The Michigan Daily Arts Tuesday, August 3, 1982 After 'Whorehouse' director needs a rest Page 7 David Letterman's "Late Night" tends to get out of hand. During one show, Jerry Lawler apparently knocked Andy Kaufman out of his chair. Letterman'S late nit fun-filled extravaganza HOLLYWOOD (AP)- The task of making a- movie based on the raucous musical The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas fell into the capable hands of onetime film student Colin Higgins. That was two years ago. The results of his labors will be judged this month by the nation's reviewers and audien- ces. Their verdicts will be closely monitored by MCA-Universal, which has a $26 million investment in the Burt Reynolds-Dolly Parton movie. Outrage may be heard, especially from Miss Parton's fans in the Bible Belt. "The movie gets an R rating on the basis of the title alone, and I think it's right that parents should be alerted," Higgins said. "There is a sense of naughtiness to the movie, but I think it's done in good taste. There is very little nudity ... It's not a salacious film, by any means." Higgins, who wrote Harold and Maude as his master's thesis at the University of California in Los Angeles, came on the Whorehouse project as a kind of troubleshooter. "Tommy Tune and Peter Masterson (who had helped create the stage ver- sion) had been fired, and there was a script by Masterson and Larry King," Higgins recalled. "There were some basic problems. The leads in the play were a 65-year-old sheriff sod a 50-year- old madam whose love relationship took place 20 years earlier. That wouldn't work with Dolly Parton and Burt Reynolds. "The problem was solved by drop- ping their ages and establishing an ongoing relationship between the two. Burt and Dolly helped by coming to my house and talking with me. They were indefatigable. "From 9 to 6, we spent our time laughing, shouting and hollering," Higgins said. "We had a great deal of fun, but then they'd go home refreshed and I'd be there faced with m aking something out of it." The musical score had to be overhauled, the director-writer added, since many of the songs had been delivered on the stage by subsidiary characters. Also there was no duet bet- ween the two leads. Miss Parton provided one, as well as new numbers for herself. The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas was filmed on locations in and around Halletsville, Texas, with additional scenes shot outside the governor's mansion and inside the capitol at Austin. Higgins found Halletsville more By Scott Stuckal A T FIRST, it looks like the old Saturday Night Live. Rock and roll rehashes of yesterday's hits trumpet from you television set directed by Paul Shaffer of Saturday Night Live fame. But there the similarities end. "Late Night," the second-effort talk show hosted by David Letterman, a master of off-the-cuff wit, tickles the funny bone in a mild but tasty way far removed from Saturday Night's -hit- em-over-the-head-with-the-joke skits. Letterman's first effort, a daytime talk show, never quite found its audien- ce between the morning sitcom syn- dications and the soap opera. But on "Late Night" Letterman hits his stride to the mirthful delight of millions of af- ter-hours viewers. Perhaps Letterman is finally fulfilling his promise as "the next Car- son" on Late Night. Letterman is the young person's alternative. Both Carson and Letterman will submit to being the butt of a joke, whether Johnny's dressed in a fortune teller's outfit, or Dave is surveying the results of "Dave's Hobby Shop." "Dave's Hobby Shop" involved ran- domly picked audience members sculp- turing humiliating representations of Late Night's host in different mediums. One middle-aged woman's wax replica of Letterman included an earing. She told Letterman it was for "in case you get into that sort of thing someday," Our nonpulsed host replied, 'If that's your fantasy'. But Letterman's late night star really shines when he's got a guest to really sink his teeth into. He doesn't chew people apart, rather he skillfully skewers his targets while they scarcely realize what is happening. Notice I said people. Late Night is a real people show in the truest sense of the phrase (for T.V. at least) without the false cheerfulness of the "Real People" show. Whether it's New York school children performing their tooth decay play or an interview with an elderly lady, winner of "dream date with Peter Tork," the ex-Monkee, Let- terman manages to make light of people's situations without making light of people. Usually. And even when he does throw out the occasional nasty joke, the punch line always works. The guests on Late Night range from See LETTERMAN, Page 10 Higgins ... directing a Hollywood musical photogenic than LaGrange, site of the infamous Chicken Ranch, which provided-inspiration for the musical. "The Chicken Ranch itself is a one- story bungalow which had been built onto, sheds on sheds," Higgins said. "We chose a beautiful mansion that had been built near Pflugerville by a ship's carpenter 6 years ago." Higgins, whose specialty had bees comedy-adventures (Silver Streak, and Foul Play), had always wanted to make a "big, old-fashioned Hollywood movie." He has done it. Now he plans to take off six months in order to recover. ri 5Th~ UAL THEATRES1 "ONE OF THE YEAR'S BEST" ENDS THURS.I Funny talkD1 I and fast food Mr TUES-4:50, 7:00, 9:10 WED.-12:30, 2:40, 4:50, 7:00, 9:10 THIS PICTURE MAY BE OFFENSIVE TO THOSE PERSONS SENSITIVE TO TOTAL NUDITY. ANDA GENTLEMAN DEBRA RICHARD WINGER GERE You can't get enthused about eating? See nothing worth thawing and heating? Hit the League on the run! Fill your full of fun, Lanch1to 1 15 And watch all your blahs start retreating! Dnner 5.00 to 7:15 IS. SPECIAL LOW PRICES FOR STUDENTS Send your League Limerick to: TheftUC hg anManager. Michigan League 911 North University Next to Hill Auditorium You will receive 2 free dinner Located ne heart of the ampus tickets if your limerick is used in it is the heart of fhe campus one of our ads_ TUES-5:20, 7:40, 9:55 (R) WED-12:40, 3:00, 5:20, 7:40, 9:55