10B -The IChigan Daily - Weekend, etc. Magazine - Thursday, January 13, 2000 0 k 1999 - The Year In Performing Arts Local arts scene trots globe, honors history in busy year The Michigan Daily - kend, et. Ma: A SMOKE-FILLED ROOM BY ANY OTHEI By ROUSMary Met Daily Arts Writer Janus, the mythological gatekeep- er for the New Year, is doing triple duty these days. Not only must he look back at the old year, he must catch a glimpse at the end of the century and peer into the new. One of the most striking features for this end of the centur. end of the year perspective is an artistic shrink- ing o e globe. A century ao, a con1ert by the Estonian National Male Choir wxould not have been possible. Traxel wxould lhaxe been prohibitive, if not non-exisrenr. Cultural awCareness would have ben limited, perhaps even uneYome. Yet. in the autumn of i 9. tis choir appeared on the stage of Hill Auditorium with the Detroit S -mphony Orchestra, Neeme Jarvi conductin. Cultural and political barriers were flung aside as the soloist sang the poems of Yecgeny Ycxtushenko, the dissident Russian poet. Another coup was scored when the Berlin Philharmonic appeared in Ann Arbor. Our town was only one of four stops in the nation for this world-class orchestra, in an era marked by similar belt-tightening by most comparable orchestras. The legendary Claudio Abbado conduct- ed. That island 90 miles off the coast of Miami was represented by the sunny and sensual sounds of Ibrahim Ferrer Orquestra and Ruben Gonzalez y su Grupo. These Cuban stars from the "'Buena Vista Social Club".electrified a Hill Auditorium audience on the night before Halloween. As if these sounds were not enough, the Flamenco Sextet with their guitars and castanets warmed an early winter evening at Hill. In a breathtaking return to U.S. shores, Harlem's gift to the world, the Boys Choir, appeared on the Hill stage. Their repertoire ranged from spirituals to Gershwin and Ellington. The Harlem Nutcracker, with its re isionist text of the holi- day fable, sang and danced in their annual presentation. "Candide" the sparkling musical be Leonard Bernstein, took the stage af the Power Cnter in April. Taken from the toltair'e text, the ousical, with its cast of handreds, charmed us into imagining a life in "the best df all possible worJsp Jeff Daniels micht have wished for a foot in that best of all possible worlds. His Purple Rose Theatre col- laborated for the first time with the Theatre Department to present "Orphan Train" as part of an extend- ed attempt to test the play's fitness for eventual mounting at the Purple Rose. Despite Guy Sanville's migra- tion from the Chelsea playhouse to direct, these hopes were apparently shelved for the foreseeable future. The seminal theatre event that closed out the last century was the staging of 'The Tempest" with an all-star cast bridging faculty throughout the School of Music with students and townspeople. Such luminaries as emeritus Law Prof. Beverley Pooley, Theatre Performance Prof. Philip Kerr and local drama celebrity Malcolm Tulip took parts in a rollicking presenta- tion, directed by Kerr, of Shakespeare's own apocryphal last hurrah. "isn't it rich" ... Sondheim's melodies floated through the Mendelssohn Theatre when "A Little Night Music" played to delighted audiences in packed houses. In the final winter of last century, during the epochal snow storm of last January, soprano Renee Fleming gave a recital at Hill Auditorium. Later in the winter. The Merce Cunnincham Dance Comipanv arised on camps for an artistic residensry. This vorld- famuously unc 'nventional dance evny wprfo-rmed on sagc at Hill Auditorium, then spen' two week- rnaste: class wxith the Dance Dpthrnentb The aecs, iverless Alv in Ailey Dance Cormnpany, wxpith its dazzling talent, also visited Ann Arbor.f Duke Ell gtonl s 100th birthday was celbraled in grand styc in the spring. \nton Marsalis has been a tireless champion of this monolithic American composer, and his Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra observed the event wvith roof-raisin~ jazz at Hill Auditorium. And on the subject of anniversary observances, Rude Mechanicals per- formed "All My Sons,' by Arthur Miller at the Mendelssohn Theatre - 61 years after the first pcrfor- mance of this work. U-M alum Miller now holds the further distinc- tion of opera librettist. "A View From the Bridge;" one of his major plays, was set to music by Music Prof. William Bolcom. This autum- nal work was performed in the clos- ing days of the milleniupm at the Lyric Opera of Chicago. Janus will forever stand at the gate which divides the new and old year. He will eternally be able to look back and ahead, at the waning year A friend of mine has a theory. Like a lot of his theories, they're alcohol- inspired, but that only means it takes a little bit longer for them to make sense. When it comes down to it, though, it's simple. "All the good bars have names with two words or more," Ben said. "But all the schwag ones have one word names." "That's a pretty general theory. Isn't Cheers a bar with one word?" I said. "No, I'm talking about the bars around here." Ben said. "Think about it - Rick's, Mitch's, Scorekeepers, Touchdowt n's. those aren't exactly places to reLix? "But they're cood bars. I mean dollar pitchers are what God invented on the eighth day when he realized he didn't want to go back to work." "It's not like they don't have their good sides. Dollar pitchers, great. People our age, great. Women in tight black pants and tank tops in the middle of January. even better." "So, what's the problem?" 'I can't get over the feeling that I'm going into a frat party every time I go to a campus bar. I wait a half an hour in the cold, pay a cover to get in and then pay money for my drinks, while being crammed in a small, hot, dingy room with a bunch of people . 'V e Seed there x before but have ne ce' real taked to I m'an. dd a r f' t x least you know who your friends are." "Yeah, but it's not like I get to talk them that much without trying to shout over the DJ's speakers. Seriously, every time I go to a one-word bar I feel like I'm a little less mature. The whole super-male ego kicks in again. I'm with my boys. We're drinking beer, watching sports and the tightly dressed women around us. The level of testosterone tends to go up. while the conersation tends to dumb down." LDoesn t that happen jtabout ',?2 but h ee-n in ina nod o etioment. adte e ti ra igtem to drn ac amontsof alcohol doesr.' eacrl seem to inspire intelligent coat ersa- rions. But then again, it might hax e something to do with the qualitx of beer that I'm drinking there too." "So the quality' of beer determines how mature someone's actions w when thev duink?" "No, the quality of the bar. The word bars have this plastic, ultr young, fast-paced multi-miedia in It's pretty shallow. There isn't any acter to them." "Character?" "Yeah, character. The two-word have character. The one-word don't." "Lhhhhh7 "Loot it this a[axLin rxao- ba. tobcan sittraand hate a Sportscee "But don' xo eel itelk "Yuppie scum Yeah, a lite h the same time. in order to go to p w ith char'act r for an intelligent co sation you have to sacrifice a lit mean, the beer is better and comn rn ie.t you know_ some of the peo- Jon Zemke St Michge ple at the bar compared to being a freshman with no clue x, hat your iden- tity is in a University of 30.000 plus. Ar DAILY ARTS Courtesy of University Musical Society Wynton MaIs s was one d a brigade of important artists to play Ann Arbor last year. and the emerging new year. This year, Janus watched as the 20th cen- tury faded into history. The impossi- ble became possible, even probable, in this past century. Artistic walls were opened, barriers broken; not least in Ann Arbor were these the hallmarks for the immediate past, not to mention the departed century. Janus is inevitably smiling. 4 The Princeton Review will get you a little closer{ to medical school Invest in your future. Our last classes preparing for the April ECAT start January 2W. Don't face the day without it. Are you feeling a bit poor after $ the holiday season? $ Tired of shelling out all your $ cash for new books? $ U Start your semester right, $ Earn EASY MONEY for $ SPRING BREAK! $ $ EDMICHIGAN TELEFUND 0 $ $7 an hour + Nightly Bonuses s N -04Make your own Schedule $ +FUN Student Atmosphere $ $ T $ $ J S 0 s Call 998-7420 Stop By 611 Church, 4h floor Apply on-line - it's easy! $ $ www.telefund.umich.edu$ .I Bebe MillerCo ay Saturday, January 5,8p.m. Power Center Over the past decade, Bebe Miller has vaulted tc the top ranks of American post-modern dance, and her company's stellar reputation is built on driving, high-energy dance in which every nuance of movement is infused with meaning and every fiber describes emotion. Take 6 Monday, January 17, 8 p.m. Hill Auditorium call us today. Celebrate the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s birthday with these a cappella superstars in their UMS debut. The winner of seven Grammy Awards and five Doves (Gospel Music Awards), Take 6's concerts are a marvel of expression, interpretation, and instrumentation. THE PRINCETON REVIEW 1-800-2REVIEW www.review.com 'I ' '~ * 1. v, U)niversty Musical Society'* 764.,253E