M ARTS Sunday, July 15. 1984 The Michigan Daily Page 10 Comden & Green throw quite a party for 400 0 0 By Susan Makuch T HERE IS nothing that can make or break a party like the host and hostess can. If the party-giver is a real bore, it's more than likely that the fest will turn sour. But when the host is cor- dial and entertaining, well there's nothing quite like it. Luckily for about 400 guests at the Power Center Friday night, Betty Comden and Adolph Green were the perfect hosts. Comden and Green, the well known musical comedy writing team, threw a fun shebang in which they simply enter- tained for almost two hours. A Party With Comden and Green stopped at the Power Center as a part of the Ann Ar- bor Summer Festival. The vastness of the Power Center (which seats 1,414), did not seem like it would offer a very intimate party at- mosphere, but it did. Comden and Green were very successful in making everyone feel right at home. The stage was a living room where Betty and Adolph reminisced about their past, all the while throwing in musical numbers from many af their mast successful shaws. The "we're all friends" attitude allawed the "guesta" ta averlook the fact thattneither Comden or Green has a very good singing voice. Comden's voice was, at times, almost unbearable. Her shrill, zero-range soprano was dif- ficult to listen ta an such wanderful songs as "I'm So Lucky to be Me" and "Make Someone Happy." The only thing that tarried the listener through the duration of the songs was the attractiveness of the numbers. But even on a beautiful com- position like "I Get Carried Away" (from the Broadway show On The Town), Comden's grating vocals becam just too much. This was the only flaw in a cabaret show that is best described as simple entertainment. Comden and Green oc- ONE NIGHT ONLY DETROIT CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS Presents "TAMBOURINES TOGLORY" 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. cupied a sparse stage which contained two microphones, two stools, and a piano (complete with pianist). The con- versational manner in which they communicated with the audience created an atmosphere of friends just talking about old times. And that's just what they did. Camden and Green began with a few numbers from their "Revuers" days. They wrote skits and songs as well as performed in the touring variety show. Other members of the group were Leonard Bernstein and Judy Holliday. Later in their careers, Comden and Green collaborated with both Bernstein and Holliday again on such shows as Wonderful Town and Bells Are Ringing. Comden relayed an amusing anec- dote about Wonderful Town, which starred Rosiland Russell. Russell told them that "I've got a voice with exactly four notes and you have a right to all four of them. The song has to go 'da da da da, joke ... da da da da, joke ...' Get it?" So the songwriter pair came up with "One Hundred Easy Ways to Lose a Man." Comden, doing a solo, really did comedic justice to this satiric tune. "Just be more informed than he and you'll never hesr 'a Promise Me," Comden sang hilariously. She mugged just enough during this take-off to avoid the classic chaunvinistic cliches of such a song. Adolph Green also had his chance in the spotlight with a humorous song from Peter Pan. Comden and Green were summoned during the out-of-town rehearsals for the Mary Martin play because some dynamite songs were needed to complete the show. "There's nothing better than being called in on someone else's show," Green joked. They happily obliged and wrote the comedic "Captain Hook" number for Cyril Ritchard. "We can't show you how Martin and Ritchard per- formed these numbers -, so we'll just how you how we looked auditioning them," Comden laughed. Green then began jumping and leaping about the stage, singing such lines as "Who's the swiniest swine in the world ... Captain Hook!" Again, like Comden before him, he performed this lighthearted number with just enough humor that it didn't seem overplayed. One particular highlight was from a song called "Simplified Language," which they wrote for an off-Broadway review. It concerns the future, where children are taught a no-gender language. "We don't say meet my husband, meet my wife," they sang, "we say meet my attache." They also sang about how "they used to have a penis and vagina, now they call it a penina." This ridiculous word drew many laughs from the receptive audience. There certainly was never a dull moment in this entertaining show, but Camden and Green intended it that way. They were the perfect hosts. 0 Eddie Murphy, preparing-for the opening of his newest film 'Best Defense,' suffered a bruised lip when he initiated a fight with patrons in a Los Angeles restaurant yesterday. Eddie Murphy gets brulsedli p in brawl LOS ANGELES, (UPI)-Actor- said Phillip Shumway, who was comedian Eddie Murphy was treated working for a promoter that leased a for a bruised lip suffered in an early room upstairs at the restaurant morning brawl yesterday at a West Carlos' and Charlie's, suffered a cut Hollywood restaurant that led to a on the left forearm from a drinking battery complaint against him, sher- glass thrown by Murphy. iff's deputies said. Murphy suffered a bruised lip and a Murphy, of television's "Saturday third person, whose name has not Night Live" and the films 48 Hours, been released, was treated at Cedars- and Trading Places, was in a Sinai Medical Center and released. restaurant in the Sunset Strip area Shumway, 26, filed a battery com- with friends shortly after 1 a.m. plaint against Murphy. Shaw said the yesterday and became involved in a comedian was not arrested because fight with other patrons, deputies the complaint will be presented to the said. District Attorney's office for con- Sheriff's spokesman Richard Shaw sideration. Records What Is This - 'Squeezed' music of Cream, Jimi Hendrix (OK, so those two are sorta "psychedelic," but . (An Andreas) . .) and King Crimson to give them a Squeezed is a record that gets better direction to go in. with each repeated listening., The Funny thing is, most of it works. brainchild of What Is This, a four-piece, There is a gleeful unpretentiousness to multi-ethnic, widely influenced band Squeezed that makes it refreshingly from Southern California, this five-song easy to listen to. The opening cut, "I "mini album" shows the potential for Am A House," gives a ready im- growth that is to be found in the guitar- pression of what's to come: gurgling happy realm these guys dwell in. bass, a steady neo-danceable drum- Surprisingly, What Is This don't en- beat, Alain Johannes' bluesy tenor, and cumber themselves or their music with the insistent, lurching interplay bet- the popular psychedelic vibrations ween his and Hillel Slovak's guitars, beaming out from the West Coast these days. Instead, they gaze back at the See RECORDS, Page 11 0