topia, Limited 0 University's Gilbert and Sullivan Society perform this weekend. The production plays at the Mendelssohn with two performances tonight and tomorrow at 8 p.m. and two matinees tomorrow and Sunday at 2 p.m. 1bE iaid 1&di IRT Monday in Daily Arts: U Check out a review of this weekend's Carl Craig show in Detroit. Friday December 3, 1999 5 H Theater season e nds i 'emp est By Christopher Tkaczyk Daily Arts Writer The curtain is nearly ready for one of the most anticipated shows to be presented by University Productions. The cast of "The Tempest," com- posed of performers from all areas of the School of Music, moved into the Power Center this past -Wednesday after nearly two months of rehearsals. Directed by Music Prof. Philip Kerr, "The Tempest" celebrates the dawn of a new millenni- um with a selected cast of students and faculty from the School of Music's departments of the- ater and drama, musical theater, vocal arts and dance. Kerr's "Tempest" bears no limitations and offers an abstract set design by Music Prof. Rob Murphy, who promises a laser light show will be implemented during the performances. Murphy's set is fully mobile, and will come together in pieces during each performance. This "Tempest" will be framed by improvisation scenes that are expected to reveal the magic of theater while constructing the set before the audi- ence's eyes, adding another element of magic to Prospero's world, Kerr said. Kerr "framed this as a fabrication of the the- UMS kicks off holiday season with annual 'Messiah' S By Evelyn Miska For the Daily The University Musical Society Choral Union will continue a 120-year- old tradition this weekend with their performance of Handel's "Messiah." For many people, the performance of the "Messiah" marks the official start of the holiday season. This year's performance will feature soprano Tamara Matthews, contralto Ewa Podles, tenor Glenn Siebert and bass-baritone Andrew Wentzel. The Ann Arbor Symphony Orchestra will join these highly talented soloists and the UMS Choral Union for this week- end's performances. Perhaps most famous for the Courtesy of Dna 5 Philip Kerr plays the magical Prospero while Julia Siple is the virginal Miranda in "The Tempest." 5r The Tempest Power Center Dec. 9-12 particular setting. ater," said Dance Prof. Peter Sparling. "It is a metaphor of all of us (in the cast) being in the performing arts. It's a real tribute to our art as per- formers." Considered to be one of Shakespeare's greatest fanta- sy plays (the other being "A Midsummer Night's Dream"), "The Tempest" is rife with themes of master and servitude, art and magic, and illusion and reality. Set on an island, "The Tempest" restricts the characters to one Each must serve his or her Miranda, and Prospero sends out his sprite Ariel to interfere with the antics of the ship's passen- gers. Prospero's servant, Caliban, a half-beast half-man, finds a new master in the drunken Stepano, and demands freedom from Prospero's charge. Coincidentally, Prospero's brother Gonzalo, the wrongful Duke of Naples, was also washed ashore, and Prospero faces him for the first time in 16 years. At Kerr's request, Sparling choreographed a special ballet that depicts Prospero's love for Miranda. The allegorical dance serves as a gift from Prospero to his daughter and her soon-to-be husband, Sparling said. "This illusion within an illusion was to feature the three characters' doubles, so that a kind of utopian vision would unfold, ushering in a golden age for the newlyweds as well as remind them of the nobility and grandeur of the human spirit that is their rightful inheritance," Sparling said. Sparling will portray Prospero in the fantasy dance sequences, with Tim Smola and Lisa Catrett- Belrose appearing as Ferdinand and Miranda. "It was important for me to show Prospero's struggle to relinquish his power and grant his daughter a kind of freedom. The emotions speak directly from the soul through the bodies without needing a text or language to express them," Sparling said. Kerr also enlisted the talents of Frank Pahl, a local musician and LSA media services techni- cian. Playing off of Shakespeare's script, Pahl's duties included the composition of magical sound effects, accompaniment to Ariel and the goddesses, as well as mood music and nature sounds. "Frank Pahl's music functions on many levels: It serves to underpin or highlight the musicality of the language and its range of rhythms, innuen- does and textures," Sparling said. "It embodies Shakespeare's own imagery of the music of the island, creating things partially heard, or sounds that characters only dream of or think they hear, i.e. the veil of illusion." "He creates the music from inside out, work- ing with the characters throughout the rehearsal with the characters throughout the rehearsal, process and within the production itself to gener- ate the musical X-ray of the characters' moods and emotions," Sparling said. The hysterical ham Prof. Malcolm Tulip will appear as Trinculo, the other half of Stephano's (Music Prof. John Neville-Andrews) duo, adding even more to a role that Shakespeare designed in his typical clownish fashion. Law Prof. Beverly Pooley, a veteran of the Ann Arbor community theater stage, is set to appear as Gonzalo. "Peter Hall, the British director, once said that this play is in grave danger of being blasphemous. Prospero takes on the role of God. On the Elizabethan stage, this was deeply radical," Pooley said. Music Prof. George Shirley, the Joseph Edgar Maddy Distinguished University Professor of Voice, lends his vocal talents in the opening improv scene, as well as a portrayal of Adrian. "There's a commentary that goes very deep here, about life and the whole idea of human exis- tence," Shirley said. "It's the stuff dreams are made of, a question prevalent in the world now, but still without an answer." Originally scheduled to perform as one of the goddesses, Vocal arts Prof Shirley Verrett recent- ly backed out of the production, due to health complications. Theater senior Dara Scitzman will fill in for Verrett, and joined rehearsals this past Tuesday. The play is especially important at this point in time, Sparling said, because it questions motives of power and meaning. "In the upcoming millen- nium, we're so obsessed with power. This play could perhaps be the end of that." "This play is a lot like Beethoven's Fifth Symphony," Pooley said. "You end up with hope instead of despair, and you're reminded that there's always tomorrow" This is the second in a series of articles about .The Tempest." Tickets for the production are selling quickly and can be purchased at the League Ticket Office. Student tickets are $7 with valid identification. Call (734) 764-0450 fbr more information. Handel's Messiah Hill Auditorium Tomorrow at 8 p.m.. Sun. at 2 p.m. 4 Hallelujah Chorus, Handel's well known ora- torio premiered in 1742 in Dublin, Ireland. UMS first pre- sented the "Messiah" in Ann Arbor in 1879. Those first performances mark the begin- ning of the orga- nization that would become the University Musical Society. Dr. Thomas Sheets directs this year's performance and is currently the 10th conductor to hold the position of Music Director of the UMS Choral Union since its founding in 1879. Prior to becoming music director of UMS, Sheets spent time as associate conduc- tor for the William Hall Chorale and the Master Chorale of Orange County, both in California. Soloist and soprano Tamara Matthews comes to visit the University after recent engagements at Carnegie Hall. Matthews is not only a rising star in the music worldbut also is currently a professor of voice at the Westminster Choir College. Her singing talent earned her first prize at the Musica Sacra Bach Vocal Competition which resulted in her debut at Carnegie Hall in 1994. In addition to performing with UMS, Matthews has performed as soloist for such companies as the Los Angeles Master Chorale, the Accademia per La Musica Antica, and the Berkeley, Boston and Ravinia music festivals. Polish-born Ewa Podles takes the part of the contralto in Handel's "Messiah." The repertory for contraltos tends to be much smaller than for their more glamorous counterparts - sopra- nos - but Podles has not let this obsta- cle stand in the way of her success. In addition to her Metropolitan Opera debut in 1984, Podles has gone on to perform at La Scala and the Staatsoper Berlin. This will not be Podles first visit to Ann Arbor, as she took on the chal- lenging task of replacing Cecilia Bartoli for a concert held at Hill Auditorium in 1997. This will not be the first time tenor Glenn Siebert has performed Handel's "Messiah" although it may indeed be his first visit to Ann Arbor. Making his New York Philharmonic debut in Carl Orffs "Carmina Burana" Siebert has moved on to perform a wide variety of other works. With credits such as having performed with the Hamburg Opera, the Santa Fe Opera, the Washington Opera as well as the Florentine Opera, Siebert ia proving his versatility as a concert and opera singer. Siebert also has a large repertoire spanning from Baroque to 20th Century literature. Bass-baritone Andrew Wentzel rounds off the foursome of soloists and has a resume every bit as impressive'as his co-performers. Having sung such parts as Escamillo in Bizet's "Carmen" as well as Mephistopheles in Gounod's "Faust" since his Metropolitan Opera debut in 1985, Wentzel's list of roles goes on and on. It is with little doubt that it wouldbe necessary to have such highly talented performers to take on a work of such magnitude as Handel's "Messiah". Between the UMS Choral Union, the Ann Arbor Symphony Orchestra, and these four soloists, the "Messiah" is bound to be a moving and powerful per- formance. master to achieve a personal freedom, which pos- sibly prevents another type of freedom, said the show's dramaturge and Music doctoral student Carrie Gabriel. "The lines between master and servant are blurred. Even the most loyal servant wants to serve himself," Gabriel said. "Are we always enslaved in some sense?" "The Tempest" finds Prospero, rightful Duke of Naples, exiled on a magical island with daugh- .ter Miranda. When a passing ship encounters a terrific storm on the high seas, Ferdinand and his shipmates are tossed ashore, where they encounter Prospero's world of beastly creatures and enchanted sprites. Ferdinand finds love in Read -Daily Arts or read us online at www.michigandaily.com. I "CV) .t EV 99( Report Binding .' or less V ae, Spiral or Glue ; 65 f covers included ; Over 1 "1.1 1 7 5 1 754 ~nly with Coupon; 8.5x 1; No Ediflng; Exp. C o or3opi s 9 SPECIAL LIMITED ENGAGEMENlTI I! STARTS WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 24" TE MIC IGAN THEAVRI' WRITE FOR THE DAILY. CALL 76-DAILY OR STOP BY 420 MAYNARD TO SAY HELLO. Dollar Bill C P Y IN G 611 Church Street Ann Arbor MI 48104 (734) 665-9200 * (fax) 930-2800 44th Annual Study Break ilt