rArts The Michigan Daily Friday, May 29. 1981 Page 5 'Bedroom Farce'-British fluff By KEN FELDMAN couples of rather diverse temper- detracting, but they nevertheless a change of pace from the usual flick Bedroom Farce is a fast paced ment who engage in the confusing leave much of the comic potential - live theatre, in any farm, still has comedy that is often amusing and endeavor of trying to reunite a four- unrealized. The notable exceptions And, despite some relatively short always cute. But although Britisher th couple. Unfortunately for all in- are Beverly J. Pooley and, to a lags (mastly in the first half I did Alan Ayckbourn has done a fine job volved, this fourth couple (Trevor lesser extent, Nancy Heusel as laughaodidefsMalf),ms id with the script, the actors and ac- and Susannah) combine the self- Trevor's quaint parents Ernest and Roselle)od deal. Mattempts at fur- tresses of the Ann Arbor .ivic confidence of Franz Kafka with the Delia. Pooley has obviously had Rosee octrn atteptsat fu- niture construction and Ernest and, Theatre are often unable to meet its intelligence of the average tree more acting experience than many Delia's confrontations with the challenge. - stump. All manner of frustrations of the others, and it shows in his hysterically insecure Susannah It's not that the evening isn't funny occur as the two progress from poise and confidence onstage. More t it's just that the humor gets enemies to lovebirds. important, he has the sense of were the big yucks, and most scenes through to the audience in spite of, timing and grace that induces un- er oomearcentw not because of, the acting. Much of Equally unfortunate is the acting forced laughter. Comedy requires char, and tFarevening is amusin the fun of Bedroom Farce consists of of Laurie Atwood and C. Taylor control, and Pooley and Heusel slapstick, physical humor thatrelies Nichols as this blundering couple. ;display it where the others tend enough, even if it just suffered a bit on the actors' talents more than on Atwood specializes in overacting toward ham. light fun like a silly television sit- the quality of the material; con- that leaves her character un- sequently, there are several dull believable and always annoying. IT'S ALWAYS worth mentioning com with the advantage of being spots in the show. Nichols is similarly unsubtle, and however, that this is just civic British. For summer entertainment, his attempts at a British accent are theatre, a local talent display that no with the price of professional theatre THE ACTION takes place in three (charity, Feldman!) inadequate: one expects to be of professional so high, I guess you could do a lot bedrooms, and concerns three The other performances are less caliber. After all, it's cheap, and it's worse. Up and down in 'Funland' Bram Tchaikovsky - 'Funland' (Arista) If Bram Tchaikovsky had simply made up his mind who was going to produce Funland, he might have had a magnificent album - or a quite ordinary one. As it is, it is only half of a marvel, sort of like the Mona Lisa from the neck down. The other half is typical Tchaikovsky theatrics, but even these reveal his vulnerable underbelly, and the ad- mission is worth the price. TCHAIKOVSKY co-produced the album with Nick Garvey, and it sounds as if each took one side and made a wish. Whoever took the first side won, but the difference between the sides is still great enough to make the album seem like a perverse musical game of tug-of-war. That first side is a masterful exten- sion of the patented Phil Spector sound. It is so pervasively emphatic that it gives the music a singular sort of authenticity, an aliveness gained by sucking the listener into a vortex of sound. The effect is kinda like aural 3-D. The loudest, and seemingly nearest, sound is the barest framework of the songs - i.e., the raw and spacious blasts of the guitars. Mixed just behind this is the steady thump-thump of the rhythm sec- tion, while Tchaikovsky's vocals form a powerful center, distanced enough to seem like a voice from the grave. IF THAT'S what it is, then it's an ac- cusing voice, for the songs harp con- stantly on a theme of meeting (and not meeting) responsibilities. Tchaikovsky perpetually confronts his characters with the responsibilities of the roles they assume, and berates their inconsisten- cy when they won't face up to them. It isn't -honest to bring distress upon oneself and then complain about it, nor is it to take one step forward and refuse to take the next one. That's why Tchaikovsky honestly asserts in "Stand and Deliver" that "I don't know if I'll make it back/Or ride until I fade away." Either way beats nothing: "Stand and deliver, but don't throw the night away." Most of the confrontation predictably goes on in the demilitarized zone of love - Tchaikovsky's guitar ticks like a time bomb in "Model Girl," a de- mythification epic with a disturbing equation ("Another woman/Another throw of the dice"). The meeker second side finds the same theme repeated in the glorious rewards of "Soul Surren- der" and the pathological frailty of "Together My Love." BUT THE accusations begin to blur on the second side, at the same time that whoever is producing starts cleaning up the act. "Why Does My Mother Phone Me?" is a metallic indic- tment of failed motherhood, linking boyhood frustration in the childlike chanting of "Why does my mother phone me/Just to tell me that she doesn't like me?" with the inevitable confused result: "Why when I run away/Do they send the police to get me?" It's abrilliant song, the finest on ther album, but already the new producer is taking control of the side. As the song opens, the afore-mentioned theatrics begin, with phones ringing and sirens blaring, while the sound acquires a cleanliness that sharply contrasts with the first side. Gone is the raw fullness of the blasts; in fact, gone are the blasts. 4 This tamer approach creates a sound that is functional and little else, an amorphous style that doesn't dare the risks of the other side. Tchaikovsky still sings like he's being garrotted (that's incurable), but everything else has been safely muted and shunted to the background. THE ACCUSATIONS go on, but they are hollower and sometimes confused; "Used to Be My Used to Be" finds Tchaikovsky chiding, "You were out of your mind/I was out of your sight," but it isn't clear whether he's still resenting the irresponsibility of his mother or the jealousy of a lover. "Miracle Cure" is an emaciated hoedown that probably wouldn't have worked no matter who produced it, while the album-ending "Egyptian Mummies" finds Tchaikovsky violatng his own tenets and shifting the blame for his failed affair. It has its shortcomings, but Funland also has a wealth of fine moments - a leading guitar riff that explores the sound spectrum in "Heart of Stone," a dreamy, distant synthesizer solo in "Shall We Dance?," the anthemic chorus of "Stand and Deliver," and Tchaikovsky's blithe assertion that "I'd like you not to come 'round again" in "Egyptian Mummies." And there are no more of those emasculating women, those nutcracker sweets that have been known'to haunt his work. He may never re-reach the heights he scaled with The Motors, but Funland is a step up from last year's Pressure, and as such is worth the trip. -Fred Schill Begin your.day with 764-0558 is preserved on The Michigan Daily 420 Maynard Street AND Graduate Library 375 N. MAPLE 769-1300 DAILY DISCOUNT MATINEES 4 Forged by a god. Found by a King.- SQUEEZE. PL AY 1:30-3:15-5:15- 7:30-9:15 THE BLUE BROTHERS ..'oi SWTIERSAL PICTURE 5:20, 7:30, 9:30