Still Jammin'... Former Grateful Dead drummer Mickey *Hart brings his band to the Michigan Theater this Thursday at 7:30 p.m. michigandaily.com /Arts uRtc~rSau MONDAY MAY 15, 2000 9 l University 'New Works' festival showcases fresh talent y Christian Hoard Daily Arts Writer The University's second annual Festival of New Works offers audiences a glimpse of eight previously-unpro- duced dramatic works, including a musical, three screenplays and an adap- tation of Margaret Atwood's novel "The Edible A Woman" Festival of According to New WorkS Artistic Director Arena & Trueblood Frank Gagliano, Theatres the Festival seeks May 19- Jut 18 both to showcase standout works of contem po rary dramatic writing and to give writ- ers the opportuni- ty to revise their pieces based upon actual, if minimalist, productions and audience feedback. "The writers all have different needs, and their works are all at a different stage," said Gagliano. "It's an educative thing, meant to let everybody in on the creative process. The audience brings a lot to it." The Festival, however, is more than Award for Dramatic Writing. Carley won the award for his adapta- tion of Atwood's "The Edible Wonan," which premieres at the Trueblood Friday at 8:00 p.m. "I read the book when I skas an under- grad and hated it," Carley said. "A very good part of it is Atwood satirizing the culture of post-graduates, and under- grads, too. When I first read it, part of it was a little too close to home." But Carley said that when he re-read the novel, he was better attuned to its feminist themes and "lovingly ironic" treatment of the world of college gradu- ates turned professionals. Carley's adap- tation retains the book's strong feminist message as well as its insights. into "consutner culture and what it is doing to us as humans. That issue is far more important now than it was thirty years ago." "Rooms," which premieres at the Trueblood on June 2, is a musical by composer Paul Scott Goodman that details the exploits of Monica and Ian, two Scottish songwriters with disparate personal backgrounds. Featuring Kristen Lee Kelly, a member of the orig- inal "Rent" cast, "Rooms" promises both a series of dramatic vignettes and plenty of musical interludes, including I. - === = , - 5- . Courtesy of Festval of New Works Peter Rini and William Wise In a production of "Hearts" from last year's festival. perhaps the first ever punk-rock song te appear in a musical (the fictional 197- hit "All I want is everything"). Saic Gagliano, "[Goodman] is tryin' o fusc theater with rock, and I think he may bc on to something." Gagliano is equally excited about -Allison," a screenplay written by University graduate Daniel Shere that will see its stage debut at the Trueblood on June 16. "Ann Arbor has become such a centet ofscreenwriting that I had access to a lot of scripts, from both students that are working as screenwriters here and alums as well," said Gagliano. Based loosely on Shere's experiences in Ann Arbor, "Allison" chronicles the whirlwind romance of a grag-'gte stu- dent and his young lover, a freshman student named Allison. Besides two plays in repertory by University students (June 2 and 3), the Arena Theatre lineup is rounded out by two staged screenplays - Oliver Thorton's "Cold" (May 19) and Erin Hill's "Getting There" (May 20) - and Gagliano's play "The Total Immersion of Madeleine Favorini" (June 16 and 17), winner of last year's Ernest Hemingway International Playwriting Award. simply a writers' workshop. While the productions are far from elaborate, Festival organizers spared little expense in recruiting actors and directors. Casts are comprised of a combination of pro- fessional actors, students and alumni, all under the guidance of experienced directors selected by Gagliano. Gagliano claims that the diversity among the works being offered is what makes the Festival so interesting. "There's no other festival I know of that does a play, a screenplay and a musical," Gagliano said. The Arena Theatre, located in the Frieze Building, will host free readings of works by relatively unknown writers, two of whom are students enrolled in the University's Dramatic Writing Program. Works to be performed at the Trueblood Theater were written by more estab- lished authors like Dave Carley, one of Canada's leading dramatists and the winner of the Festival's Arthur Miller .Witty, eclectic Ween rocks out By John UhI Daily Music Editor Ween's performance last Thursday at Mill Street Entry seemed like the usual cheesy rock concert: fans were rowdy, bearing handmade signs, occasionally ugmping on stage to flash some quick tits the audience before being removed by security; crowd- surfing was preva- lent; the drummer wasn't wearing a shirt; large hoses Mill Street Entry, exhaled clouds of Pontiac smoke; the band May 11, 2000 jarmmed hard and loud. But a closer examination of Ween reveals a more complicated scene: the bare- chested drummer plays ons ass open kit with a single tom drum, like those used by jazz drummers, instead of the standard oversized set (asnyosse ever sects Rush"); she hoses spew out so mesebh fog tits is's hardly possible to see the stage; though * y kla the bnd pe ee o hamrs om al- nk lbe baud,. doe n's jais, stait as an excuse so pesisp Up shCte soluse. Ott their 1994 albsssi 'C hocolate asnd Ches,"sh layers of keyb,'oard effects a disudgia on Este ae Free" are supplanted by a funny electronic voice singing nonsensical lyrics about pump- kins. Live, Dean and Gene Ween fuel the climax of "Roses are Free" with Allmanesquc dueling guitars, and, as the song ends, the five piece band turns and bows in mock homage to the giant Ween logo garnishing the back of the stage. This tension between serious rock music craft and foolishness is the essence of Ween, which consists of brothers Gene and Dean Ween. Of course their real names are Aaron Freeman and Mickey Melchiondo, respectively, and they're not really broth- ers. Gene Ween gives a shout-out to Detroit and proceeds to sing "Freedom of '76." Close your eyes and the song glides with all the soul Motown deserves. Open them and notice that Gene is the last character one might expect performing it. Kind of short with scraggly hair and a good sized paunch, Gene walks the stage with mic in hand like a stand-up comedian and gives the inpression that his entire performance is a big joke. As the smoke obscures the band again, itsis unclear whether Ween is mocking the music they imitate or them- selves. Yet Ween's albums contain an astonish- ing variety of styles and enough digitally warped singinag and electric noise to con- stitute noble sonic exploration. And this substance provides the band's jests with etIoUtghi meaningful background for them to be taken seriously. Thus, Ween's cre- ation of a world of sexually frustrated cowboys (check out the album "12 Goldecn Country Greats") with a bouncing circus theme for AIDS (on "Chocolate and Cheese") can be assusned to be a sort of critique of our own. But mostly it's just good fun: while most of their recordings are attached with parental advisory stick- ers, Ween has also written music for Nickelodeon. And that's just silly. Iou think rou're pregnant... :-call uswe isten, we care. PROBLEM PREGNANCY HELP 975-4357 Anytim se,,any day,24 hou Servintg Stu &en Ince , '90 MlP ~ V 11OP'SON VOUJA W4OT9~ l ~iu~1 1 (M N fl1 TOO1L U t 1)II N:Ij ii- fvt.. a4M UMToit iT, ri 200U P 4M OOlU.~