6A - Monday, December 2, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com fiA - Monday, December 2, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Commercializing the fine arts Is Hollywood ruining theater with adaptations? By REBECCA GODWIN Daily Arts Writer Recently, the world of fine arts has grown increasingly present in mainstream media. Hollywood producers are making musical after musical into mildly success- ful movies. Multiple media outlets have covered street artist Banksy. TV shows like "Glee" and "Smash" made it cool to be a part of glee clubs, acappella groups and other singing organizations. Fine arts has become increasingly commer- cialized, and while that has helped expose new people to the arts, is it worth risking the integrity of the art? When I first stumbled my way into fine arts, I was a sophomore in high school. "Glee" had just started, and its quirkiness and mix of modern and classic songs attracted me and most of the kids in my school. So, when the annual musical was announced, dozens of us decided to audition. The final cast, which included myself, was huge, but the appeal of performing quickly faded when many in the ensemble realized that hard work was required to put on a number similar to Rachel Berry's. By the next year, "Glee," while still popular, no longer held the interest of many of my classmates. Movies like "Mamma Mia!" were popular enough, but the students around me had learned that big song-and-dance numbers weren't as easy to put together as Hol- lywood made it seem. But I was hooked - I performed in the school musicals again my junior and senior year, and soon I was devouring everything that had anything to do with Broadway. But in recent years, fine arts has become increasingly popular, and I've begun to miss the times when no one knew any Broadway show besides "Wicked." It's not that I'm upset that more people are beginning to enjoy fine arts; I'm just afraid that, in order to appeal to a wider audience, executives will begin to take the fine arts and commercialize them. Hollywood has already claimed its first victim with "Glee." When the show first started, I loved it. It was a poignant look at high school, and it gave the best representation I'd ever seen of what it felt like to be a part of a theater group. But as the popularity increased, the show began to change. Soon episodes were dedicated to plot lines revolv- ing around Britney Spears and Lady Gaga, and the quirkiness was replaced with the mainstream. The next to fall to commer- cialism was the movie musical. Over the past several years, the movie musical has gone through a rebirth. Well known musicals like "Chicago" and "Hairspray" were all brought to the big screen in fairly accurate adaptations thanks to casts of genuinely tal- ented performers. Then came "Sweeney Todd," "Rock of Ages" and "Mamma Mia!," and while the stories were decent, the perform- ers were slowly being replaced with better known actors, who, while quite famous, didn't pos- sess the vocal capabilities the roles required. Finally, Cameron Mackintosh decidedtobringthe powerful "Les Miserables" to the bigscreen and I couldn't have been angrier. I love "Les Mis;" the music is breathtak- ing, the story is heartbreaking and when the show is performed with the right cast, the show can be awe-inspiring. But I knew Mack- intosh wasn't going to cast the right people. I knew that actual talent would be sacrificed for big names, so I dreaded the release. I watched in anger as people around me, people who had never once shown any interest for the arts, gushed about the upcoming movie because Wolverine, the Gladiator and Mia Thermopolis were going to be in it. When I did finally see it, every- thing I had predicted had come true. Hollywood destroyed the masterpiece that is "Les Mis." They were more concerned with Oscar nominations and box office numbers than preserving the integrity of the piece. They moved scenes, added songs, removed musical numbers, cut out pieces of the story altogether and then claimed it was a cinematic tri- umph. But the masses ate the film up. Many of them had never seen the stage production, let alone read the book, so they had very little idea of the extent to which they were robbed. Now Hollywood is at it again, with filming already underway for "Into the Woods" and "Annie." Again, the movies are full of big names, but I don't see any evidence that these peo- ple know how to carry a tune. Maybe I'm just bitter. Maybe I should accept the growing popularity. But as a person who loves the fine arts, I would rath- er these works go unnoticed by the majority and stay untainted by greed than be butchered and commercialized so some execu- tives can make a profit. ABC "Do we have to watch 'Crash' again, mom?" New ABC comedies about families hit stride THINKING OF JOINING DAILY ARTS NEXT SEMESTER? E-mail arts@michigandaily.com to request an application. AB "Agee lead-i ily which outsh the f terms ity. B Goldb and Wife' miere decet that poten Come time op, as ers how for t and vw of jo] "The bergs "Trol are r great ers a: what these "Tr has g famil lows "Subu By ALEX INTNER band, Pete (Bradley Whitford, DailyArts Writer "The West Wing") as they raise his kids from previous marriag- C is using Marvel's es and deal with his two crazy its of S.H.I.E.L.D." as a ex-wives. Akerman leads an n to a block of two fam- ensemble of both kids and adults comedies, that continue to improve as the h are [3 writers learn how to write their ining characters. For example, Marcia ormer in Trophy Wife Gay Harden's ("Law and Order: of qual- SVU") character appeared to be oth "The .asonone an obnoxious hard-ass in the nergs' midseason first episode. Several episodes "Trophy Tuesdays at later, she is still a strict charac- " pre- 9:30 p.m. ter, but the writers have figured :d with out how to add layers of warmth it pilots ABC to her. showed The shining stars on "Wife" tial. B- are the child actors. Casting dies take children for sitcoms is hard, but to devel- The they happened to get a group of the writ- Gldbrg three funny children who can evaluate g not only work with good mate- to write Season one rial, but elevate it to make it he actors midseason great. The best kid is newcomer chat types Albert Tsai ("How I Met Your kes work. Tuesdays Mother"), who is hysterical as Gold- at9 p.m. Bert, Pete's adopted son. He and ABC avoids the trap of acting like a phy Wife" generic sitcom kid - improving not quite upon his already solid material comedies, but their writ- by adding an extra level of goofy re starting to figure out to his performance. makes the best versions of The pilot for "Trophy Wife" shows. was very good, and it only got rophy Wife" in particular better from there. The latest grown into a very funny episode, in which the char- y comedy. The series fol- acters gets head lice, was the Kate (Malin Akerman, best episode yet. Most of the urgatory") and her hus- jokes landed with laughter and Call: #734-418-4115 Email: dailydisplay@gmail.com Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis ACROSS 1 Mooing ere 4Ancient region surrounding Athens 10 Reagan eramil, program 13 Disgusted grunts 15 Resident ol Tibes capital 16 Muscle spasm 17 Illegal activity admited by Lance Armstrong in January201l3 19 Wrieror whom the Edgar award is named 20 Notisacred 21 Secretmatters 23 Baba who stole from thieves 24 Singer with Crosby, Stills & Nash 27 Glass container 29 Atress Cannon 30 Peter Fonda's title beekeeper 31 Opposed 1101 34 Hutswith a tusk 37 ESPN showwith an "Inside Pitch" segment 42 Willenof "Platoon" 43100-lawmakers group 44 "Peter Pan" pirate 47 Hang around 49 Preoria'sland: Abhr. 50 Trousseau holder 53 Stomach-punch response 55 taroftheline that includes "whereot eart thou" 56 Female star en Cowfy roa 61 VolcnitHawdiin landmark, and a hint to the first word of 17-,.24-, DOWN 1 Babybears 2 Lookat lasciviously 3 "Sonwhat?" 4 Alanof0 "M*A*S*H" 5 Like rosebushes 6 Pob spigot 7'Woe": Patricia T. 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All Disciplines. 734/996-0566 or writeon@iserv.net HELP WANTED WWW.STUDENTPAYOUTS.com Paid survey takers need in A2. 100% FREE to join. Click on Surveys. other moments helped develop the characters by moving them from their initial stereotypes. For example, it showed Kate not being the pretty trophy wife and doing work to take care of her kids. ABC's other family comedy, "The Goldbergs," only produced a mediocre pilot. The show focuses on the Goldberg family, a group of people who love to shout at each other. In the pilot, the volume for every single line was turned up to 11, and it was headache-inducing to watch. S 'Trophy Wife' and 'Goldbergs' continue to * improve. The show's cast is talented, but they have been given one direction from the writers and directors of the show: shout. They do this very well, but it's still grating after watching it for 22 minutes. Jeff Garlin ("Curb Your Enthusiasm") is the only one who can make this type of dialogue work as Murray, the father in the family. He plays angry and loud very well and is able to lessen the obnoxiousness of some of the moments. What works on "Goldbergs" is the true sense of sentimentality that is prevalent in each episode. Each ends with a moment of warmth and family togetherness. This show, forcthe most part, nails these moments because it lets them come from real character realizations, rather than forcing them to occur. The Thanksgiv- ing episode, for instance, ended with the two sons, Adam (new- comer Sean Giambrone) and Barry (Troy Gentile, "Entou- rage"), stopping their fighting to acknowledge that they are family, and they love each other. After an episode with them doing nothing but fighting, this was a welcome change. The glimmer of hope for "Goldbergs" comes from the fact that it's based on the creator's real life. Adam F. Goldberg ("Break- ing In") based this sitcom on his childhood, complete with keep- ing the names of the members of his family and showing real-life home videos over the credits. It's clearly a passion project, and one hopes he will find a way to tone down the obnoxiousness of the character interactions. "The Goldbergs" and "Trophy Wife" are growing comedies. Comedies in their first season need time to grow and develop their sense of humor and their ensemble. So far, both of these family comedies have earned that time. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 112 13 14 15 i6 i7 18 i9 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 51 Mr- 52 0 53 54 0 0 37-and50-Across555 I I I 7ar 55i i 9eon 64 Night's opposite 65 Pie: ice cream treut 66 Reached base in a cloud ofldust 67 'Tasty! 68 Unsettling looks 69 Arid m m i0 6 I1 62 63 By C.C. Brnikel (c)2013'tribun Ctent sAgency, LLC 12/02/13