Put on your dancing shoes... Leck out the classic MGM musical aster Parade" staring Fred Astaire and Judy Garland, playing at The Michigan Theater. 7 p.m. ARTS MONDAY JANUARY 29, 2001 A michigandaily.com /arts JEFF DANIELS DOUBLE FEATURE Daniels dishes on Hollywood, 'Escanaba' Purple Rose production features 'Yooper' humor By Christopher Cousino .I Daily Arts Writer By Lyle Henretty ly Film Editor Jeff Daniels minces no words when it comes to naming his inspiration for writ- ing, directing and starring in his latest film, "Escanaba in da Moonlight." "I've wanted to do all three ever since working with Woody Allen on the 'Purple Rose of Cairo' in 1985." The Michigan native and star of such eclectic films as "Dumb Dumber," "Terms of Endearment," "101 Dalmatians" discussed his new film with The Michigan Daily. Daniels enjoys the power of having creative control over every aspect of his film, including producing. This is the first film financed by his Purple Rose Films. "As an actor, you're kind of a hired gun. Instead of being overwhelmed by [being a director, actor, and writer] all three of those people, who all happened to be me, ended up trying to make the same movie. That doesn't always hap- As producer, Daniels hired most of his own cast from the Purple Rose Theater's stage production of "Escanaba," Michigan's longest running play. "These guys had literally played these roles five hundred times, so any nerves they had about working on their first big film set disappeared." Daniels, as Rueben Soady, a Michigan n who is a disgrace to his hunting tamily because he, at 43 years of age, has never bagged a buck, anchors the cast. Character actor Harve Presnell, best know for his role as the tough-as-nails Wade Gustafson in "Fargo" plays the patriarch of the Soady family. Daniels has nothing but praise for Presnell, a vet- eran of both stage and screen. "He couldn't have been more professional, which was a great example to the 'Purple Rose' guys, who are all pros, but here's ' a real pro acts on a movie set." The movie was filmed on location in Escanaba, Michigan, a small upper- peninsula town that wasn't used to the Hollywood treatment. "They were thrilled that we were there. Whatever we needed, we had three of them in half an hour. It was constantly like that." When asked about the "Yoopers" notorious dislike for tourists that come across the Mackinaw Bridge, Daniels had to admit that not everyone was thrilled to see them. "There were a few guys with the pick-up trucks and the gun racks that said 'Go back to Hollywood.' There were those that felt we were just making fun of them, but these were peo- ple that had not read the script, didn't know the story, and were just judging, preconceived notions." ' The film version of ."Escanaba" opened this past weekend in Michigan, and is currently,seeking a studio for wide distribution. Daniels continues to split his career from big budget Hollywood blockbusters ("Speed"), and running the Purple Rose Theater in Chelsea, Michigan. The actor feels that the mid- west's talent pool has not been fully exploited. Despite the growing national - popularity of the theater, Daniels, promises to maintain the dis- tinct Michigan' flavor of his pro- ductions. "It's what got us here. We will always hold true{ because it's important to me, to the mission, to workshop and produce mid-westefn writers and actors." He admits that the Theater Company still receives many bad plays, and that they cannot teach talent. "The trick is finding a writer that has a voice ... If you can find somebody who can think funny and write funny, the structure and the story work, we can teach them So Jeff Daniels decides to make a movie about Michigan (the fair city of Escanaba in the U. P. to be exact). Yes, the first Purple Rose Films produc- tion, "Escanaba in Da Moonlight," a film written and Escanaba in Da Moonlight Grade: B- At Showcase and Quality 16 Courtesy of Jeff Daniels Above: Jeff Daniels on the set of "Escanaba in Da Moonlight." Below: Reuben Soady (Jeff Daniels) gets ready to face Maximus in the Yooper Dome.- irected by Daniels and based off his play of the same name. With its localized Michigan speci- ficity, it's chock full of jokes about "The B r i d g e," Mackinaw "fudge suckers," sap laden whiskey and a good 'ol game of euchre to boot. Through the eyes of pop Soady (Harve Presnell), we go back to the start of deer season at the Soady deer camp in 1989. 43-year-old Reuben Soady (Daniels) heads out for another year of supposed cursed luck: This poor sap has never shot a deer in his life. When he arrives to camp "Is this the Soady taking a meaty crap). When younger brother Remnar (Joey Albright) pulls up with a free case of Lienankugel (which he wins through a rather hilarious trashy bar contest), hunting season has begun - and hijinks sure are afoot. After Albert discovers the Soady whisky all turned to sap, the crazy local former UFO abductee Jimmer (David Albright) shows up with wild stories that his "Chevy shook a shit," and ignited on fire. Though the group doesn't get too riled about this rather random occur- rence, when Reuben's 'euchre hand turns to twos and threes when "there aint twos and threes for miles." the curse upon poor Reuben seems to some to light - in more ways than one. Daniels' rather sweet, romantic world of the Soady deer camp is most- ly about fun, family, flatulence and face (saving Reuben's, that is, for being the oldest Soady not to bag a' buck). This film, though, packed with regional Michigan humor (it's- only being released so far in select Michigan theaters), works on the larg- er level of continuing a family legacy and living up to what your family establishes as a standard. Daniels and his supporting cast of local unknowns (wonderfully matched by the spastic, ridiculous glory of Albright's Jimmer from Menominee) pull this film along some of its rather shoddy, too out-of-this-script-world extraterrestrial parts. While "Escanaba" loses its focus at times, foraying off into a lame explanation about God and the DNR, the main crux of the film (the Soady family) stays true to its yooperness. It's not the funniest film and Daniels' blocking at times feels a little too stagey; but damn, it captures the fine spirit of Michigan at the start of deer season. As Remnar gleefully pro- claims, "It's like Christmas with guns. to do that, but you can't teach someone to have a voice, and you can't teach them to be funny. Daniels has just finished the fourth draft of the second film he hopes to produce with Purple Rose Films. It is a comedy about a door-to-door vacuum cleaner salesman and Daniels plans to film it somewhere in southeastern Michigan. That is, assuming that "Escanaba in da Moonlight" is suc- cessful. Even for a big Hollywood actor, the success of his labor of love is important. "We're hoping the movie does well enough to keep going." And if that means more films for and by Michigan natives, then we're right with you, Mr. Daniels. with the traditional Deer Camp?" shout to his father Albert (Presnell), we know the route this film is goirg to take - a more goofy, romanticized vision of what deer hunting is all about (yes, the only time Bambi actually bites the big one occurs when imbecile cousin Walter shoots one from the outhouse while Praise for Dave (not Matthews); Douglas ignites Kerrytown By John Uhl ly Arts Writer By the time the first fully articulated tone sprang from his trumpet, Dave Douglas had already played something unspeakably sublime. As the band began "Charms of the Night Sky," the title album, the audience I ~ * Dave Douglas Kerrytown Concert House Jan. 26, 2001 tones and Douglas e track from its first e was already antici- pating the sweep- ing trumpet andN violin melody that would follow Greg Cohen and Guy K I uc ev sek 's twelve-bar blss and accordion preface. Cohen's bass played a sim- ple half-syncopat- ed.rhythm in medi-- um tempo that Klucevsek embell- ished with pairs of long, apprehensive hovered around his Concert House, Doglas shrugged off the boisterous crowd's salute with, "I'm just a guy trying to play some music." He jest- fully strutted back on stage for his encore, striking muscle-flexing Superman poses and exaggerated an enthusiastic thank you to his record company for making the performance possible. Douglas' four-record deal with RCA/Victor is .one of the most hopeful recent signs to suggest that other trends in experimental improvised niusic' could find a broader audience. The contract's first product, last year's Soul on Soul, was an award-winner. But the album's fairly traditional-sounding sextet tribute to the legendary pianist Mary Lou Williams was doubtlessly less shocking to mainstream jazz audiences than the quirky trumpet, violin, accordion and bass instrumenta- tion on A Thousand Eveniings and the quartet'stendency to delve into tango, klezmer, Balkan folk and classical music. Douglas agrees that "some people come into it thinking 'oh, this is going to be some kind of avant-gardeprvject,"'but doesn't feel that his music is inaccessible. "I don't think the music itself is extremely far out. I'm just interested in having it sound fresh and new." Listeners who pay attention to the music of the quartet will find that, while drawing on the phrasings, harmonies, inflections and forms of a multitude of musical forms, the band often Tfunctions in precisely the same manner as any jazz combo. On A Thousand Evenings, the Nat Adderly tune "The Little Boy with the Sad Eyes" swings, from the three-hit call and response of melody and accom- paniment to Mark Feldman's motively- structured, Newk-like violin solo. "I try to make everything I do not fit into any smooth category. As a matter of fact, that's what I'm fighting against." Purists often consider, such genre bend- ing within the jazz idiom as blasphemous and, though all of Douglas' solos are laden with variations, distortions and clever juxtapositions of bebop phrases, some may have trouble seeing past the band's seemingly unorthodox instrumen- tal composition. Which is silly, since the trumpet, violin and bass have all been a part of jazz for the better part of its histo- ry and Klucevsek frequently makes his accordion sound just like an organ (an instrument that is anything but foreign to jazz). Moreover, this quartet is a band, a well-rehearsed group of musicians who are extremely experienced and comfort- able performing together. And that's a quality that has been lacking in main- stream jazz for a number of years. It's hardly even appropriate to call Guy Klucevsek, Mark Feldman and Greg Cohen sidemen since each is such a fresh and resourceful master of his own instru- ment. In fact, the individual presence of each quartet member is so strong that the band often only employs the playing of all four musicians at the same time for instances of extreme climax. On Friday, the players rotated roles, Cohen walking under a Douglas solo, Douglas egging on the dueling of Feldman and Klucevsek, constantly alter- ing the texture of both the music's impro- vised and composed passages so as to make each piece a kaleidoscopic portrait of itself. Suddenly, as on Charms of the Night Sky's "Dance in Thy Soul," every- one was playing and the music became so strikingly large that it seemed the quartet might crowd itself off the stage by means of its own webbing emotional intensity. Still, this is Dave Douglas' band. Although ample space is given to feature every member of the ensemble, the quar- tet's construction of melody and improvi- sation generally hinges upon Douglas' trumpet. The whimsical waltz "Bal Masque" unravelled around lengthy improvised trumpet passages. Opening the piece with an extended unaccompanied solo, Douglas worked into the melody, bend- ing it into almost a blues. He later sailed back into a solo with a fluttering series of soaring upper register tones as rhythmi- cally sure as the bravado of Louis Armstrong. Mugging Satchmo while tossing . out New Orleans blues-based smears and hints of "Down By the Riverside" like beads at a Big Easy street parade, Douglas ironically transformed a song that, on record, sounds like the European-derrived soundtrack to a Scicilian mafia wedding. Such humor was prevalent throughout the quartet's performance. In the middle of one solo, the husky, silverhaired and balding Klucevsek gave out a "hrhm" groan like Peter Boyle's Frankenstein. "Born to be wild," he said gruffly. Douglas himself draws on so many different squeals, smears, sputters, whines and whinnies that it seems he and his trumpet are joking with each other in half a dozen different, inter- changable voices. And it's funny. It's funny that Douglas has created a trum- pet style that can encompass Armstrong, Lester Bowie, Clifford Brown, Don Cherry, Dizzy Gillespie, Freddie Hubbard and Gustav Mahler without sounding like anyone other than Dave Douglas. My favorite Douglas technique is his . 'y :aa ,, ' Y "p 4 t4 x4 t4 r4 ,:.a Courtesy o avedouglas.com Dave Douglas plays a ditty. tendency to smudge the most climactic note in a phrase. Building his way into the upper register, he'll botch the key note or hit it head on and fall off messi- ly. Of course he could play the note per- fectly, but flubbing the note imparts the idea that Douglas is really struggling to express himself. That his solo comes from somewhere deep in his soul and is unearthed in a painfully stirring manner. Furthermore, it's a gesture of fallibility, something that is refreshingly human to hear from the modern trumpet hero. music stand, pacing in small anxious steps. A measure before the melody, he pursed his lips and blew. Two sounds emerged simultaneously Warm air mov- ing through his horn and a soft, quivering whistle. At such a bodeful moment in the music, this ethereal inflection was ghost- ly enough to be called unearthly. Yet it was the sound of leaves rutling and f ze passing through a chance hole in a ti ed acorn cap: The most profoundly earthly thing one could imagine. Before I get any more caught up in my own idolatry, I should say that Douglas himself would likely frown upon such- a sentiment. Before his second perfor- mance on Friday night at Kerrytown Corection *an article printed In the Wednesday, Jan 7 Arts seCtiio- of The Michigan Daily ("isetope 2±7 rises MEMBERS Financial Services Available to U of M Credit Union Members Investment Asset Management Retirement Planning Financial Estate Planning, College Funding Long Term Care shIley s is proud to announce. Meet The Brewer Nights Every Monday Ashley's will host a brewer from one of the region's breweries. They will be offering samples of their beers including some found only at the brewery. You are invited to come and meet these craftsmen in an informal setting in Ashley's Underground Pub. 3 S Monday Jan. 29th --A-10 nm