The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, March 25, 2011 - 7 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Friday, March 25, 2011 - 7 Spellboundby MUSKET University musical theater group kids around in 'Putnam County Spelling Bee' By Cassie Balfour ( Daily Arts Writer "My unfortunate erection / Is destroying my perfection," cries Chip Tolentino, played by LSA fresh- man Dave Caldwell, The25th Annual after his Putnam County dream of Spelling Bee becoming Putnam Today and County's tomorrow at 8 p.m., preemi- Sundayat2 p.m. nent speller is foiled Power enter by adoles- From $ cence. It happens to the best of us. Luck- ily, the University will be able to relive those traumatizing middle school years this weekend at the Power Center. MUSKET will be performing "The 25th Annual Putnam Coun- ty Spelling Bee," a one-act show about six quirky child prodigies competing in a high-stakes spell- ing bee while attempting to navi- gate the single most harrowing experience known to mankind: puberty. "These roughly nine to 13 year olds are taking part in the Put- nam spelling bee," director and Music, Theatre and Dance senior Rebecca Spooner said. "It's these six eclectic and eccentric kids, each have their own little quirks and stories and backgrounds. They're the misfits, they're the outcasts, they're the oddballs and the scapegoats, but they're all very lovable." The beloved comedy features a kooky cast of characters brought together by their insatiable need to win the county spelling bee. The Broadway musical has roots connecting it back to the Universi- ty, which is just one of the reasons MUSKET picked the musical. "The original Broadway show has a couple of Michigan alums in it and so we were excited to bring it back to the University," pro- ducer and MT&D junior Kathryn Pamula said. "Spelling Bee" has a small cast of just nine members, with many of the actors doubling up on roles. The fast-paced show, which fea- tures plenty of improv with char- acters spontaneously ad-libbing quick one-liners, is more light- hearted than past MUSKET fare. "This, is the first show that MUSKET has done since I've got here that no one dies," Pamula said. "They've been fun at times but someone always dies. So doing a happy show with a small cast has given the experience of a sense of family and sense of community." The characters in the show range from brilliant child genius- es like William Barfde, who spells out words by outlining the let- ters with his "magic foot," to the zany Leaf Coneybear, who has to go into a trance before spelling out his word. Even though the characters let their freak flags fly, they're easily relatable for Uni- versity students who undoubt- edly cringe when confronted with frizzy-haired "photo memories" on Facebook. "The characters are all strug- gling with growing up," Caldwell said. "My character is trying to maintain this perfect child star image. He gets very caught up in his genitals, which are changing and becoming erect all the time." Caldwell added that getting into character required him to remember what it was like being at that awkward age. "I'm really focusing on being true to what a child-slash-tween goes through," he said. "SpellingBee" maybe peppered with raunchy and crowd-pleasing musical numbers, but cast mem- bers and crew seem to agree that the focal point of the show is the characters themselves. cHRIS DZOMBAK/Daily The "Spelling Bee" competitors include audience members. "The jokes are great, but it's really about the characters, and as the director I've really had the opportunity to dig into these characters," Spooner said. MT&D and LSA junior Ali Gor- don, who plays the shy, diction- ary-loving Olive Ostrovsky, knows students will see themselves in the show. "The musical has a surprising amount of heart. It's a show about growing up; it's about kids real- izing that they're on the verge of adulthood," she said. Every aspect of the contestants' personalities has been considered and toyed with - from each char- acter's unique movements, to the way they sing or talk, to the way the cast members vibe off each other on stage. It's obvious the final product required an intense amount of collaboration between the cast and the production team. "Everybody is really sharing the weight the entire time, every- body feels responsible for every- bodyon stage ... everyone has their eyes on the periphery so they can help everyone else get through the show," Gordon said. "Spelling Bee" doesn't have an intermission and is only 90 minutes long, so the cast mem- bers have to be on their toes and in character the whole time. The audience is treated to an immer- sive experience, which will have viewers breathlessly rooting for all the freaks and geeks on stage. But Gordon does have one worry. "My only concern now is that I want to hydrate a lot before the show, but I have terrible bladder control, so I'm afraid I'll have to run out of the theater. It is literally my greatest fear," she said. Despite the lack of bathroom breaks, the show has another aspect that sets it apart from most musicals: It's interactive. The final cast list for "Spelling Bee" has yet to be determined, as a couple of audience members will be (voluntarily) picked to join the rest of the offbeat char- acters on stage during each show to compete in the bee. "The show never gets stagnant, because it changes every night depending on who's competing," Gordon said. "And we encourage good spellers because it makes it more exciting." Nevertheless, the cast will guide ambitious audience mem- bers through the show. And, added Spooner, "every speller gets a juice box and a hug." Spooner has one final piece of advice before coming to the show. "Brush up on your spelling skills," she joked. cOURTESY OF RELATIVITY MEDIA "Did you seriously lose Doug again?" All that power By BEN VERDI able sexual encounters aside, DailyArts Writer Morra doesn't do a single thing for anyone but himself once he "Limitless" can be read as two gets hooked on NZT. Appar- different things, and depend- ently the smartest possible ver- ing on what meaning we choose sion of Eddie Morra looks, acts to attach to and talks a lot like any other it, we'll either asshole who grew up with a sil- hate it or be ver spoon in his or her mouth. terrified by Limtless But, strangely, while this feels how accurately disappointing and upsetting, it it portrays our At Quality16 doesn't feel incorrect. society. This and Rave This is where the duality in film is either a how we read the film becomes sleazy instruc- Relativity Media important. If the film is claiming tion video on that the self-glorifying romps what we should all strive for and Cooper goes on (once he's domi- what average people (like us, nated the stock market and made presumably) should do if we ever himself an overnight sensation) become really rich and power- are the smartest possible thing ful, or an indictment of what we someone can do, then it should've would do were we to become big- been called "Pointless." But shots like Eddie Morra (Bradley by thinking of this man's new Cooper, "The Hangover"). superpowers as neither inher- If we're supposed to think ently good nor bad, and using of this movie in that first con- them as mere access points to text, then, frankly, it sucks. It's find out what he really believes like a 12-year-old boy imagined in, we are shown a saddening what it would be like to have but spot-on mirror image of the the smartest brain in the world. egotistical culture in which we For the record, you don't have participate every day. Student finalists playatUMMA By LUCY PERKINS me sane." Daily Arts Writer Music has always been a part of Kim's life, but the singer- People write songs about songwriter didn't start writing everything - teenage dreams, music until he went to college. banana pancakes and daylight He found a few classes in LSA are just a that offered courses in song- few of the The Ark at writing, which spurred his themes interest in the area. that have UMMA Student "They teach you a lot about graced the Songwriter creativity and expressing your- airwaves of self," Kim said. "There's a lot of late. And Series Finale collaboration." usually, the Tonight at8 p.m. Engineering freshman Hobey only music Kuhn, another March finalist, people hear UMMA started learning guitar when he is written Free was in eighth grade. by artists "I started writing songs early who have made it "big." But on, but they were really unde- today, Ann Arbor will get the veloped," Kuhn said. "I always chance to hear original songs stuck with this really typical written by students at the Uni- verse and chorus." versity. As Kuhn grew up and gained Each month this semester, more experiences to draw upon, The Ark has held a competi- his style changed significantly. tion in which students from the "Now I just fool around on the University of Michigan, East- guitar with cool chord changes _ ern Michigan University and until it sparks something," Kuhn Washtenaw Community College said. "Then I'll start singing a submitted original songs. The melody, and then the words fit in four winners of the competition with the rest of the song. are featured in a performance at "(My music) used to sound the end of the month. more like Nirvana, Vampire Weekend or Spoon, but now I'm going toward something more A songwriter's like Radiohead and Coldplay" Last spring, Kuhn and his Super Bowl. brother built a recording stu- dio in their backyard, and he recorded an entire album under the name Resident Scout. Tomorrow, the winners from Kim has also used collabo- January, February and March ration as a source for growth, will all return to compete in the forming a band called Dan Kim final round of competition with and The Blueberry Incident over the chance to win a live perfor- a month ago. The group has per- mance at UMMA and the oppor- formed at several Ann Arbor tunity to be an opening act at the venues, including Bar Louie. Ark. Music will continue to be the "Other people exercise or main mode of expression for work out to de-stress them- both Kim and Kuhn. selves," said Dan Kim, a 'U' alum "It will always be a passion and one of March's finalists in of mine," Kim said. "In June I'll the series. "But for me, music be applying to med school, but is my way to get away from the music will always be a part of my world. It energizes me and keeps life. We'll see where it takes me." Strikeout for 'MLB' By TEDDY PAPES totally disconnected from the Daily Arts Writer hitting system. Pitching is its own minigame, and its intricacy Baseball is a boring sport. doesn't mesh with the simple It has its merits, of course, but batting style. Hitting is all about exhilarating action is definitely the positioning of the joystick not one of and timing, but there is no feed- them. The * back for what is going wrong. great thing Hours of play aren't enough to about old MLB '11: decipher if missed balls are the baseball video result of swing that was too late games like or early. Even when contact is "Ken Griffey Playstation 3 finally made, it seems more like Jr." was how a random coincidence than an much they Sony improvement in skill. diverted from The analog play style is only the live sport and created a sur- one of the multitude of features prisingly fun and arcade-like "MLB '11" is now packing. It experience. But rather than has accumulated so many new going for an enjoyable video features and additions over the experience, "MLB '11: The course of its annual releases that Show" aims too close to the real it's impossible to keep track of sport and scuttles itself in the everything. Offense is so con- process. Instead of a stream- gested with baserunning, lead- lined game that pits the batter ing,stealingandslidepositioning against the pitcher, offense and that when itcomes time to do one defense become disconnected of them, it gets lost in the excess in a slogging mess of mechanics information your brain is trying that amount to a frustrating and to process and the umpire will vapid game. yell "Out!" before its even clear what has transpired. The online play compliments I' Ke n the generally miserable expe- 'I'm Kenny rience of "MLB '11." Playing at Powers and I the mercy of a slow opponent is grueling. Waiting for pitches can do not approve take far too long, and a game that is concerned with the minute this game.' details of timing is thrown off by incredibly laggy online play. Even when the game is played offline, the downtime is brutal. The first thing that greets There is so little actual game- each power-on of "MLI '11" is a play in "MLB '11" that its nega- skipping audio track indicative tive characteristics make doing of the prevailing lack of care and nothing seem like a more enjoy- polish that was devoted to the able alternative. game. The intro video is a live Mastering"MLB'11" might be action replay of clips from the a more feasible goal for experts previous year's baseball season of the series, while average gam- and it feels wholly out of place. ers will be left scratching their Even the menus and font are heads. The new analog systems obtrusive and nicely compliment might even be a fresh change the outdated nature of live action for those too familiar with other in a video game. baseball games, but it's hardly The big new feature of "MLB enough to make up for its other '11" is pure analogue pitching pitfalls. Seasoned players would and hitting. The pitching system do well to steer clear of this title is an intricate and complicated and newcomers beware: A truly use of the analog stick and is dreadful experience awaits. to be the smartest person in the world to get a haircut, wash your clothes, contribute nothing to society and have sex with tons of women, which is 90 percent of what Morra does once he dis- covers the powers he gets from a new super-pill, NZT. The drug is illegal, and Morra has to steal it from his drug- dealing ex-brother-in-law to get his hands on it, but once it's in his system he quickly transforms into the person he presumably always wanted to be. So, if the point of this movie is that enough power can corrupt even a good person, then, frank- ly, it still sucks, because Morra is kind of a lazy douche before the powers anyway. However, if we place "Limit- less" in a broader cultural con- text, we can then assign it much more value and importance as a pessimistic look at what people in 2011 would do if they could do anything in the world. Innumer- 'Limitless' sees our limits. It's a lot like the question that the characters of "Office Space" were asked to consider: What would you do with a million dol- lars? Honestly, as nice as we like to say we are, who would do any- thing but spend it on themselves? Who, when put on the spot, can come up with something better to do with a million dollars than "two chicks at the same time?" One can't critique the message or main character of "Limitless" without also judging the world that gave rise to both. Morra is endowed with limitless cogni- tive power - this is true - but throughout the movie he reveals his unbelievably limited view of what that power is for. *Based on availability - first come first served. Expires 4/30/11 3870 Jackson Road, Ann Arbor 734-747-9060 www.selfstoragespecialists.com Michiganbay Spring 2011 MemanMalyooazl