremely. But at Macy's modest Spanish-style house just off Melrose Avenue, nobody gives a good goldam. Among actors and directors, the man is venerated asa master of his craft. "Everybody wants to say they knew Bill Macy before everybody else did. That's a testament to how cool he is," says Paul Thomas Anderson, the writer- director of Macy's latest film, "Magnolia" "He's very simple. I mean that as a huge compliment. Very direct. He doesn't have a lot of sugar, flour and cherries on top of it.... He is so (exple- tive) reliable. It's very comforting to see him in a movie. Every time he comes up, he's(expletive) Bill Macy and he's gonna rock the house." And in the past few years, he's been rocking the house pretty often, usually and most potently as the loser, the odd- ball, the dork. He was a bumbling car salesman who put a hit out on his wife in "Fargo," a performance that got him an Oscar nomination three years ago. Last year he was an anti-hero in "Mystery Men" and a lonely gay sheriff in "Happy, Texas." And now, in "Magnolia," which opened Friday, he's whiz-kid-turned- failed-adult Donnie Smith. Macy has had seasonal gigs on "ER" as Dr. David Morgenstern and now does guest spots on "Sports Night." He's a sta- ple in anything David Mamet creates, from "American Buffalo" to "Oleanna." Basically, he pops up everywhere and is reliably riveting. So when some actor Macy has never met comes over, "They'll say, 'I'm sooo in awe of your work,"' he says. Then he suddenly thrusts his face in your direc- tion, the massive blond eyebrows go up, the cheeks puff out and his eyes have a glint of Howdy Doody: "Ten minutes later, they're screaming, 'Be specific! What are you, stupid?"' Pause. A big, goofy grin. That's charades for you. "You go insane" He has renovated much of this house with his own hands, tiled the kitchen, vaulted the living-room ceiling, redesigned the bathroom, installed the picture windows that look out onto the vine-covered back yard. ie seems so impossibly un- Hollywood. The phone rings. He answers it, basso profundo: "Macy here" He says corny things like "I'm hip to that." He'll say "That's jive, man." He refers to his wife, Felicity Huffminan (best known as tough-as-nails producer Dana Whitaker on "Sports Night") as "the cat's pajamas." Truly. Until four years ago when his career got too crazy, Macy was a scoutmaster. Aha! we think. All of this is starting to make sense. "I like Boy Scouts," he says, utterly disarmingly. Who in this cynical town would confess to such a thing? "I love the idea of 'Be Prepared.' If you have to have a slogan, isn't that grand?" "One of the rules of acting is never cop an attitude about a character," he explains. "You must do the character's bidding all the time. You can't say he's a loser. Or he's evil. There's never been someone who thought of himself as evil. Even despots thought they were doing the right thing. "Oh, and never give up," he contin- ues. "You can't ever give up. It's always compelling to watch someone who won't give up." Even when the viewer knows the char- acter's effort is utterly futile, as with 'Lundegaard, falling ever forward toward disaster? Or the gay sheriff in "Happy, Texas," in love with a straight criminal? Or the lovelorn Donnie Smith, a lost cause if there ever was one? "Look," says Macy, warming to his topic. "An actor's job is to create calm, stasis. A writer's job is to create disorder. The writer is constantly throwing traps, little disasters" He grabs a script that happens to be sitting at one end of the table. He explains: A good writer gives an actor just what he needs and no more. Most scripts don't do that. "I read these scripts, and it just drives me to dis- traction," he says. "They torture us with this garbage." He reads a lengthy intro- duction about some man driving home in a neighborhood where the women drive Mercedeses and the men are relegated to driving Volvos. And he reads, whining: " '(Camera) Angles of Volvos, no, not new Range Rovers and Mercedeses these are the mules and drones on their way to work and on their way home'" Snoooore. "You know what the shot is? A car pulling into a driveway. I cannot drive that car in such a way that it's clear that my wife is driving a Mercedes. I can only drive into the parking spot. The audience wants to know one thing and one thing only: What Happens Next? Tell me a story" But surely an actor like Macy spends a lot of time on preparation, on back- story, on the character's inner life? Uh, not necessarily. "The demands on a person when they're acting are: Speak up, remember your lines that's a huge thing and you have to hit your mark," he says. "That's not a big thing, but it takes up one more bit of your attention. You take the direc- tor's notes; that's one more small piece of your mind. Then you've gotta put all the attention you have left on the other person (in your scene) in order to get them to do what M ,. t {, y°. x '. ..salt.,;. :. . .. ., William H. Macy stars as Quiz Kid Donnie Smith in RT. Anderson's 'Magnolia:' i 1 s i 4 'c 1 j i i a e 1 i { I t i t t 1 1 t t ' t you want them to do." That's it? And real acting just comes out? "You cannot stop it," Macy insists. Macy's wandering childhood prepared him well for the role of observer. He was born in Miami and lived in Georgia untilhe was 9. His father, an insurance salesman, a failed contractor and a deco- rated World War Ii bomber pilot, then took the family to Cumberland, Md. He began acting in high school but decided to study to become a veterinari- an at Bethany College in West Virginia. It was the'n60s; he transferredto Goddard College, an alternative-style school in. Vermont, where he met professor and playwright David Mamet, who became his mentorcollaborator and promoter. Eventually, Macy became Mamet's teaching assistant and a willing vessel for the playwright's terse, talky, psycho- logically bruising style. By the 1970s, Mamet had moved to Chicago, and he, Macy and actor Steven Schachter formed the St. Nicholas Theatre Company, stagingcontemporary plays and some of Mamet's works. Mamet created the central role in "American Buffalo" an arrogant loafer who plans a robbery for Macy. It was Mamet's incendiary "Oleanna" in 1992 and Macy's portrayal of a pro- fessor falsely accused by a female stu- dent of sexual harassment that got many people talking. "The play made the audi- ence so angry (that) they would yell at the stage, they would yell at each other they would just yell;' recalls Macy. In Boston a man stormed out of the theater in mid-play, shouting, "My God! My God! It's inhuman!" Mamet was in the house and wrapped his arms around the man to calm him down. Macy mar- veled at the response: "He was so enraged by the play, this guy almost burst into flames." Though Macy had some success in television in Los Angeles, he finally tired of the hackneyed guest roles he was offered and stopped taking them. He began to find more mainstream charac- ters, on "ER;" in "Mr. Holland's Opus," co-writing television murder mysteries such as "Above Suspicion" in 1995. But after "Fargo," his life changed dramatically. The press called. He shot his mouth off. He called friends toa ogize. Oops. But he's been working like a madmn since. In 1997, he was in "AirPFp One, "Wag the Dog" and "B' kie Nights" The next year, he was in "Pleasantville," and he co-wrote and starred in the TNT movie "A Slight Cae of Murder" playing opposite Huffman, who finally married him two years ago. (They had dated for years, then broke-up for five "I was miserable every mina" and he finally gave her a ring an . wiggle room.) Is he exhausted? Well, he has' been working too much, finishing a film on Friday and starting another on. -n Monday. "Too many times, the only thing that's gotten me through is skhegr talent;' he confesses, and he isn't brt- ging. "I've always had 18 balls in the air, but I need to watch the bottom line. Do better work. I want to see my wife'. Brrring. Brrrring. "Macy here." Te actor picks up the portable phone in the kitchen that he tiled, then crumples in half onto the counter as he listen's. "Mmm-hmmm. Oh, (expletive)" The payoff for Macy's success 'of recent years has been his attempt to move from his handmade house to a property on two acres in the Hollywood Hills, his first and only attempt at living like a movie star. Unfortunately, it's not going well. You might say it's bee demoralizing experience not unlike those endured by his characters: a diff%- cult architect, an untrustworthy contrac- tor, a Kafkaesque zoning commission. He's fired everybody and started over. Now the real estate agent is on the phone with yet another snafu. He swears some more and shoots that forlorn expression across the room."The whole thing is just poison," he s rather plaintively. Clearly the guy is not cut out for the Hollywood life. "We're gonna miss this house;' he deadpans. "But not any time soon." And certainly not before racy throws his wife a birthday partyHis coolest friends will be there. Guess what they'll play? Musical charades. "It'll be great" he says, brightening. "We'll drink like fish and howl att e moon. "1 I Junkies I THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGANt SCHOOL OF Music GUEST LECTURE: MILES CHAPIN, AUTHOR Friday, January 14, 7:00pm McIntosh Theatre Miles Chapin is the author of "88 Keys, The Making of a Steinway". The lecture is sponsored by Steinway & Sons, Hammell Music and the School of Music Piano Department. THEATRE DESIGN AND PRODUCTION Saturday-Thursday, January 15-20 Media Union Gallery Student Showing. MARTIN LUTHER KING J, CELEBRATION Sunday, January 16, 8:00pm Britton Recital Hall CELEBRATION HONORING MARTIN LUTHER KING Monday, January 17, 2:00 (School Music portion) Rackham Auditorium Performances and Readsngs by: Dean Daniel Washington, Prof. Shirley Verrett, Prof. George Shirley, Prof. James Standifer, Karen Johnson, Brenda Wimberley, SoM Choral Group performing Negro Spirttuat s nducted by Augustus Hill. GUEST RECITAL: KEN THOMPKjNS, TROMBONE; WITH GUESTS ROBERT CONWAY, PIANO AND KERSTIN ALLVIN, HARP Tuesday, January 18, 4;3Opm Britton Recital Hall Principal trombonist of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra per- forming works by Strauss, Dbu y Saint-Saens and Frank Martin. BACH 2000: GRADUATE ORGANISTS Tuesday, January 18, :#pm St. Francis Catholib Church, 2250 E. Stadium Blvd. Kevin Hildebrand, Jean Randall, danelle O'Malley, Rose Van Mersbergen, Rakhee Sun, Bah's Eighteen "Leipzig" Chorales. COLLAGE CONCERT Friday, January 21, 8:15pm Hill Auditorium Free Admission, however, tickets required (limit four per family). Tickets available at Hill from 4:00pm on January 21st. Events are free and wheelchair accessible unless otherwise specified. The EV Moore Bldg. (main School of Music Bldg.) and the Stearns Bldg. are located on Baits Dr., North Campus (US 23 to Plymouth Rd., Plymouth to Broadway, Broadway to Baits). Events Hotline: (734) 763-4726 Concert Information: www.music.umich.edu . MULTI COLOR SPECIALISTS " ARTIST ON STAFF * RUSH ORDERS 4/ NEAR U OF M CAMPUS 1217 PROSPECT, ANN ARBOR 665-17 F ~ FF with his0., http://www"sh-t*tu*d'*-c* The Office of Academic Multicultural Initiatives is now taking applications for Student Leader positions for the King/Chavez/Parks Summer Institute Program Application Deadline is January 21,2000 Student Leaders are needed for a 6 week commitment0 (June 11-July 21, 2000) which includes a two week paid training program. Student Leaders work with diverse groups of high school students residing in the residence halls with the students and serving'as role models and guides. Room and board is covered the entire 6 weeks in addition to a salary. Student Leaders should be outgoing individuals that have a commitment to helping students traditionally underrepresented in higher education to pursue a college education. Applications and job descriptions can be obtained at The Office of Academic Multicultural Initiatives 3009 Student Activities Building For additional information contact Gloria Taylor or Silvia Carranza 936-1055