61 ARTS Page 10 Tuesday, July 10, 1984 The Michigan Daily Soundin2 out Marceau . By Eric Mattson MARCEL MARCEAU'S perfor- mance at the Power Center Sun- day night was filled with great momen- ts, but at times it seemed as if the world's premiere mime was a bit slow on his slippers. Still, the greatest problem in the two- hour show was not with the soundless motion but with the often distorted music. Either the Power Center ought to invest in a pair of decent speakers, or Marceau should find a higher quality nn Arbor V mmer jfjestidalj tape. But for the most part, Marceau's performance was laudable. From the opening strains of Hum- mel's Trumpet Concerto, Marceau moved with the grace which made him famous in his first U.S. tour nearly 30 years ago. There were, however, times when the show dragged. When Marceau por- trayed Bip the Clown using a dating service, for instance, the sketch seemed to go on forever, although the last two minutes were filled with a great deal of energy. Marceau created the tragicomic clown in 1947, and Bip since then has en- tertained thousands with his sometimes pathetic, sometimes happy-go-lucky at- titude.d Marceau began the evening with six style pantomimes, including the classic "cage" and a very poignantrendition of "The Maskmaker." Encompassing the entire spectrum of emotions, Marceau drew laughter and applause for his rendition of the man who cannot remove his happy face, even though he is crying. In another skit, Marceau was "The Angel," and a plethora of lighting and music helped the 58-year-old mime act out the trip from heaven to Earth and back to heaven again. ONE NIGHT ONLY DETROIT CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS Presents "TAMBOURINES TO GLORY" A Musical Comedy by Lonston Hughes Featuring a Cast of 25 Singers and Dancers in a LIVE ON-STAGE EXTRAVAGANZA SATURDAY, JULY 21 8:00 P.M. Michigan Box Office Theatre 668-8480 Reserved Seating: $7, 8. Students & Seniors: $5, 6. Marcel Marceau demonstrates the art of mime to his class yesterday at Lydia Mendelsshon Theater. His Sunday night show at the Power Center was an energetic show filled with many of his famous routines. In his trip to Earth, Marceau mimicked perfectly the fallen angel-drinking, dancing, and chasing women. In the end, however, the angel literally sees the light and returns to heaven. "The Trial," a pantomime of our justice system, parodies the judge, defendant, and lawyers with frightening accuracy, although it was sometimes difficult to discern exactly which part Marceau was playing. The bored judge, the pleading defen- se attorney, and the accusing prosecuting attorney play their parts to the hilt, climaxing when the judge weighs the defendant's innocence on the scales of justice. And in a scene reminiscent of Dr. Strangelove, Marceau plays a robot who eventually strangles himself. He may not have been as snappy as the robot-like breakdancers on the Diag, but as Marceau has said, mime is largely an interpretive art, not an ac- curate representation of our day-to-day activities. After a brief intermission, Bip the Clown plays everything from a china salesman to David and Goliath in a captivating performance. As David and Goliath, Marceau uses one of his few props-a tall, thin board. Each time Bip walks behind it, he emerges as his alter ego. When David finally slays Goliath, Marceau won laughs from the audience when-as Goliath-he motions for David to come out and take a bow. Naturally, David obliges. A standing ovation prompted Mar- ceau to -perform an encore, a sometimes disturbing portrayal of Bip in modern and future life. The skit was marred by a slow and ambigious beginning, although some aspects of modern life were clearly- discernable. When a bright red light signals some sort of apocalypse, Mar- ceau becomes a future primitive man, suggesting that life is merely cyclical. His portrayal of the future was cap- tivating and haunting. Mime is really a fascinating art. There is, of course, no sound except the squeak of the performer's slippers and a mimimum of music. The music and the lights certainly enhance the act, but the real burden is on the mime himself. To spread the ancient art he helped resurrect, Marceau is in town to establish a School of Mime at the University, the only mime school out- side Marceau's school in Paris. Marceau will perform a different program in the Summer Arts Festival tomorrow and Thursday at 8p.m. in the Power Center. If you're into mime, and even if you're not, it's well worth the $11 ticket price. Technicalgoofs plague mime gig The following observation was written by Eric Mat- maybe give him a good pair of socks. tson's less-than-cultured alter ego, Matt Ericson. But the problems didn't stop there. Marceau's assistant apparently had either laryngitis or one bad case of stage A(ieifright, because he forgot every single one of his lines. C#AN YOU believe it? Whatever the cause of his forgetting them, the backstage We pay $11 for tickets to see this world famous Marcel people made him go out on stage anyway. Worse yet, beheld Marceau guy, and the people at the Power Center forget to his cue cards backwards so that the people in the audience give him a mike. I mean I couldn't heara single word he said could read them. the whole show, and I had good seats! Not only that, but they The cue card slip-up actually worked out for the best. The also forgot to set up the stage - it was almost completely writing on back told us what skits Marceau was doing and so empty. with a little imagination we could see what was supposed to Marceau was pretty good about the mixup, though, he just have happened if there had been-sound and props. kept pretending everything was right there on stage with Finally, though, comes the matter of the man's health. He him. was full of energy - he danced around almost non-stop The audience wasn't much of a help either, since they kept trying to cover up for everything that went wrong - but he laughing and clapping whenever Marceau tried to cover up was so pale that he must either have been very ill or for the backstage foul-ups. desperately in need of some sun. Another problem was his squeaky shoes. Since the sound In all, Marcel Marceau deserves a lot of praise for trying so was already off, all you could hear was, "squeak, squeak, hard to cover up for what went wrong behind the scenes. squeak" - just like that.- The least they could have done Let's hope he gets rid of his illness, gets a little sun, and come would have been to go out and buy him some new shoes, or back with a stage crew that gets things done. 0