The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, November 12, 2010 -- 5 What is love? The RC Players share their take By STEPHEN OSTROWSKI DailyArts Writer The ageless inquiry into the nature of love has at times been handled quite poorly. Chris Kat- tan and Will Ferrell's infectious, synchronized head-bopping The Real to Haddaway's "What is love?" 'Thing in 1998's "A T.g Night at the Rox- Tonght bury" is pain- through Sun- fully memorable day at8 p.m. and threatened Keene Theater to immortal- Free ize "love" into a laughably lowbrow domain. Thankfully, the higher-brow crowd tackles similar romantic topics. Enter "The Real Thing," the RC Players's adaptation of British playwright Tom Stop- pard's 1982 production of the same name. "The Real Thing" profiles the infidelities of its lead characters - Henry, a playwright, and Annie, an actress - and the messy relationships that encom- pass them. The RC Players is a student-run troupe based out of East Quad that performs student and profession- al pieces. According to LSA junior Sean FitzGerald, who directs the play, the RC Players - which is open to non-RC students as well - Find out if it's 'The Real Thing' in East Quad. usually performs two full-length productions per semester. With "The Real Thing," FitzGerald makes his first full-length direc- torial effort. "It deals with a lot of themes that I feel are consistent through- out time," FitzGerald said. "Like, what is love? How do you know if what you think love is actually is the real thing? Just a bunch of themes that resonate with every- one." FitzGerald said Stoppard's humor and the show's complexity make "The Real Thing" an attrac- tive choice for a student adaptation. Starring in his first RC Play- ers production, LSA senior Dante Bugli headlines as Henry, an adulterous and charismatic play- wright. Bugli, who has performed with campus theater organiza- tions like Rude Mechanicals and the University's Educational The- atre Company, highlighted the magnetic personality of Henry. "He's really good at talking over people, because he's a play- wright," Bugli said. "He's quick, he's witty, and so he always has a lot of smart things to say and he can tell people what he wants to say and make people believe it." Bugli stars opposite LSA soph- omore Miriam Kamil, who plays Annie, Henry's mistress and even- tual wife. According toKamil, the role of Annie presents somewhat of a foreign personality. "I've never played a charac- ter so different from me," Kamij said. "It's fun that she's 30, but she sometimes acts like really young, really naive. But sometimes it seems like she's just pretending to be naive, so she's really compli- cated in that way." Bugli and Kamil represent only a small portion of the cast's age diversity: According to FitzGer- ald, the cast consists of a mix of underclassmen and upperclass- men, a balance praised by one of the show's co-producers, LSA sophomore Sophia Blumenthal, who works alongside LSA senior Rebecca Gutmann. "We have a lot of new people in this cast, and it's great to see how the dynamic with everyone is so pleasant," Blumenthal said. Still, the production has not been without its challenges. Par- ticularly demanding, according to FitzGerald, was adapting to the scene changes required of a distinctive production like Stop- pard's. "Scene changes normally are very complex," FitzGerald said. "(In the original script) they have a circle stage that spins ... enabling them to make quicker, more com- plex scenes changes, but we don't have the resources for that. So I had to sit down and figure out how I was going to accomplish the 'scenes." These complexities, according to FitzGerald, were remedied by simply rearranging stage sets to signal shifts in time and place. Individuals familiar with Stop- pard's production might notice a See REAL THING, Page 6 A nine-piece orchestra will accompany "Place. 'Placebo' musical is super effective Basement Arts's first original production of the year By BRAD SANDERS Daily Arts Writer Red pill, or blue? For the charac- ters in a new Basement Arts show, this question is moot; they're not given a choice. Placebo Only a placebo. Tonight at 7 In the first andi11p.m., original pro- tomorrow duction of the at 7 prm. Basement Arts at7p.m. season, "Place- Walgteen Drama bo," a so-called FreeS' o miracle pill isF introduced to a modern midwestern American town. The pill is supposed to help the townspeople accomplish their dreams, but being merely a pla- cebo, the pill's effects are solely in the minds of its users. The per- ceived effects of the pill drive the dialogue, written by the Univer- sity's own Joshua Borths, a junior in the School of Music, Theatre & Dance, with music created by MT&D senior Danny Abosch. "It's a story about dreams and, you know, how far you're willing to go to get what you dreamed of," Abosch explained. "It's also a love story between Robert and Morgan, and the story of how their love is tested by this placebo pill." Borths and Abosch began writ- ing the musical a little over a year ago and originally intended to adapt Puccini's "Gianni Schicchi" into musical format. Their creative juices came together every Sunday at Starbucks. "The version we have today is barely recognizable from the ver- sion we started out with," Abosch said. "(We'd) think of some really cool idea that would negate the whole idea we had thought of... but that's the process - it changes, it grows, it's a living piece of art." Going from paper to the stage, the casting process proved to be a proud moment for the production's directors. "It's one thing to hear the work how you invented it in your head, but to hear real live actors perform- ing your piece, it's so enlightening," Abosch said. "They bring so much to the table and you learn so much about a piece." Being the music director, Abosch had to compose the music toencom- pass all elements of the play - from its characters to its story to its themes. A nine-piece orchestra will perform the score. "It takes a long time because you have to set up the musical world of the show. It's more than just writ- ing the music, it's telling a story through music," Abosch explained. "I've written one other musical and See PLACEBO, Page 6 "The Real Thing" was written by Tom Stoppard. A cappella gets festive By ADDIE SHRODES Daily Arts Writer Every year, nerves and excite- ment escalate for MACFest per- formers as, group by group, they take the stage before an audi- torium full of a MACFest cappella fans. Tomorrow For freshman at 8 p.m. performers, Rackham the 11th annual Tickets from $5 MACFest will be their debut into the tight-knit University a cap- pella community, one of the larg- est in the country. "As a freshman, I was so ner- vous, because it's like you're proving yourself to not only your group and to the audience, but to this huge a cappella community," said Chaz Cox president of the Michigan A Cappella Council and member of the all-male a cappella group GMen. MACFest features seven-minute musical sets from 13 of the 15 a cap- pella groups on campus. Since 2002 it has been organized by MACC, which brings representatives from the a cappella groups together to talk about issues related to the community and acts as a liaison to the greater Ann Arbor area. By assembling the groups to perform, MACFest exemplifies the purpose of MACC. The con- cert is the main source of revenue for MACC throughout the year, and it can mobilize a solid follow- ing for every campus a cappella group. "There are definitely groups that have 'groupies,' if you will, but those groupies quickly become a cappella groupies when they come to concerts like this," said MACC Vice President Lance Fletke, member of Amazin' Blue. "It's lik' group? This is' Since sion" o shows 1 a dram, attentio this fal which- perforn to recrt had to s of spac Fletke, est attei Whil on hope only str sity a ca "We the aud cr C nity an a grour and evi same p absolut hard fe Each diversit Rangin Americ (a co-e( interest Asian-i Chines( two so: will be oldies a e, 'There's not just this one However, it's hard to know There are 14 others too? what to expect from each perfor- wonderful!'" mance, as the groups lose gradu- the "huge cultural explo- ating members and gain new f group performance in voices each year. ike "Glee," there has been "One year you may have a atic increase in a cappella group that sings oldies and seri- in this year, Cox said. At ous ballads, and the next year l's A Cappella Rush, in they're doing pop songs and Dis- all of the campus groups ney tunes," said Fletke, a junior in and present information LSA and the school of Music, The- uit new members, people ater & Dance. "It really is a grab it on the floor due to alack bag of a cappella - you get a little e. According to Cox and bit of everything." this year's was the great- For group members, MACFest ndance ever, by far. isn't just a chance to show off e that puts more pressure their group to others for the first efuls to get into a group, it time in the year; it is also a chance engthens the solid Univer- to get excited about what every ippella community. other group is doing. make it very apparent to 4I love MACFest because itionee that this a commu- oftentimes it's the first time in the year where you're able to see the groups," Cox said. "It's really fun to see where they're at, what Thirteen a they're doing and who their new members are." )pella groups Fletke and Cox both joined e o groups as freshmen after hearing lescend on about a cappella for the first time Rackham. upon entering the University. "I stumbled upon Amazin' Blue and listened to it, and I was like, 'this is really bizarre; this is really d that they need to choose cool and different!' " said Fletke, p that fits them the best, who had sung in his high school ery singlelgroup is on the choir. age," Cox said. "There is "I was in shock," Cox added. ely no competiveness or "As in, 'This cannot be real. What elings whatsoever." is this? This is fabulous!'" group is distinct, and that "Yeah, it's just like, 'Where has y is on display at MACFest. this been?' " Fletke said. gfrom the India-influenced Both fell in love with a cappel- an pop of Maize Mirchi la their first year and have stuck d group with South-Asian out the often 10 hours per week ts) to Kopitonez (a co-ed time commitment and frequent nterest group that sings in late-night rehearsals. MACFest e). Each group will perform is one of the big pay-off events for ngs, the majority of -which all involved, literally and figura- contemporary pop, rock, tively, even for the nervous fresh- md classics. men. I