.. ! L+ ..g 1{', - i ";, "f "..v 4""yr" h } '," ly ti's.?yj;.''lr, .-'"",. The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, May 20, 1980-Page 11 Lt+.'{;; A rt;:,ti"n :}t, :vM:S Secoi By ANNE SHARPE I first encountered the famous Second City theatrical comedy troupe in a room at the downtown Chicago Sheraton, and they didn't impress me at all. I guess I expected too much, but then, there they were on inational TV. This is the group with a decades-old tradition of spawning great comic per- formers, including Mike Nichols and Elaine May, Robert Klein, and the lion's share of past and present Not Ready for Prime Time Players. The night I was in Chicago, they did a half-hour parody of Ben-Hur, in which Ben-Hur, the f Te Second Quebec MONTREAL (AP) - Quebec voters decide today whether to take a major first step toward independence from Canada, a break that would turn the "world's friendliest border" into a question mark for the United States. Quebecers are being asked in a referendum to endorse their provincial government's proposal to negotiate "sovereignty-association" for largely French-speaking province. UNDER THIS plan, Quebec would have political independence but would continue its close economic ties with the rest of English-speaking Canada. The last two pre-referendum opinion polls gave conflicting readings. One taken May 4-9 showed the "no" side with a 12-percentage-point lead, but a nd City scores again Charlton Heston characters talked and overbearing medium of television. It for one sparkling moment in acted exactly like Curly from the Three works much better on the intimate level act. This sketch called for S Stooges. I only remember laughing on- of the theatre. Content-wise, Second director of the Boston Syr ce, when Ben was getting a terrible City skits are still more reminiscent of chestra, to conduct a forun message from a dying enemy. "Your Nichols and May than Saturday Night Criticism in which each ply sister and mother," gasped the man, Live; despite its token bawdiness, it complain, solo and ensemb "arelepers!" isn't ever cruel or offensive, or hell- certain annoying social "My sister and mother are leopards!" bent on pumping the audience for a cer- "Ozawa" called for memb squeaked Ben/Curly, in befuddled tain quota of yocks per minute. On- audience to contribute social alarm. stage, Second City plays with ex- the second eji Ozawa, nphony Or- m of Social ayer would le, about a problem. ers of the gripes. WELL, Second City TV isn't that slam-bang funny, but then its charac- teristically mild, casual, middle-brow humor isn't suited to the expensive, perimental theatre, improvisation, and so forth in a decidedly laid-back man- ner. The players aren't overly concer- ned with polish or making everything work just so. One gets the feeling that this troupe is a way-station for them; they're waiting to be "discovered" in- dividually, like Chevy Chase or Bill Murray before them, and magically spirited away to Bigger and Better Things. Until then, it's playtime for Second City. There is more than one touring com- pany, and the Second City members that hit the road aren't the same people one sees on television. The particular troupe that stopped by the Michigan Theatre last Saturday night weren't exactly "giving their all" and theaud- ience response echoed their perfun- ctory tone, forbidding any hope of spon- taneity. The cast was virtually the same that. came to the Power Center last fall and their material seemed familiar also, most notably the routines about singing cowboys who are incredibly bored with life on the range and two doctors sniggering over the word "rectum" in the dictionary. The "improvisational" bits appeared well-rehearsed and a bit tedious, save AMONG CALLS of "Smoking in public places!" "Homosexuals!" and "Democrats!" there came a loud, un- mistakable shout of "Nude Whales!" The players looked as surprised as the audience about this one; nevertheless, they resolved to do it. "My girlfriend and I went to the beach for a private par- ty," shouted one of the players in a genuinely outraged tone, "when we were accosted by a NUDE WHALE!" "Not only that," he screamed, as "Ozawa" again pointed his baton at him, "but it was a SPERM whale!" It was a beautiful moment, despite all the dull ones. Second city has a raw-edged charm and excitement that makes it all worthwhile. None of the players in this company really showed any unmistakable "star quality", although Lance Kinsey displayed a Charles Grodin-like capacity for looking endearingly dumb when the situation calls for it-both as the "nude whales" man and as a win- some tow-head in a masturbation sket- ch. Saturday night's performance may not have revealed the Face of Comedy to Come, but it garnered quite a few laughs and that's a good start. to decide o 1 separation proposal negotiate the division of Canada. But the United States in important Levesque dismisses this as a referen- economic, military and political ways. survey made a week later and published Sunday gave the "yes" 40 per cent to 37 per cent for the "no," with 23 per cent either undecided or refusing to answer. Political analysts believe most of this undeclared vote will end up in the "no" column. THE SEPARATIST Parti Quebecois of provincial Premier Rene Levesque has stressed that no changes will occur overnight if it receives the mandate it seeks. Years of lengthy negotiation would lie ahead, and the PQ pledges a second Quebec referendum on any resulting agreement. Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau and the premiers of the nine other provinces insist they will not dum ploy and says they will have to ac- cede to the democratic will of Quebec. The PQ maintains that Quebec can best develop economically and protect its French culture only if it gets out from under two centuries of English domination. SOVEREIGNTY FOR this province of 6.2 million people - five million of them French-speaking - could affect Anti-U.S. feelings were partly behind a PQ platform plank calling for an in- dependent Quebec to withdraw from the NATO alliance, just as France did in 1966. That PQ position was reversed two years ago, but the party makes clear it still reserves the right to review Quebec's membership after indepen- dence. Tie Ann Arbor Fin CoopemtiAe Presents at Aid A: $1.50 Tuesday, May 20 TOBACCO ROAD (John Ford, 1941) 7:0--AUD A John Ford's adaption of the famous Broadway play about life in rural Georgia. A tragi-comedy about moral depravity and social injustice starring CHARLIE GRAPEWIN and MARJORIE RAMBEAU. HOW GREEN WAS MY VALLEY (John Ford, 1941) $:45-AUD A Beautiful, moving story of a Welsh coal mining family trying to stay together. This touching story is filled with incidents which evoke emotional responses even from the most indifferent viewers. A "must see" film. Stars WALTER PIDGEON, MAUREEN O'HARA, DONALD CRISP, RODDY McDOWELL. Academy Award Best Picture. -Tomorrow: Luis Bunuel's THAT OBSCURE OBJECT OF DESIRE and PHANTOM OF LIBERTY ot Aud A.J This is our " Spring Semester Coupon! Worth 50C Free Pinball. at Tommy's The Cross Flipper Holiday & Eyed Mc~ee's Camp Moose South Packard and State E. Liberty University THIS COUPON GOOD UNTIL 5/26 1 coupon per person per day