The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, January 23; 2009 - 5 Paying homage to a rewarding connection By BEN VAN WAGONER Daily FineArts Editor InOctober2006,1,000students spent the night camped out in front of the Power Center just for the slim chance of getting tickets to a Shakespeare performance. If this sounds implausible, it is - for any troupe other than the Royal Shakespeare Company. But after all, the RSC is the stuff of which dreams are made, and the compa- ny's three residencies at the Uni- versity have been, almost without question, the height of artistic excellence at the University in the past decade. This Saturday, the Ford Hon- ors Program will hold an event celebrating the RSC's history of performance at the University. "These performances marked the University in the world of theatre," English Prof. Ralph Williams said. "(The historic cycle of first residency) was one of the great productions of the century." Williams has been deeply involved with the RSC'residen- cies and is a personal friend of Michael Boyd, the company's artistic director. This Saturday the collaboration between the two dramatic giants will be honored at the Ford Honors Program, an annual event that recognizes out- standing contribution to the arts. "It's a sensational cheer for what three great institutions can do that no one of them could have done on their own," Williams said. The performances were also very much collaborative efforts: They were produced by the RSC, paid for by the University and presented by the University Musical Society. The University's cooperation with the RSC was so successful that its blueprint has been used by the company in its other partnerships. "It's been stupendous for the University," said Williams. "(It is) a relationship which has been mutually berleficial." Observant art lovers may notice that the program is strangely out of place in January - it's normally held in the rosier month of May. Why the shift? Simply to allow student the- ater enthusiasts (and Williams enthusiasts) access to the event. The move clearly speaks to the nature of the program. The resi- dencies, and Williams's involve- ment in them, have been in the spirit of whole-hearted collabo- ration - not just between com- pany and university, but between performers, professors, students and community. Ford Honors Program honoring the Royal Shakespeare Company, Michael Boyd and Ralph Williams Saturday at 6 p.m. Al Rackham $20 fat sudents On this point, Williams could hardly restrain his enthusiasm. Williams praised the pro- longed nature of the residencies, suggesting that the duration and the additional programs made it possible for a real dialogue. "It was not just one concert; people came in and sustained a presence. (Audiences) talked with others about it, thought about it. (The plays) became a way for soci- ety to talk about many of its cen- tral issues." Not only that, but the pres- ence of RSC members like Pat- rick Stewart and Harriet Walter (Emily Tallis, "Atonement") at everyday locales like the Ann Arbor Brewing Company and the State Street Starbucks gave the- ater enthusiasts enough excite- ment to last for months. "They demystified excellence for students," he said. "Seeing them on stage, they're like..." Wil- liams brought his voice to a whis- per, "...gods." But RSC members' involvement in University pro- grams and their presence around campus gave students a new perspective on the possibility of achieving true excellence - on the mortality of the gods, as Wil- liams would have it. For all the celebrated success of the residencies, Williams is still hoping to achieve something more. The Royal Shakespeare Company has not made a formal agreement with the University to return. Although, according to Williams, both institutions are happy about their collaboration, there are no guarantees. Instead, the professor is proposing that the University continue to build a reputation beyond the RSC, and, perhaps, beyond the football sta- dium. "This is a hope of mine," Wil- liams said. "The University, in its continued relations with alumni and with the world, is known much as the block 'M,' as the sta- dium. That's good in my view, but also, students typically love (Michigan) because it lit up their minds." Programs like the residencies, Williams proposes, are the key to advancing the University's intel- lectual strength and reputation. "I should like to see us devel- op a rhythm of residencies each year - one year an American (company), every second or third a company like the RSC, a trans- atlantic group," he said. "It is deeply important to me that the University present this possibil- ity as well as the possibilities of the stadium." With figures like Ralph Wil- liams and - as Williams names him -"virtual godof the theater" Michael Boyd involved, it seems there are few things beyond the reach of the University. We, as the audience, can only be over- joyed at what the RSC has helped accomplish and hope ardently for a future collaboration. We will get a small taste: The Ford Honors Program will fea- ture a performance "by members of the RSC of a scene from "Henry V," and that, in its way, must be celebration enough. "I have candy. Come into my van." Naturally goo Afte su Bon acci If yo ing a I any pa life, th grow mutton most now. t recent sute ac & Wi Foxes: folker Just the Bo last ye jaguwa album a deer whose ties co in his s sin cat r a tremendously of touring and critical acclaim behind him, Vernon delivers a [ccessful 2008, four-song EP to start 2009 off with a bang - albeit a hushed and 1 Iver defends its pensive one, as only Bon Iver can give us. aim with new EP Blood Bank is short and sweet, comprised of what appears to be By MIKE KUNTZ an assemblage of remnants from Daily Arts Writer the For Emma sessions. In this case, the "outtakes" are a wel- u were planning on becom- comed companion to the master- bearded indie-folk artist at ful album, serving to enhance int in your listeners' understandings of the he time to somewhat enigmatic Vernon's out some emotional inner-workings. On chops is both Blood Bank and For Emma, definitely BonIver there's an almost claustropho- Given the Blood Bank bic sense of being enveloped in rise of hir- pine needles and endless for- ts like Iron Jagiagawar est - but for some reason, it still ine, Fleet feels warm and fuzzy. Paired with and Bon Iver, being a freak- the suppressed urgency of Ver- is apparently all the rage. non's multi-tracked voice, there in Vernon (the man behind is a unique honesty to Bon Iver's in Iver moniker) emerged sound that's as freeing as it is ar with the national Jag- gripping. ar release of his debut Beginning with the title track, For Emma Forever Ago, the familiar aesthetic ofFor Emma sly affecting set of songs returns, with a heartbeat-strum of organic, whispery quali- guitar and sparse drumming sur- uld only have been created rounding Vernon's ghastly voice. ecluded Northern Wiscon- "Beach Baby" comes next, with the bin. Now, with a full year soft percussion of acoustic strings and dreary slide guitar echoing more patient lyrics like, "Only hold 'til your coffee warms / But don't hurry and speed." Percus- sive piano strikes jolt the EP back to life in "Babys," and are warmly enveloped by the chorus: "Summer comes /to multiply." The first three tracks are where Bon Iver shines brightest. But then there's "Words." Like the bastard child of a T-Pain single, Auto-Tune reigns over this last track. While the exaggerated experimenta- tion with the synthetic may have worked on, most famously, Kanye's 808s & Heartbreak, it doesn't fit here. Though "Words" will most likely leave the Bon Iver faithful scratching their heads (or beards, as the case may be), its difficult beauty shows potential for prom- ising future experimentation. Nev- ertheless, it's doubtful that the last moments of Blood Bank suggest a direction Vernon wil pursue in the future. The trademark cozi- ness of Bon Iver's sleeping bag of sound is best kept out in the woods where it belongs - and after two solid releases with the rustic aes- thetic under his belt, Vernon prob- ably realizes that. A failed act of 'Defiance' By SHERI JANKELOVITZ DailyArts Writer "Defiance" tells the remarkable true story of the Bielski brothers, Belarussians who hid over 1,200 Jews for sev- eral years during Defiance World War IH. The film opens At Quality16 with the brothers and Showcase - Tuvia (Daniel Paramount Craig, "Quantum Vantage of Solace",) Zus (Liev Schreiber, "The Omen") and Asael (Jamie Bell, "Billy Elliot") - returning home to find their parents and neighbors slaughtered by Nazi officers. Fueled by rage, the broth- ers take to the woods and eventu- ally find themselves charged with guarding the lives of other Jew- ish exiles, whose origins remain largely unknown. ThoughCraig'sperformancehas beenthe most heralded, it's Schrie- ber who gives the most fleshed-out delivery. His desire to save Jews is eclipsed only by his desire to kill Germans, placing him in direct contrast to Tuvia, who believes the focus of their mission should be survival, not murder. The strife between the two siblings becomes the film's main conflict, and for some time it seems to be less about Nazis versus Jews and more about brother versus brother. Eventually, the intense competition between Tuvia a as Zus to fight army. That' come in but har: the cam up by G real dra within: several, to hide rebellio with a address Instead focus o Asael a: ka, TV Tuvia a "The M An 0 bec a to be ap sored m ably fig wouldr betweer and sad and Zus comes to a head The film trips up in its inability abandons the forest exiles to focus more on its title subject: on the side of the Russian defiant Jews who actually fought back against the Nazis (and pretty s not to say that Nazis don't successfully too). They forged a to play sporadically. Brief life within the woods that resem- rowing action scenes show bles nothing of the life they had p being bombed and shot been forced to leave behind. In the 3erman soldiers. Still, the camp, those who were once par- ma comes from the scenes ents and professionals join togeth- the camp. The film sets up er as freedom fighters. subplots - a woman trying if the film chose to devote more her pregnancy, a possible time to the inspiring resistance, n within the camp - but, perhaps there wouldn't be such a large cast, it has trouble disconnect between the charac- ing them thoroughly. ters and the audience. "Defiance" , "Defiance" chooses to should be a story of the resiliency n the romances between of the human spirit; when the nd Chaya (Mia Wasikows- film focuses on resistance and 's "In Treatment"), and survival, it works. But, frustrat- tnd Lilka (Alexa Davalos, ingly, it refuses to dwell there ist"). The love stories seem for too long, choosing instead to become something akin to any run-of-the-mill action film dotted with shallow romance. Director inspiring tale Edward Zwick ("Blood Diamond" and "The Last Samurai"), may be :f humanity to blame: his penchant for action often sidetracks a strong focus on :omes a mere real people. Though some of the film seems action flcck. too grandiose to be authentic, the true impact of the story fully emerges at the end. Because of these brothers, 1,200 Jews were rimarily Hollywood-spon- saved from the Nazis. Their surviv- ove; the studio heads prob- al story is far more awe-inspiring ured that most audiences than any big-budget Hollywood need some good romance action scene could ever be. Unfor- n all the scenes of violence tunately, "Defiance" fell victim to ness. this inevitable pitfall. cOURTESY OF UNIVERSITY MUSICALSOCIETY English Prof. Ralph Williams has cultivated a close relationship with the Royal Shakespeare Company. CHECK ONLINE FOR A PREVIEW OF 'GILGAMESH' michigandaily.com/section/arts