ARTS Wednesday, April 10, 1991 The Michigan Daily 'Disciple: Shaw shows devilish style Page 5 Theater Review Play within a play confuses by Julie Komorn The Brecht Company's perfor- mance of The Devil's Disciple por- 'trays George Bernard Shaw at his convention-shattering best. While the show incorporates the rich the- atricality of Melodrama, including a prodigal son, mistaken identities, a "love triangle" and a hero imper- iled by the hangman's noose, it also goes one step further. Expanding on the popular form of melodrama, Shaw created a modern morality play on the importance of self- recognition and realization. The play is set in a Puritan town in New England during the American Revolution. General Burgoyne and his British army are marching south from Montreal to Saratoga, where they are destined to be defeated. To encourage the others, the Burgoyne' s men are stringing up a few prominent rebels in every town square they come across. Everyone thinks that Dick Dungeon will be hanged, but the Reverend Anderson is the actual target. In a stirring and witty last act, Dungeon gallantly attempts to sacrifice him- self, offering his life "for the world's future." This non-traditional show ma- nipulates the melodrama so that what is expected becomes twisted into the unexpected. Instead of fol- lowing the line of the highly emo- tional tensions of love and duty, the play becomes intellectual and philosophical. This unforeseen change in direction becomes inten- tionally unsatisfying. Director Bob Brown explains that "(Shaw) is not dismantling melodrama, but adding onto it." Shaw had an early job as a theater critic which forced him to watch abominable melodrama - the enormously popular genre of the 19th century. In order to get his work produced, he took the popular form, turned it inside out and made it artful. Melodrama was not at- tractive to Shaw for its energy, spectacle and clockwork dra- maturgy so much as for its allegori- cal tendencies and its natural in- stinct to pit good against evil. The Devil's Disciple established Shaw as a writer of international importance. Shaw has been a major force in the modern theater, and is one of the greatest dramatists in our language, with more plays to his Reverena Anthony Anderson Pnlip van -ycK), left, and Ricnard vungeon (Martin Sweeny), right, ask, "What ja have for lunch?" as they get ready to "sandwich" Judith Anderson (Aberdeen Marsh). credit than Shakespeare. He is known for his ability to shock and amuse his audience into creative thought. By choosing to perform Shaw, the Brecht Company is a making symbolic gesture. Shaw was a for- mative influence upon young Bertolt Brecht's distancing style, so much so that he stole ideas like crit- ical irony from Shaw's playwriting. The two playwrights also shared many of the same concerns for the renovation of theater and society at large. In his admiration of Shaw, Brecht once reportedly said, "He knows just how much courage is needed to laugh at what is amusing, and how much seriousness to pick it out." THE DEVIL'S DISCIPLE will be performed tomorrow through Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 1 p.m. at the Residential College Auditorium. Tickets range in price from $3-$6 and are available at the door. by Diane Frieden W hat started out as a good idea turned into a distracting device. Sometimes the play-about-a-play idea works well, but often it will complicates the action on stage. The University production of Pelleas and Melisande contains both the Maurice Maeterlinck play and a dress rehearsal adaptation by the di- rector, Jerald Schweibert. Often the transitions between reality and fantasy provided by the original text were rough, making it difficult for the audience to actu- ally enjoy the story because the ac- tors kept showing through their characters. Neither the fantasy world of the play nor the backstage world of the dress rehearsal were strong enough to captivate the audience, separately or collectively. The Stage Manager (Melissa Zafarana) ended nearly each scene with a directorial com- ment, jolting the audience from the magical tale that was being told through Pelleas. Also visually dis- tracting were the actors who were not in particular "scene between scenes," but who crossed the stage anyway; the characters of Julie (Erin Dilly) and Beth (Tammy Jacobs), as well as Steve (Matthew Rego), walked aimlessly, or need- lessly and unrealistically - this was set as a formal dress rehearsal - across the stage at the end of most scenes. However, Schweibert was on target in a few of his innovative transitional scene changes. For ex- ample, as William/Pelleas (Tom Daugherty) enters, late for rehearsal but just in time for his line, there is a fresh humor in the Maeterlinck lines between Jan/Genevieve (Heather Raffo) and Russ/Arkel (Erich Jungworth). "Why, look, it is Pelleas," they say as he runs into the theater. "Come closer, so that we may see you." At the end of the scene, Arkel says to Pelleas, "Be sure to light the lantern," and then, as Russ, adds Schweibert's line when she is addressing William: "Be sure to sign in." Also, the end of Act III segues neatly into the in- MANN AR E 1 &2 5TH AVE AT LIBERTY 761.9700 DAILY SHOWS BEFORE 6 PM & ALL DAY TUESDAY' STUDENT WITH I.D.3.50 termission with Schweibert's clever use of the theatrical setting. Each actor involved did a good job at being themselves; the most humorous storyline to listen for at the start of the rehearsal is that of Steve, who is trying to get out of rehearsal for a call-back. Zafarana doesn't do her role as a dominant Stage Manager justice; she coimes across as a somewhat weak, flat character. However, doubling as Ynold, the son of Golaud, Zafarana delivers an excellent reading. Jungwirth performed well in both of his characters. Raffo let too much of Jan show through to her Genevieve, and as a result took-her- self too seriously. A main problem with Pelleas was the character of Gol ud (Matthew Letscher), who was not believable in his care and passionate love for Melisande (Johanna Borman). Letscher spoke his-lines quickly and unconvincingly at first, but warmed up in a later scene by the prie-Dieu; yet his part of Joe'was overly brooding and dramatic. As for the title characters, Borman "re- acted excellently as Melishn'de, with wide-eyed, childlike frailty, and Daugherty fit well as her'lover, emphasizing the sensitive side df his Pelleas. The scenic and lighting designs (Gaetane Bertol and Sandra Myers) were impressive; a simple sheet was draped to represent a bed canopy, a forest or the garden trees, and the effects were fantastic. Costuming (Deborah Yegerlehner) was-. also handled very well. PELLEAS AND MELISANDE will be performed again at , the Trueblood Theater tomorrow through Sunday. Shows from Thursday through Saturday are at 8:00 p.m. Sunday's show is at 2:00 p.m. Tickets are $9, $5 with stdent ID. Color Printin Color Printing'- Color Printing Color Printing Big savings on color printing for all clubs, businesses, and organizations. Hoopsnakes Jump in and Hang On Dan Michael Music If you're beginning to think that anything that comes out of Minneapolis is good, then you're right. The Hoopsnakes are just a bunch of guys having fun. Listening to Jump in and Hang On is like being at a live show in a * dingy, smoke-filled joint. One almost expects to hear hooting and monologue between tracks. The songs get semi-redundant, but that's somewhat typical for the genres to which the music belongs, rock 'n' roll and blues. Regardless, the album is still precious in a not-so-cutesy sort of way. The title track even has a line about blue suede shoes in it. "Can't Seem to Stop Myself" steals "just my imagination running away from me" for its lyrics, but sports more original lines as well, such as, "I know I said goodbye, but that was just a lie." "All Dames Are Dynamite" is blues. Vocalist Bruce McCabe doesn't quite do his Bessie Smith impersonation, but he does cut loose a bit of improvisational-like fingering on the keyboards, unleashing in similar fashion on "One Stop Shoppin'." We don't get a good dosage of what guitarist Charlie Bingham is capable of until "The First Man (Who Ever Had the Blues)," but he is astounding. "Walk Real Slow" is the stroll- esque track on the LP and sports my favorite lyrics on the album: "She's harder to get into than heaven..." Diagnosis: For a good time, call a Hoopsnake. -Kim Yaged Imagine 15 tubas and one eu- phonium trapped in a high- ceilinged, echoing room. A night- mare? Some might think so, but the Union Arts and Programming * Office quaintly describes their sea- son finale as incorporating the "megaphone effect." In any case, if you can't find anyone to have Stucchi's with tomorrow at noon, you might drop by the tuba concert in the Union's Pendleton room. It'll be a blast (ba-dum-bum, oom- pah-pah). Eastern Michigan University's ;*Dance' Division demonstrates some of their academic tenets in a concert April 17 and 18. Included in the production are pieces entitled, "Forgotten," "No Place to Go" and "Confusion." The Dancers want to convey what it's really like to be an Eastern alum. Hail to the band. The University Symphony Band and Concert Band are having a spring concert. The group will choose an unortho- dox way to show you what "Bo knows" with Prokofiev's Athletic Festival March. Another attraction is Resphighi's "Hunting-Tower Ballad," in which those crazy tuba players will enact the famous fairy tale, which we all know already, of course. The free concert will be per- formed on Friday at 8 p.m. in Hill Auditorium. Professor Drew Westen will be giving his last singing performance ever at the University tomorrow night in the U-Club. There are two shows (8 p.m. and 10 p.m.) and cover is a mere $3. But if you can't make it (or if you just want to hear more Westen), the show is being recorded for a live concert album as well. Maybe it will be his Frampton Comes Alive! Live from New York... it's a staged reading! Usually audiences are only given the opportunity to view the finished product after months of the creative process, but a new form of theater that has emerged on the University campus allows the audience to partake in the creativity itself. In a Staged Reading, actors read directly from the script and the use of movement and props is kept to a bare minimum. After the reading, audiences are en- couraged to give the playwright feedback. So, if you're sick of being a theater potato, sit in on a reading and talk back to the actors. The Playwriting Towards Production Class will stage a reading every evening this week at 5 p.m in the Arena theater in the Frieze building. Also being presented is a reading of student Nina VanderVoort's work Freeway Fables, Thursday and Friday at 8 p.m. and Saturday at 2 p.m., in 2518 Frieze. STUDENTS: "If your hair isn't becoming to you you should be coming to us." - 6 Stylists-No waiting - DASCOLA STYLISTS opposite Jacobson's 668-9329 ' p , I The Nasty Girl PG-13 Cyrano De Bergerac PG Present tEis.coupon.with purchased ticket tr 4/19/91H ro 1. 69016 i C r 4'l: SUMMER COURSE S Begin June 3rd & July 8th - 4-year liberal arts & science college - Day and evening classes . Transferrable semester credit - 5-week sessions . 30 miles west of Chicago 708/960-1500 Illinois Benedictine College 5700 COLLEGE ROAD, LISLE, ILLINOIS 60532-0900 Please mention this newspaper when calng. " Start Fall term, speak it in Moscow next year. " Also, Russian Literature in English, Hu. Distr. " For information, call Slavic Dept., 764-5355 or check CRISP Cf Lin Qate - 4 zt~ rf R E S T A U R A N T 26 years of experience TOP GOLD MEDAL WINNER OF DETROIT COBO HALL NATIONAL CONTES Sponsored by Michigan Restaurant Association Michigan Chefs De Cuisine Association LOOKING FOR LS&A STUDENTS! LS&A Student Government is looking for LS&A Students to fill seats for LS&A Student Government and MSA. Interviews April 11th 5-7pm 4003 Michigan Union Questions? Call office at 763-4799 or Claudette at 662-7180 Founding member of The Byrds. Back from Rio to Ann Arbor o oE With Special Guest DAVE ALVIN Formerly of The Blasters Thursday, April 18/8PM MICHIGAN THEATRE Liberty and State " ANN ARBOR m BLUE RIBBON BEST CHEF AWARD IN WASH INGTON D.C. VOTED #1 BEST ORIENTAL FOOD IN A BO APnR 1990 -Michigan Dailv PPP' a -4 fi/Wr A