THI{I.MICHIGAN DAILYt. PRISES COSTUMES TO BE USED FOR 1916 PRODUCTION DIRECTOR iMlOIIGAN BELIEVES AT- TIRE OF CAST AN) CHORUS BEST OF ITS KIND DESIGNS SHOW MODERNITY Varioiis 'SCenes of Show Give Splendid Opportunity For Skill of Artists The coztumes for the Union opera, "Tres Rouge," are the finest that have ever been used for any student pro- duction, according to Charles P. Mor- gan, Jr., director of the opera. Not only are the costumes beautiful but they have been designed with the utmost modernity, so that when the "leading lady" puts on her gown for Mrs. Greggs' ball she need not be afraid that it is any later than two or three minutes of the most approved fashion. The costumes were designed by the :Eaves Costume Company of New York, and are all made from sketches drawn up purposely for the opera. The num- ber of the castumes are 110, and their value is estimated at $5,000. The first act which is a house party, furnishes many chances for the de- signers to display their skill. The, men dress in hunting costume and the ladies are clad as golf girls, tennis girls, and other adaptable costumes. In the second act we break into a fancy dress party. The dresses for the most part are of the fashion of the time of Louis XVI, and Mrs. Gregg appears as Madame Pompadour, the mistress of the frvolous monarch. There are Spanish girls in the Span. ish ballet scene, there are Poster girls for "Vogue," representing "Skating Girl," "Motor Girl," "Matinee Girl," "Cabaret Girl,"'and 'Bathing Girl," in the chorus numbers. One of the most familiar scenes and one which is of most interest to stu- dents, is the football scene played on Ferry Field in which the girls are dressed as rooters and the men in foot- ball costumes. Another scene is the Harlequin and Pierrette scene, in which the principals are dressed in black and white costumes, of the kind which Fritzi-Scheff has made famous, and which Caruso wears when he sings "Pagliacci." To Hold Ohio Club Smoker A-Get-Acquainted smoker for Ohio men will be held at the Union at 7:30 o'clock tomorrow night. Professor David Friday; of the economics department, will deliver the principal address of the evening, An effort will be made to solicit memberships at this meeting, all those signing becoming charter members of the organization. The Union Sunday afternoon meet- ing was postponed yesterday, the auth- orilties in charge not being able to se- cure a speaker. ,It is possible that no meetings will be held for the next few weeks owing to the many things going on on the campus. I I I I F.ST "TN~AEWJh~1 1. EVERYBOIJVI If it 111111'ITHE}FIRST V~FlfAN1 OF Tres Rouge SEND THE MUSIC HOME Early Rehearsal of "Pouies" I OPERA TROUPE WILL {Y1S--FOUR CTiES Toledo, Chicago, and Detroit to Wit- ness Production; One Date Still Open WILL CARRY 100 MEN ON TRIP One hundred men will be assembled for the trip when on the morning of March 24, the Michigan Union Opera troupe entrains for Toledo, the scene of its first stand. Chorus, principals, property men, committeemen, elec- tricians, stage directors, orchestra, several tons of baggage, and a carload of scenery will make the initial trip. Toledo, Chicago, Detroit, and one city yet to be selected, will be visited in the course of the tour. The Valentine Theatre, Toledo, will be the scene, on the evening of Friday, March 24, of the first out of town pro- duction of "Tres Rouge." On former. trips the troupe has found in this city an enthusiastic audience with an in- satiable appetite for encores. Early Saturday the entire company will leave for Chicago, where the sec- ond performance will be staged in the evening at the Auditorium Theatre. The large number of Michigan alumni in Chicago, together with the excellent showing made by operas in past sea- sons insures a large audience. The return to Ann Arbor will be made Sunday. The second stage of the trip will egin Friday, March 31, then the opera will be shown in Detroit at the Lyceum Theatre. Detroit audiences are prov- erbially enthusiastic over university operas. The nearness of that city to the university involves a close tie of interest which never fails to manifest itself in capacity houses. To Detroit alumni the opera affords one of the few opportunities of the year to show their friends what Michigan can do, and few fail to avair themselves of the chance. Saturday, April 1, is an open date. The committee is undecided between Saginaw and Grand Rapids, and is still in communication with alumni of those cities in regard to possible arrange- ments: The annual trip of the Union opera has become an institution. It is the one event by which the people of Mich- gan and surrounding states become in- timately aware that the University of Michigan exists. At other times they read with more or less interest of soul-stirring victories by the Varsity eleven, or of triumphs on the baseall diamond, but only at the advent of the opera do they wake up to the fact that Michigan is a great institution capable of turning out real talent that is other than merely muscular. Theron D. Weaver, '16E, general chairman, will have charge of the com- pany en route. Send The Daily home. $1.00 for the rest of the year. ** Opera Needs No Specialties To Bridge Gap Between Acts THE SCORE $2.00 SHEET MUS 25c A 'tween-the-acts specialty serves one of two purposes. It prevents an audience from getting up at the end of the first act and removing itself bodily to parts unknown, or by virtue of mere sonorousness it drowns the din and bombilation of hammer and ,nail behind the curtain, of loud-voiced stage huskies pushing ponderous art- icles of furniture about, or of quick- construction men frantically erecting the 'refractory sides of enchanted castles. From the time that the dancing chorus at the Globe theatre disported lustily upon the stage while an over- worked Macbeth hurriedly exchanged velvet breeches for a sword and a suit of mail, this device has been con-4 sidered legitimate. To so delicately time the action that the raspy voice of the curtain per- former will reach a grand crescendo at the precise mqment it becomes necessary to insert a number ten spike in the oak flooring of the back stage has caused theatrical directors an in- finitude of sleepless nights. Such finesse is born, not made. It betok- ens -a nicety of artistic touch, a bal- ance in aesthetic temperament well beyond the confines of the wildest dreams. The tender sensibilities and sus- ceptibilifies of the theatre habitue must be carefully courted or they wither and fade. At all events, and at any cost, a riotous fandango of music and laughter and pretty faces must keep the emotions at a high pitch and sustain a continuous round of hysterical applause. But special stunts have their vogue, and then are "out." So far as "Tres Rouge" is concerned, they are de- cidedly out. A chance for life is ex- tended the audience between acts. The management sincerely believes that even the veriest aesthetic demands a breathing spell in which to ruminate on the joys of life depicted in the last scene and indulge in idle specula- tions regarding the delectable fan- tasies to be shown in. the next. So it is that the high standard of excellence attained in the body of "Tres Rouge, a Musical Comedie" pre- cludes the necessity for 'resort to slap- stick buffoonery between curtains. The audience will be given something to think about and to laugh over. True romance and real comedy need no special seasoning-the spice is in the natural flavor of the goods. Hold University Dance at Packard The first university dance for the overflow from the Michigan Union dance was held at the Packard Satur- day night. A large crowd attended the affair, and it is possible that they will be held after Saturday hereafter. The dance was conducted by the student council. ON SALE ATl Grinnell Bros. 11 6 South Main Street Phone' 1707 .. . ... .. EMAWEDNESDAY Mail Orders Now FAREWELL i Greatest English-Speaking Actor . ti err of Forbes- Robertson, (His First and Last Visit tp Ann Arbor) AND LONDON COMPANY Matinee at 2 p. m. Sharp "HAMLET" Shakespeare Ter - Cen- tenary Celebration' Night "Passing of the Third Floor Back" SEATS Monday, March20 PRICES $2, $1.50, 75c and 5 p.. Majestic Billiard Hall HILLIA STATE STREET Forbes Robertson, at the Whitney Theatre, Wednesday, 3arch 22, Matinee and Evening. k. ei II " .... .. . Woinmann-Geisendorler-Brown Co. .FLO)WERlS FIJOWERNGk PLANTIS " Electricity Serves You Right " The place to get the best of everything, to supply your table with, at reasonable prices. Cousins & Hall The Detroit Edison Co. U EASTERN MICHIGAN DIVISION 219-21-23 East Washington Street III I'l I' PHONE 115 1002 S. UNIVERSITY AVE. TELEPHONE 2300 I rel '1"l