A-r.ts, The Michigan Daily Friday, July 31, 1981 Page 9 Flett flat in Stratford's Shrew,' but 'Misanthrope' sails on Bedford's talent By JOSHUA PECK Specialtothe Daily STRATFORD, ONTARIO-Whatever Sharry Flett's Katharina is, she is no shrew. Intelligent, maybe; spunky, cer- tainly., But if there's one thing all productions of Shakespeare's Taming of the Shrew ought to agree on, it's that Kate's hellish fury has got to be as commanding and central to the play as fireworks are to the Fourth of July. Yet Flatt at her best is a meager sparkler twirling in the crowd. Flett's extraordinary beauty and her considerable experience both point to her having been the right choice for the tempestuous Katharina. She has even played the role before, in the thriving metropolis of Edmonton, Alberta. But she is in the big leagues now opposite Len Cariou, and comes across as more of a nonentity than a furnace. CURIOUSLY, the production's strongest element, like that of the con- currently running Coriolanus, is the beautiful physical work of the prover- bial cast of thousands. Like all the rest of Shakespeare's comedies, Taming of the Shrew at its best is an exhilarating blend of the high and low forms of comedy, delicately interspersing the subtlest of wry observations about the human condition with the basest and broadest of pratfalls and puerile tom- foolery. As Flett's flatness defuses the quieter, more reflective element of the play, the antics of the minor characters jump into prominence. Director Peter Dews has chosen to include The Induction in his production, a scrap of foolishness that introduces the better-known portion of Taming of the Shrew by detailing the deception of a drunk by the name of Christopher Sly into believing that he is a wealthy lord with wife, sack, and entertainers at his ready command. (The Shrew story is actually a play performed for Sly as part of this deception.) In the teasing of the wonderfully sod- den Sly (Desmond Ellis) there is an abundance of coquetry and inebriated slapstick. The demanding physical training that goes into an actor's instru- ction is readily visible in Shrew's artful bumbling. Such carefully choreographed missteps could never' endure haphazard stumbling; it is to the company's credit that they've risen above the principals' problems to become the production's stars. THE BIG LOSER, of course, is Cariou, a strong performer whose stature is perfectly evident in Coriolanus, but not here. The thrill of the play, after all, is watching the artful tugging between the bitchiest of bitches and the craftiest of chauvinists. Cariou holds his end up all right, but the nagging imbalance wrecks the pyrotechnical display. The Shrew, I'm afraid, is already tame. The new brass at Stratford rewarded Flett with the preeminent female role in Moliere's The Misanthrope as well, though here fortunately, she is not quite so pivotal. The role of Alceste, the title character, is the property of Brian Bed- ford, the very best of Stratford's actors. Bedford gives a mournfully melancholy reading to the part not a little reminiscent of his Jacques in the Festival's As You Like It from a few years back. Alceste is a man who insists on ab- solute and uncompromising sincerity. His dilemma: He lives in what may have beeii the most insincere society in the history of the race, the age of flowery falsehood under Louis XIV of France. NOT MUCH happens in the play; it is essentially a character study of a man who could only be happy if he were able to twist his society into something else-an unlikely event-or suppress his- own hankering for complete honesty-an impossibility. Bedford is flanked by Nicholas-pen- nell (last seen in Ann Arbor as Richard III) in the role of Alceste's dear friend Philinte. In comparison to the charac- ters of Pennell and the other ordinary figures that people the play, Bedford's quirky misanthropy sails delicately forward. The production is a good, but not ex- ceptional one. There are stagnant and draggy moments in the pacing that beg remedy, and Flett does her best to derail the effort altogether. THE OPPRESSIVE social strictures of the day are beautifully conveyed by Desmond Heeley's sets and costumes. Even the men are so smothered in wigs; bric-a-brac, fringes, and fluffs that flowery insincerity comes to seem called for. And the neatly manicured lawns and foliage couldn't possible be better behaved. And Bedford fails to overwhelm his audience only because his character's actions are by and large internal and ephemeral. As an alternative to the in- defatigable power of say, his Richard or Malvolio, which vanquished even the most cynical audience's intellectual doubts, Bedford's Alceste seduces the soul into the dangerous belief that, in- deed, the world may indeed be as un- worthy a place as he insists that it is. Sharry Flett's weak performance as Katharina opposite Len Cariou as Petruchio robs 'The Taming of the Shrew' of its central conflict by making the taming of the shrew a foregone conclusion: THE. COMING WEEK. Pick-..Hits. MUSIC Go-go's-This all-woman band from California has a reputation for giving good live shows, even though their recently released debut album is no great shakes. Monday, August 3; Second Chance; $6.50in advance. Nighthawks-This group of Washington, D.C. session players are certainly more accomplished musicians than The Go-go's. They've been playing their own brand of bluesy rock and roll for years behind notables like James Cot- ton and J. B. Hutto, and with the help of Muddy Waters and Gregg Allman (among others) along the way. Now, they've finally got the push of a major label behind them on their fifth and most recent album. Tuesday, August 4: Rick's; $5.00 in advance. Northwood Symphonette and Keith Bryan - The highlight of this concert sponsored by the University Musical Society will be the Ann Arbor premiere of a flute concerto commissioned in memoriam of a member of the music school faculty. Wednesday, August 5; Rackham Auditorium: $8.00, $650. $5.00. THEATER 'The Sea'-The RC Players present this social/farce tragedy with their usual, unusually adept professionalism. July 30-August 2 and August 6-9: RC Auditorium (in East Quad); 8 p.m.; $3 for students. $4 for general public.