,: 16 A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 11, 1999 RC class remembers Goethe with production of 'Urfaust' 4_ By Jeant Lee Daily Arts Writer Wrapping up a series of events commemorating German writer and philosopher Johann Wolfgang von Goethe's 250th anniversary this year, a new translation of Goethe's play, "Urfaust," will be presented this weekend in the Residential College auditorium. Urfat7 RC Auditorium Friday and Saturday at 7 Written around 1775, Goethe's "Urfaust" is the earliest version of his well-known "Faust," the romanticized story of the professor selling his eternal soul to the devil in return for limitless joy and knowledge. "It was Goethe's first attempt to write dramatically," said RC Drama Prof. Martin Walsh, director of the production. This weekend's production will be a staged reading, with lights, costumes and scripts, rather than a full-fledged produc- tion. As part of a midterm project for the RC Drama course on Brecht, Walsh said it is as much of an educational event as theatrical entertainment. "We are just taking an attitude to Faust that is not reveren- tial," he said. Prof. Dan Farrelly said the Brechtian implications in Urfaust lie in its disjointed fragments, more so than in the ideas of the play itself. "Urfaust is really a series of episodes. Each scene stands alone, but they are also connected," Farrelly said, mentioning the Brechtian idea of knots on a string and how each scene cre- ates its own peak and knot to contribute to the whole play as still a constant, single string. "Urfaust is rarely done, while Faust is performed frequent- ly," Farrelly said, noting how this makes the early work signif- icant for new areas of interpretation in theatre. This weekend will provide an opportunity for people to encounter a rare classic work being reinterpreted and to see a work-in-progress production of a play that has just recently been translated. Farrelly came in from the National University of Ireland at Dublin at the beginning of the week to participate in workshops with the actors of "Urfaust" before seeing his work go up this weekend. "It is part of a long cooperation between the Residential College and the Goethe Institute of Ann Arbor," said Institute Director Uwe Rieken, who organized this weekend's event. "We just want people to know that this is just a normal thing we do here," said Walsh of the Goethe anniversary production of "Urfaust," noting the University's attitude toward theater as that of educational enterprise. I .rj' ., , "There is the possibility of an audience discussion after the readi which is a very Brechtian thing to do," Walsh said, addiat he has taken "a superficial Brechtian spin" in direc 'the play, including using captions, but that the play itself really Goethe." New Zealand-born Russell Crowe is quickly gaining popularity with American audiences Crowe' s at home with WAYNE STATE UNIVERSITY Eat up to $1,000. Healthy participants (age 18 to 4E14 ho have used sedative drugs recreationally or whatdrink alcohol regularly but with no current or pa tdrug dependence are needed for study of a new'sedative-like medication. PwScipants will be interviewed, fill out question- nair~s, and participate in six drug administration sessions. After each session, participants must be willing to stay overnight on our residential unit (total of six nights separated by at least 5 days). The entire study may take seven or more weeks to complete, depending on how frequent volunteers can visit the laboratory for testing. Anyone interested in participating should call (888) 457-3744 or (313) 993-3960. Please ask for the Sedative study when calling. Wayne State University is an equal opportunity affirmative action employer. Read the Daily. Write for the Daily. Recycle the Daily. Or stop by at 2 p.m. tomorrow to try your chance at getting Kevin Smith goodies. Los Angeles Times Russell Crowe wore a crocodile tooth on a cord around his neck. In town the other day to promote "The Insider," Michael Mann's new movie about tobacco whistle-blower Jeffrey Wigand, the 35-year-old New Zealand-born actor, interrupted an inter- view at the Argyle Hotel to shout epi- thets at a televised rugby match. He took a reporter to task for describing him as proud. And at times he was so blunt in his assessment of Hollywood that when he revealed that he had wres- tied a tiger on the set of the upcoming Roman epic "The Gladiator" it was easy to picture the cat in a headlock. In other words Crowe - whose pent- up portrayal of a brutal cop with a vul- nerable heart in the 1997 noir hit "L.A. Confidential" let American audiences in on something Australians have known for years - appears in person to be exactly the tough guy you might expect. "People accuse me of being arrogant all the time. I'm not arrogant, I'm focused," Crowe growled at one point, responding to reports that his strong opinions about acting can make him a challenge on a movie set. "I don't make demands. I don't tell you how it should be. I'll give you (expletive) options, and it's up to you to select or throw 'em away. That should be the headline: If you're insecure, don't (expletive) call" But if that's the headline, here's the surprising story that goes with it: This man's man, who recently rode 4,000 miles around his adopted Australia on a motorcycle, also has a sweet streak a kilometer wide. He is a collaborative - and unusually generous - performer who has fought to cut his own screen time to protect others' roles. He's a softy for animals - he can't bring him- self to slaughter any of the cattle he keeps on his 600-acre farm seven hours northwest of Sydney, so the cows (some of whom have names) have become his mates" There's absolutely nothing safe about Crowe on screen. He brought a neo- Nazi skinhead to scary life in Geoffrey Wright's 1992 "Romper Stomper" and played a computer-generated killer opposite Denzel Washington in Brett Leonard's 1995 "Virtuosity." And when not inspiring fear, he's often taking .roles that some might se'e as risky: Playing a gay plumber in the Australian film "The Sum of Us" or a sarcastic gunslinger in the spoof "The Quick and the Dead." But it is Crowe's leading role in Disney's "The Insider" that has every- body talking these days. He plays the tightly wound Wigand, whose decision to reveal a tobacco company's secrets to CBS' "60 Minutes" made him and his family the targets of a smear campaign. Crowe is 17 years younger than the 52-year-old Wigand (he gained 35 pounds for the part and wears a gray wig), but his physical transformation is not what you'll notice first. Instead, what's most striking is Crowe's restrained fury. From his carefully knot- ted necktie to his practiced golf swing, Crowe's Wigand is a painstaking and deliberate man, and one you don't want to cross. "What Russell is doing, which is so difficult, is he's conveying the anom- alies of the man, not what's symmet- rical and easily observable," said Mann, who believes Crowe and his co-star, Al Pacino, who plays "60 Minutes" producer Lowell Bergman, "have one thing in common as actors: courage. They have no fear of embar- rassment. (The trick is) nailing awk- wardness. Not nailing grace. Nailing grace is a lot easier." Mann laughed at the memory of Crowe's discovery that the real Wigand wasn't as good a golfer as the one the director planned to portray in the film. Crowe saw Wigand's sorry golf game as a key detail that helped explain why Wigand ultimately failed to fit into cor- I-W AP PHOTO his range porate culture. Conversely, Mann wnt'. ed to use a few scenes of a more profi cient Wigand hitting balls at a driving. range to highlight the man's self-disci- pline and loneliness. The director was. willing to fudge the truth a little, to make his point. But for Crowe, it didn't fit and he said so. Repeatedly. "He's totally an actor. Totally. I don't. know what goes on between roles.' said- Mann, his voice deeply respectful even as he remembers the golf debate. Crowe, he said, resembles a young Marlon Brando. "Look at 'On the- Waterfront,' at 'Streetcar' or even Young Lions,' and you see this Vaw, powerful talent that's dead serious and accomplished. That's Russell to me I'm dying to work with him again." Crowe values straight talk, and tic rarely stifles himself. For example, on the set of "The Gladiator," in which he plays a Roman general who is unlaw. fully imprisoned and condemned. to. participate in the blood sport of the day, he spoke up about the accent, which he thought was all wrong. "My character was Spanish, and I wanted to do Antonio Banderas with better elocution. But they wouldn't let me," said Crowe - a proven vocal chameleon who believes a proper accent is essential to a fully realized character. "They didn't want peopleto be distracted by it. But I felt when you say you're Spanish 50 times in the course of the movie, I should be doing the accent. Instead, basically everybody in the movie does, you know, Royal Shakespeare Company two pints after lunch." Nevertheless, he loved working on the film, due out next year from DreamWorks, partly because it is so rare as an actor to get the chance to do an epic and partly because direc Ridley Scott, he says, "is Picasso.'" Crowe has been acting since he waadh years old, when he got his first speaking part on a TV show. Show business was in his blood - his parents were loca- tion caterers, and his grandfather was a cinematographer. Crowe jokes that he was the only one in the family stupid enough to work on the other side of the camera. Crowe also has genuine admiration for other actors. He's such a fan of Jodie Foster (whom he's never met) that when she had her baby last year, he sent her a couple of tiny rugby jumpers. And when his movies wrap, he always tries to trade the canvas director's chair with his name printed on it for the chair of one of his co-stars. ("I've got Kim Basinger," he says happily. "Now that's (expletive) cool, isn't it?") "I think you've got to be a fan first to be able to be a performer," Crowe said. "Acting has a lot to do with living in the real world:' You've tokeni. the MCAT. Have you explored all your options? When it comes to health care,, Y Scholl College of Podiatric Mnaiina Marc vnit "I'D LOVE TO TRY FINDING YOUR TATTOO, BUT I'M GOING BACK TO MY ROOM TO CHECK MY EMAIL:' toAr etarning extra cashfo .holiays?0 Then take a look at Domio''s. You can earn some extra cash for the holidays, and maybe open some possibilities in manage-- ment down the road. And right now is a great time to join our team at Domino's. Whether you're looking for a lot of hours or you're just looking for a part-time job, Domino's has an opportunity for you. 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