THEI MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY. _usic andDrama VIET V J\ +' ' THEA TRES Ann Arbor Deluged with the Aesthetic Impulse; Uncle Tom's Cabin up to date, a war By ario Barlow up a coherent whole which is unique. drams, and a iusical comedy head the Art as an avocation is prevalent in A portrait of Mrs. Eliel Saarinen lists of theatre attractions in Detroit Ann Arbor. A few there are among by her husband, was the most finish-l this week. ius who practice apointing the allied ed painting shown. Rich, mahoganyt The Duncan sisters will be at the arts in a manner which is profession- tones,blended perfectly, conveyed the New Detroit in "Topsy and Eva." An "&1. In this center of learning a con- spirit of the picture in a manner which, entirely new conception of these two siderable number of persons surrepti- was outstanding. There were also stage children is portrayed in Cath-j tiously humor their passion for self batiques of . delicate craftsmanship, erine Chisholm Cushing's adaption of exprssion, and some of the results done by Mrs. Saarinen, and others Harriet Beecher Stowe's novel. It is I were brought to light in an art ex- equally perfect in technique by Mr. embellished with tunes and dances, hibit he1l in Alumni Memorial hall and Mrs. Chapin. and comes with a record of unbroken the week of November 9. There were book plates by Halsey success after running a year in Chica- Miss E. C. Perry, whose pastel Davidson, '25, drawn in his accurate, go and a time in San Francisco, the landscapes are each distinctive, is one well defined styles with his inevitable,i only two cities which have thus far of those persons whose avocation is fantastic gnomes playing about the' seen the production. related in a peculiar manner to her musty books. A great variety of "Simon Called Peter," a vivid dram- profession. Sketches of surgical work was shown, some of it good,t atization of Robert Keable's sesa- operations may involve the same sort and some of it bad. Certainly morel tional novel. comes to the Grrick of skill as a landscape, but the dif- was exhibited tlian one would suspectl theatre the night of November 3. The Lerences are certainly obvious. They is. to be found in Ann Arbor.N story was accepted at the time of its Lie so obvious, in fact, that they might I The first of the art exhibits, how-c publication as the autobiographical b called incongruities 'were it not ever, which have followed each- otherc adventure of its author who served that this versatility is a quality to be in rapid succession, was shown theI as a war padre in a South African admired. week of November 2, in Memorialt regiment. Its hero was a youthful A figure in plaster, conspicuous j hall. Self expression by Vienneset clergyman who found his old time for its very smallness among the children was the general theme. I religion uninteresting to the soldiers more flagrant works in the display, The thoughts which are uppermost l in the trenches. He,too, became lax, indicated the most active iniagination in the minds of these children are ofI and losing his grip of his higher represented in the exhibit. "Drama" picturesque Austrians, enjoyingE motives, he meets a nurse who atI by Carleton W. Angell is wierd in quaint pastimes, or attending to the! tracts him. In the 'end he gives up effect, original in technique. Lines simple things of life. To the . hil-x the church to marr, her. Catherine sweeping in varied directions make dren, these things are real. They Willard and Leonard Willey take the ---represent the life about them, which parts of the padre and the nurse. as it is to-day? When have so many is beautiful because it is\ true. Tol Sally, Irene, and Mary, the musical i giftcd individuals turned their at- us, the paintings embody the romance comedy that has had Eddie Dawling teintiOin and energies to composition of a foreign country out of touch with as a star from the outset and Louise and expression? all that which to us seems real. Their rown as the featured player, will Here,however, we are forced to ad- work is also beautiful to us because open at the Schubert Detroit Novem- mit that much of what is being writ- her 30, and the Whitney will house ten is of little worth. Our issue is the caricatures are true enough in Channing Pollock's "The Focl" Sat- that when an honest comparison is any time and place. urday night, December £. made with that which has gone im- JIn connection with the conventionI mediately before, it will be found that of architects held here last week, a greater amount of to-day's material small exhibits of pencil drawings by - fithe. late Louis Sullivan of Chicago _ Spain Comes to Ann Arbor I A By Judlih Breiienbach When Masques dramatic society; presents "Bonds of Interest" by Jacin- to' Benavente on December 3, Ann Arbor will forget for a few hours the approaching winter, for they will be transported into the 'sunny atmos- phere of Spain., Bright smiles, flashing eyes, trip-+ ping toes, the clack of castenets, the sound of string instruments far-off, charming senoritas will feature the I garden party given by Dona Sierena, where for the first time the sober, serious-minded, quiet Leander is jolted from his reserve by the sight of the charming heiress, Sylvia, flower of the nobility of Spain. Leander is accompanied at this fete by his crafty, wily, jovial, happy-go-lucky, unprin- cipled servant . Crispin, whose avo- cation is chicanery. This clever fel- low has succeeded in putting his mks-' ter on a 1 edestal in the eyes of the townspeople. Penniless and withont any worldly possessions Leander and Crispin come to the town which fur-' nishes the setting for the play. The clever schemes of Crispin involving all the interests of the town to pro- mote the happiness of Leander form a good background for this fantasticj comedy, which may be also described as a keen satire on the qualities of human nature. The father of Sylvia furnishes for the principal players- the obstaclesI which must be oversome. He has his heart set on having his beautiful daughter marry a certain man of his own choice whose wealth is enor- mnous. Sylvia feels that she has sqme- thing to say in her own affairs and opposes her father's wishes. She has a mind of her own. Costumes more elaboratq than any ever used before in a production of this type, beautiful Spanish gowns fashioned after those worn by the senoritas of the early seventeenth century will give to the setting the atmosphere of romantic Spain. These costumes, that is some of them, are lying brought from Chicago; others are being made especially for this perf9rmance. The latter are for the principal characters. The scenery designed by Prof. H. A. Kenyon, of the Romance Language department, director of the play, will fairly convince the audience that they 'are in sunny Spain. Cornell and f Davis, the builders of the scenery will play no small part in making the setting truly Spanish. What more variety could a audi- ence want in a play than a fascinat- ing, charming, young girl in attrac- tive and beautiful gowns, a crafty, skillful fixer; a sober, reserved young gentleman; a overly wealthy father who gives his daughter everything her heart desires but his consent to her marrying the man *of her choice; real Spanish dances to the accomnpani- ment of soft, fantastic music of guitars and other stringed instrif- ments, beautiful scenery, G specia.l local interest due to the ap- n"Mi.oian f r"""n w^o "a" iVUSC4 IVI U 1 1wiil SuIvive than of yesterdays. Of pearance of this organization Tues- enn the oara garmem, mimeday course, it little behoves the writer to were shown. Besides being the auth- day evening, November 25, in Hill the outraged goddess, mimed to ass judgments of a final or of his own biography, in words as t mu rhjoint auspices piritely and with sympathy. Again Is there a musical famine today, is nature, yet he is convinced of the fact oehl as n action, Mr. Sullivan is of the University Glee club and.the Miss. Miriam delineated Undine, sow- there a great. shortage of brilliant that the present day is producing a Tetitl of o ofs oy thesedUniversityig teaGleeo F Teuttlandoe theisdrtint Ann Arbor branch of the American ly crushed in the writhing tenacles of performers and composers? if so, is type of musical art that is so en-,ATwnud beg Association of University Women. an octopus, with a fluidity and rhythm this due to the fact that they are not tirely distinctive, so individualistic A Geometric Playground" would he Assciaio ofUuierieyWwon.thiher audience. ant-teyareno * * * I being born, or if they are being born in its appeal and mode, and at the t appropriate name for the whole. The dancing of the Marmein, sis- ! "A Puppet Tragedy" was another are they turning their genius to other isame time so majestic and so deli- It is to be assumed, however, that ters at Symphony hall last evening piquant number mimed by the inser- i things? - cate,'that its presence will prove an when one plays in the fields of geom-. ran faithfully and satisfyingly tion of aptly phrased asides to the The nd ho mortant land mar in the history of etry, he also philosophizes. Mr. Suli- the ghmut of a dozen moods and man- audience. "The King, Queen, and tionse arecenty sarisen due tque evolutionary music. The writer isvanformed creed i e a ners. In their mdim they are sin- Knave of Hearts" was also vivified by outspoken of lead- also convinced that the height of ourfo otes ho aretintredhich sere nd _delihtfu artits i ther ;"7cec! " te drller wasdeft outsokenopinons f connectsad thecoabstract abtrealmsams of cere and delightful artists in their speech; the drollery was deftly point- ers of good music in this country. present so-termed "modern music is geometry and architecture with the presentation of the dance as a, pliant ct ancifully conceived, pertly cx- Guili Gatti-Casazza, impresario of yet considerably far off, say some abstract realms of philosophy. His and straightforward art. ecutedte Metropolitan Opera, answers the twenty to thirty years. stract rear of posophy. is thIigrs hr belief is clear and consoling, devoid of .tIn their program they dis- One leaves properly for final men- above questions with a single sweep As to great opera singers, there that sentimentality which creeds so played an astonishing if not a bril- tion "The First Kill" danced by the of the hand and a single unqualified are as many in our midst as ever often acquire. liant versatility. Singly, two at once, Misses Miriam and Irene. For in this "yes." He is firmly convinced that there were at any one time. We are or three together, they essayed humor, are gathered the finest shadings, the the famine exists, convinced of the prone to look .upon an artist who pathos, whimsy, and-once or twice nicest intricacies of technique, and dearth of great opera singers and has passed out of the public eye as with marked effect-tragedy. In clas- the exquisite delicacy of inspired great composers and convinced that if being of greater makeup than those sical subjects, oriental imagery, or! rendering. Miss Miriam especially they are being born, they are turn- who remain, or than those who grad- the daintiness of the ballet they seem- caught the spirit and gesture of the ing their talent elsewhere. If this is ually find their places among the ed. equally at their ease. If at times graceful stag. She shaded and arti- true-and Gatti-Casazza is staunch in select. There is a sentimentality of a certain sameness of presentation culated with the grace that enchants, his belief-then the situation that an unexplanable nature involved in WhITE SWAN cropped out, it may be overlooked in the facile skill that draws the breath { confronts us is indeed a distressing this attitude of mind, and in this in- view of the variety of setting and the of admiration. oe stance we are almost inclined to unusual latitude of subject. T The animal pranced, leaped, now Tut happ y, and we speak advised_ accuse Gatti-Casazza of such senti- For the first part of the program halted to preen his antlers, now ly, there is no such thing as the mu- mentality. the sisters offered eight brief sketches bounded again in sheer exhuberance sical famine that the gentleman of I Music is finding itself in America, together with the first of the "drama of living, until the wary huntsman the Metropolitan speaks of. When in and Europe, too, is marking fast dances," "The Vengeance of Kwan lossed the fateful arrow. High in the the histqry of "music has the concert I time. While there will always be Yin." Interpretations ranged from air, the creature sprang with an- stage been so filled with deserving some who believe that all the great the figures on a Greerd vase or from guished muscle and agonizing form; artistry as in the prsent day? When, musicians and composers have already a Japanese print to " the expected then from the antlered head came. a comparatively speaking, has the opera been, there will also be some (and Egyptian dance well set to bars from shrill cry, the animal dropped to the flourished as it does to-day, or when thank God for them) who do not be- Verdi's "Aida." - earth, quivering in a last feeble has it ever been so fully appreciated lieve so. In the second group of the pro- throe. --- Ina theaseod grou of the r- othr gram appeared two of the most As one left the auditorium it was ' strkingly executed dances of the impossible to drive from one's mind fid5-3238 evenlng: "Undine," and the fiery appreciato ofrthe wrmth te en- "Dance of Shiva." There was a grace, trusiasm, thon ot warmth, t en- rhythm and bounding fervor in the ssk I NOW is the TIME to Begin SAVING BUY A CASH CARD 10% SAVE 101 HAND WORK MOE .L AUNDRY' 204 North Main St. Phone 2355 ii' Read The Daily "Classified" Columns . z 'i Christmas Is Near! Can you think of a finer gift for anyone than an appropriate article of -I 'I Washed in soft water; ironed carefully ; but- JE WELRY I0 We Have Anything You Want I I tons replaced; mended neatly. That's the way we do your laundry. Returned soft and white-ready to put on. White "wan L~aundry Co. f. F" a Burr, Patterson &Co. Save 156 by bring- ing your laundry to onr station in the f f it I I 9