TeMhgDay-ihaayc Friday, April 13, 2007 - 5 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com THEATER PREVIEW Basement Arts heads to Ireland By WHITNEY DIBO DailyArts Writer The remote Aran Islands off the coast of Western Ireland are an unlikely setting The Cripple for a Hollywood of Inishmaan film, so when the culturally fam- Tonight and ished residents Saturday of Inishmaan at7 p.m. hear that a Los Free Angles film crew has arrived at At theWaigreen the neighboring Drama Center, Island of Inish- Studio1 more to film a movie, everyone begins clamoring for a moment in the spotlight. Such is the premise of cel- ebrated Irish playwright Martin McDonagh's dark comedy "The Cripple of Inishmaan" put on by Basement Arts this weekend. The- show is the valiant undertaking for Music senior Rachel Brody, who choseMcDonaghtoughscriptasher senior directing thesis. McDonagh, who was awarded the London Crit- ics' Circle Theatre Awards for Most Promising Playwright in 1996, took Broadway by strom in 2005 with his thriller "The Pillowman." The show opens in the general store of Cripple Billy's "aunties," two quirky but loveable women who raised him after the mysteri- ous death of his parents. A trio of two violins and a guitar provide the necessary Celtic music, and the rustic wooden set effectively trans- ports the audience into the humor- ously bleak world of Inishmaan. The sad irony of the show comes from McDonaugh's engaging pro- tagonist, Cripple Billy. Despite being physically disfigured and publicly ridiculed, he is obviously the sanest of the emotionally hand- icapped bunch. Auntie Kate spends her time talk- ing to stones, while her uncannily similar counterpart Auntie Eileen eats gobs of"sweeties"to drownher troubles. Of course, the small Irish village would not be complete with- out a town gossip. Self-proclaimed "newsman" Johnnypeteenmike fuels the playawih scraps of rumors and minor scandals. "The Cripple of Inishmaan" takes place in the early 1930s, a tidbit of information the audience only gets with Johnnypeteenmike's remarks about a nice young fella with a funny mustache seems to be risin' to power in Germany. "Good luck to him!" Johnnypeteenmike exclaims, happily throwing the newspaper aside. But the desperate boredom in Inishman also lends itself to gratu- itous cruelty, of which Cripple Billy usually bears the brunt. One par- ticularly horrible rumor has haunt- ed Billy since childhood - that his parents drowned themselves after learning he was disfigured. A reprieve from the hum-drum of island life comes when Johnny- peteenmike spreads the news that the film crew has landed on the neighboring island of Inishmore. This storyline is actually based off the filming of "Man of Aran," a his- torical documentary filmed in the 1934 about life on the desolate Aran Islands. The object of Cripple Billy's subtle lust, Slippy Helen, and her hilariously bizarre brother Bartly secure a boat ride over to Inish- more with an elder islander, and Cripple Billy fenegles a way to tag. along. When he doesn't return at the end of the filming, rumors fly about the L.A. film crew picking up Cripple Billy to make him a movie star in America. But as in every McDonaugh play, things aren't always as they seem, and this dense and darkly complex show takes many twists and turns before the curtain falls. THEATER PREVIEW Tommy, can you hear me? THE WHO'S SURREAL EXPERIMENT HITS THE STAGE By MICHELE YANKSON DailyArts Writer Before "Rocky Horror Picture Show" and "Rent," there was Tommy. The 1969 album by The Who was the first of its kind The Who's to fuse rock with theater, Tommy spawning the play "The Who's Tommy" and helped Tonight and establish Rock Musical with Tomorrow at8 such memorable songs as p.m. and Sunday "The Acid Queen," "Pin- at 2 p.m. ball Wizard" and "Fiddle Students $9 About." This blend of media serts$ has been imitated for many Reserved years, resulting in some of Seating $19 the most evocative produc- General Admis- tions brought to the stage. sion $22 And this weekend's produc- Atlthe Power Center tion serves as the culmi- nating performance of the Department of Musical Theater's main stage season. "Tommy," with book and music written by Yeah, dude. We can hear you. Who mainstay Pete Townshend, follows the life of its title character, a boy plagued by the traumas of his childhood. While still a child, he watches his father gun down his mother's lover, and conjures himself as deaf, dumb and blind shortly thereafter. He is abused. And he discovers a gift for pinball that launches him into celebrity-like stardom, just to be ultimate- ly shunned by the same public who fostered his fame. Music School senior Alex Brumel plays the role of Tommy during his young adult years. A longtime Who fan, Brumel is excited about the band's songs coming to life on stage. "(The play) really is the whole The Who record cover to cover," Brumel said. "It's an incredible experience." The aesthetics of the stage are equally incredible, Brumel said. Adhering to the vision of the original stage design, the set was mod- eled after the cover of the Tommy record. The image of the blue-lattice pattern, with black- and-white images of the band's members peek- ing out from underneath, serves as central focus, and this loyalty to the original produc- tion is a facet Brumel admires. "Our production is deeply rooted in the original," Brumel said. "People walk into the theater and originally identify it as the cover, which is important." Still, this begs an obvious question: How does you go about tackling so weighty a subject, especially to the sounds of sharp guitar riffs and raucous drum sequenc- es? "It's a dramatic challenge, but rock music almost makes it / work," Brumel said. "It lets us 'ourtesy of the Department of Musical Theater present everything. We can squeeze what we need into the music-if it's a celebratory mood, the music becomes more celebratory." School of Music senior Dave Hull, who served as assistant choreographer along with Choreographer-Director Linda Goodrich, echoes Brumel's assertion that the theatrical should reflect the thematic. The fickle relation- ship between Tommy and the society around him becomes demonstrated through the show's many dance routines, which combine nuances of jazz, modern and even hip hop. "The (dance) numbers are so involved," Bru- mel said. "When Tommy is an outcast, he's left out of them, when he is embraced by the public the numbers envelope him." Hull also plays the role of Cousin Kevin, a character which he describes as "a teenager in every sense of the word" - and who uses the pinball-prodigy's success for his own personal gain. Cousin Kevin may be an adolescent, but he seems all too reminiscent of a merciless and exploitative agent, and that characterization is part of the reason that Brumel believes Town- shend rendered Tommy as an exploration of how one deals with stardom. "Townsend had the idea that people expect- ed something beyond human out of him," Bru- mel said. "Toward the end of the show, people are asking Tommy, 'how can I be like you?' But the message is that there's no secret, if you think that (someone) has everything, maybe it's because their eyes are open, and (they) can see, feel and hear everything." Brumel picked his words carefully. The album's arguably most famous lyrics, "See me / Feel me / Touch me / Heal me," run through several songs, and "Tommy" is a musical which begs just that. For more photos of this weekend's shows, go to michigandaily.com. For more events, go to our blog, The Filter. ARTS IN BRIEF CONCERT PREVIEW Xiu Xiu to take Blind Pig Xiu Xiu Tonight at 7 p.m. At the Blind Pig $12 cover, all ages Somewhere outside of Montre- al, a man is sitting on a bus, lazily talking on the phone. He casually riffs about his friends, his plans for the not-so-distant future and an obscure 1998 Chinese film about a teenage prostitute. While this might sound like the makings for some sort of surreal, independent film, it's nothing out of the ordinary for Jamie Stewart, mastermind and soft-spoken frontman of the indie troupe Xiu Xiu. CAMPUS EVENT FOKUS block party on Diag "Vanguards" Saturday, noon to 6 p.m. On the Diag "We just say 'shoe shoe.' That's how we pronounce it, but it's not an English word. And in different dialects it's probably pronounced differently," Stewart said oft the oft-debated pronunciation of the Californian trio. Asked how they came to use the name, Stewartreferred to the afore- mentioned film: "There were paral- lels between the main character of the movie's life and the decisions she was making, and my life. Not specific things, but just sort of the way she was dealing with the prob- lems in her life." Stewart and his fellow band- mates Ches Smith and Caralee McElroy are landing at The Blind Pig tonight - and the amount of times he's answered the above ques- tions is palpable in his nonchalance toward them. "It's unfortunate that most tours aren't thatinteresting," he said. "It's cool to play every night but basical- ly, we play, sleep and play again. The interesting part is playing." Understanding the history behind the group's name makes it easy to presume the sort of top- ics they approach on their albums - primarily the deep-seeded ugli- ness they find in the world around them. "It's just about real things that are going on in our lives and our families," Stewart said of their first full-legnth, The Air Force. "It's just real, and not in a metaphorical sense, I mean literally real." With such vitriolic topics, Xiu Xiu has found a few detractors, but he said the band just wants to mae music that's important to it. Tonight at The Blind Pig, you can decide for yourself. CHRIS GAERIG whom will be performing Saturday. same this year. In addition to music From start to finish, the compila- acts ranging from gospel to rap, Uni- tion sounds great, and it's an eclectic versity dance groups like Climax and track list: New York rapper Gist, local Dance2XS will be performing. The rapid-fire MC Bufflandgospel singer dance groups as well as the poets (and University student) Brandon will be holding workshops, which, Littlejohn. Other scheduled perform- along with the food and games, will ers include local acts like Belikosa be free. and The Macpodz, a jazz quintet. Aside from showcasing talent, the If the stellar mixtape is any indica- purpose of Vanguards is to bring the tion of the live show, fans are in for University's student body together. a treat. Last year's spectators were Yes, it will probably be chilly, but at treated to a diverse group of poets, least for a few hours, a diverse group dancers and other talented perform- of performers will be heating up the ers, including rap duo Slum Village, afternoon. and students can expect more of the ANDREWKAHN