The Michigan Daily-Friday, June 6,1980-Page 9 ..r .f..f .r .r.: .. .. ..r.r ............................... ?...r ............. ... r :........:::.....:.......: ........................................,..........::::::: "::.::;::: ..;:.. ":a}}:n:}:x:r ...fi. r:....4 .v .. .. ...r . .. ... "$, f.::.t . ............... ........... r........ ..............v..................n.r.......:..n.......v..........v, ............ ,} , ' } ..... .... .. r.. }{C .r ....". ......... }r.......{....., r.. f. r ............. n .. r... .... ..........v..h..} ............v................. .x...................:..n .............; ...v1::........r. v:} ..h.,"v'::v: .:} ":; .,. ..r .. rr...}.r .....{ v. ..... r... n.....n...... r.. r....,..,... } .................n.... v........... : . {.. .. ...... ... .. , : i'>}thi+ ".vi1.. .h... ... v.. ..v,.. .. .ter'. ..., . ...... ... ... ... .:... n...n..:,.............. n.,.... r...r .v.... r.:....:.................. ....... ......h.. ..........^........................ .. ,.. ... .: . . 4...... ...................................... ... ... ..'" ......... vi.,} .( .. r.v...f ......"} .} '.".. .. .....G.......{.. r...r ..: ............................. . . ...........r.. .............. ... .......... .......v.......... i"...,............... ......... . . :. ......... .... . . .. v. ................. ...... ....... .., .t-. . :.v'S "."".v :" }} '~:"Y.r,+ 3C .. ... .. it ...... ... .. . ... .. .. ......... r......................,.........r X. t............. n............. n.. n.....,. .r. ....... ...... ... .. ...............r........ ... ... ..... .............. . .... . ::.4:.:w:.v.v}}:{"} :+:: v .. . '4 5... .. R.. i \$ .. .. ..............x::::n......t..,.......,...... n., ....:v: ": :":.,.... ............w:...,..v,...,-"w::.v?:".vr:::::: r.vt.. n:: v}} :. ,... :{".".',ti:.. .. ... ., x.4::. v ,"".,?"::. °,{": .......n.....v. v...v. n.. f..,..r ............v..... t......... r.... r.. r...........} ...............,... r...v..:{............. ......... r..r .. t........... r..: ......:....... r... r................ ,.. ..... .....................................rr::. n...:rt.... ......................,... ....f.r ......... f.. v...... ...... rr..v ........................ ...................... n....v........ .......... r...:.......... ............ .... r ............::.v::."r.": }:h:w:: w:::: n....:..:.....,... n..... ..,^:::::.,".v..........rv:::: {w:::::..... ............. .........- .. .....n ............................v....{....fem ..... .... .. ... ....... .. .. .... ............... .......... ..:...................... .. r............ .......... ...... h..w..... ................ .. h.................n ., .. .. . . ...Y ................ .. ..... ... ............... .. ..:...... ....v..... r.......v.........:.....r ...... ...... ....................... :: -.....,............... w::: :,...............::: v........w:.v: v '}h:"}}:v.,+.v^.,:.y.".vx:: }iv ". :::;r.".",y "}, Arts WHO 00 LIFE Asserting the right to die By JOSHUA PECK It created quite a stir last year when the wife of a prominent New York psychistrist swallowed poison, deliberately calling a great deal of at- tention to herself in the process. The woman sent out notes to her closest (and some not-so-close) friends, ex- plaining her decision to end her life (she had cancer) and asserting suicide as a reasonable and proper alternative for her and all others whose earthly lots had become too much to bear. On the same note, a suicide-rights group in England has infuriated some Britons by publishing a guide to easy self-destruction. Opponents fear that access to the information might en- courage some to commit suicide who might otherwise look for further solution to their woes. BETWEEN THESE two events, a play opened on Broadway that for the first time brought the performing arts' attention to the problem of suicide. It is called Whose Life Is It Anyway and a touring production of the show is now playing at the Birmingham Theatre. Suicide is not a. topic people like to discuss. To those raised by traditional Judeo-Christian ethics, life is too precious a gift to surrender it, even if immense pain is the only alternative. It seems peculiar that while many other taboos-premarital sex, masturbation, homosexuality-have been crumbling, most Americans should not have budged a bit in considering suicide unacceptable.. Playwright Brian Clark is not at all happy with that particular element of the status quo. There are times, he con- tends, when life becomes mere existen- ce, and simple existence is not precious or holy; it can be terminated without aggrieving man or God. Ken Harrison, Clark's hero in Whose Life, is in just such a situation. A for- mer sculptor, he has been lying in an English hospital bed for six months when the curtain rises on his melan- choly visage. Harrison is paralyzed from the neck down. He has been forced not only to give up his art, but also even the remotest semblance of a normal life. He relies on a catheter to keep his body free of impurities that could kill him. His only pleasures are leering at nurses and social workers, staring at the walls, and chatting with the Carib- bean-born orderly who shaves him and humorously commiserates with him about his lot. EARLY IN the play, Harrison (Michael Moriarty) hears that his con- dition is almost certainly permanent. After a few days of thinking it over, he decides that he would rather die than continue to exist as a helpless invalid. His request that his life support be removed so that he can peacefully die is delivered in his already-established style; an amusing blend of keen in- telligence, sardonic wit, and matter-of- fact self-confidence. Harrison's request is met with deep consternation by the nurses on the ward, and is bluntly refused by Dr. Emerson, whose decision it is to make. Michael Moriarty, last appeared in the area as the younger son in O'Neill's Long Day's Journey Into Night (Power Center, 1975) and has'also shown up in several television and film vehicles in- cluding Williams' The Glass Menagerie with Katharine Hepburn, the television mini-series Holocaust, and the film Bang the Drum Slowly. He has im- pressed many critics, including this one, as being one of the most talented actors on stage or screen now working in the U.S. (I admit to having been un- fairly prejudices by first seeing Moriar- ty in the title role of my favorite drama-something about a hunchback king.) Moriarty is here cast in a role which constantly would seem to handicap the actor-his only available tools are his face and voice. Yet the Detroit native projects such an engrossing character, such a stirring Mend of rapier wit and heart-stopping pathos, that the play's central problem grows to a major dilemma. It becomes quite painful to imagine permitting the demise of this very human fugure, and of his immense intellect at the same time. Yet that it is his right to choose demise no sentient observer can, in the end, deny. MUCH OF the juice of this meaty play is drawn from Moriarty's simultaneously sardonic and self- pitying remarks about his own con- dition. If the tragedy of the human con- dition is at the center of comedy, then its quitessence is Harrison's promise to a lawyer who leaves his briefcase in the invalid's room: ". .. and if anyone tries to steal it, I will swear horrible at them." Such a mixture of tears and laughter is rare-and in Moriarty's capable hands, altogether moving. The supporting cast, frankly, is a bit of a bore. The doctor in charge of the case, played stolidly by David Tabor, never seems for a monent to consider Harrison's arguments seriously. He'd be more believable if he did. A suggestion of budding romance bet- ween two of the minor characters is so insubstantially played it slips away en- tirely, and the legal eagles who come in to settle the dispute at play's end are all but indistinguishable. But Moriarty is so central to the ac- tion and to the staging of Whose Life that his compatriots' deficiences are rendered insignificant. The play does not stretch for a look at any really deep or particularly complex questions. But with humor and savvy, it does bat around the sticky problems connected with enthanasia and the like. It's a delight to see morbidity so provocatively and smoothly handled. The Ann Arbr Film Coopentive presents at MLB: $1.50 Friday, June 6 A BOY AND HIS DOG L Q. Jones, 1975) 7& 10:20-MLB3 Based on Harlan Ellison's short story, this film takes a kinky look at life in the vnr 2024. The world has been decimated by a nuclear holocaust, and the roaming survivors battle each other for food and women. A BOY AND HIS DOG is a "science tiction titm that is an intelligent example of the genre as it should be, unaccompanied by idiot explanations and not diluted for the masses." -CINEFANTASTIQUE. With JASON ROBARDS and DON JOHNSON. Cinema- scope. THE TIME MACHINE (George Pal, 1960) 8:40-MLB 3 A literate and imaginative adaptation of the H. G. Wells story. Noted special- effects wizard George Pal employed excellent time-lapse photography to capture the essence of time travel. Winner of the 1960 Academy. Award for special effects. With ROD TAYLOR and YVETTE MIMIEUX. Tomorrow: Sterling Hayden, Eric Roberts, and Susan Sarandon in the KING OF THE GYPSIES at MLB. h Surf Salad'nc I ' Your apartment cramped? Read the Daily Classifieds for the latest 'For Rent' info. c i I s .......... N -, ~{, eC br a ncigu ctri rctn w w ilit nc Right atba STpecibunrgCr e 1-ved new u S a odNe r auce. lae delicatl ~fresh fruit 12 only' with a co through Jt Catch it ntow- rolled i~ntoo 6000