ARTS Thursday, April 11, 1991 The Michigan Daily Page 8 Ship's ahoy, set sail for fun by Beth Colquitt It just occurred to me last night, as I pondered this show, that H.M.S. Pinafore is an utterly ridiculous name for a ship. Would any self-re- specting captain pilot a ship with a name like "Pinafore?" Really-. It is an unusually apt description for a musical, however. A pinafore is an apron-like frock which covers the front of a dress, and is largely a superfluous garment. This is also true of Gilbert and Sullivan's H.M.S. Pinafore, which is being performed this weekend by Uniiversity's Gilbert and Sullivan Society at the Mendelsshon Theatre. Because this is the time of year that students are under the most stress, I would venture to say that this frivolous .comedy is especially timtely. Pinafore is nearly a nonsense musical. The plot is so simple it is downright silly - the theme is a standard love story between mem- bers of different social classes, and the idea that "love can level all ranks." Ralph Rackstraw, a common sailor, is in love with Josephine, the captain's daughter - which makes the situation impossible. Josephine, naturally, is engaged to someone of higher rank and, in true romance form, is stuffy, snobbish, marginally attractive and boring. Other plot complications are of- fered by Dick Deadeye, the villain who wants to keep the lovers apart,. and the captain himself. Of course, there has been a mix-up and Ralph has a past which will be uncovered by an old but dear nursemaid (who is still hanging around!) which will allow him to be equal to Josephine in social rank and thus live happily ever after. This production will be quite special in terms of the set, which will cover the entire theater. The stage action will take place at the stern, and the rest of the ship will extend into the house as far as the lobby. Director Audrey LaVelle, making her UMGASS directorial debut with Pinafore, says "we want to give the feeling that life isn't a vacuum. In most musicals, every- thing else fades away while scenes are going on. In (this show) there will be people working on the ship during the scenes, climbing in the rigging, and generally trying to give the audience the feel of life on the ship." Set Designer Scott DeChant has been working on the idea since before UMGASS's last perfor- mance of H.M.S. Pinafore, over five years ago, says the publicity director Susan Duderstadt. Pinafore, says LaVelle, is a mu- sical which engages in "a sort of tongue-in-cheek finger-wagging at the cast system." It is not a realistic story, she says, so 'wee re not taking it too seriously." As if one should take a fluffy satirical romance about a boat named "Pinafore" seriously. The music is a splendid creation, typical of Gilbert and Sullivan. HI.M.S. PINAFORE is playing at the Mendelssohn Theatre tonight through Saturday at 8 p.m. and Saturday, Sunday and April 20 and 21 at 2 p.m. Tickets are $7.50, $8.50, $9.00 and $10.00. Student tickets are $5 with I.D. They are availa ble at the Mendelssohn Theatre box office. 9 from the right, with the silly sly grin. But the band doesn't resemble the New Kids in the least. The Happy Mondays rave on 0 Less says mlore in Love Letters by Jenie Dahiman In a Broadway world full of Andrew Lloyd Webber's box office busting spectacles, it is nice to know that you don't always need grand- scale hoopla to have a hit. A.R. Gurney's hugely successful play Love Letters proves it. The produc- tion simply consists of two actors sitting side by side reading the let- ters exchanged between their char- acters, Andrew Makepeace Ladd III and Melissa Gardner, over a 50-year timespan. The unadulterated hon- esty conveyed in their letters endear Andy and Melissa to the audience and reminds everyone that, as Andy writes in the first act, "letters are a way of presenting yourself in the best possible light to another per- son." Written in 1989, this play has al- ready toured over 30 American cities and has an impressive, as well as diverse, acting alumni list, in-. cluding Colleen Dewhurst, William Hurt and Kathleen Turner. The play has been read by young couples as well as mature ones and changes with every cast. Young cou- ples bring a certain sexual vibrancy while older couples enhance the au- tumn of youth theme in the play. Regardless of who reads it, how- ever, Love Letters has a universal theme. Andy and Melissa love each other but something in the stars keeps them from being together. Life leads them in physically sepa- rate directions, but their ongoing correspondence binds them together emotionally. Andy alludes to the strong tie between he and Melissa most effectively in the second act, when he writes, "The thought of never again being able to write to you, to connect to you, to get some signal back from you, fills me with an emptiness which is hard to de- scribe." A.R. Gurney's Love Letters fills one with the hope of having a letter from an old friend in the mailbox, and with the ambition to rekindle the dying art of letter writing. LOVE LETTERS will be performed at the Michigan Theater Saturday night at 8 p.m. Robert Reed, the vet- eran stage actor trained at the British Royal Academy but best known for his portrayal of Mike Brady in The Brady Bunch, and Tammy Grimes, a Tony award win- ning actress, will lend their inter- pretations to Gurney's heartwarm- ing script. Tickets are $26.50, $8.50 for students. by Annette Petruso Wle' re better than New Kids on the Block" - Shaun Ryder in December 1990's issue of Q Most Americans hate the Happy Mondays; I don't. Most Americans also detest the highly undervalued New Kids; I don't. Manchester's latest musical present to the world is under-appreciated. I ask some nay- sayers why they dislike them and all I get is a "they suck." Obviously, I talk to very small-minded people. But until now I haven't come up with a comprehensive argument as to why someone should give them a chance-. They do do a lot of drugs -- the college kids and other "rebels" should like that. They can play their instruments and come up with a good tune. Shaun Ryder can't sing for shit, but his vocal style is quite laid back and gives one faith that anyone but anyone can be famous. What else do you want? For you the reader, I have comprised six whole reasons to give them a listen. (All quotes from Shaun Ryder come from the issue of Q noted above.) . 1. The Records. The Mondays have four lengthy works (three re- leased in the U.S.A.), uniformly full of deft guitar work, hooky tunes, danceable grooves, thought- provoking imagery and Ryder's pseudo-spoken vocals which are sometimes effectively paired with real back-up singers. Their first LP, the '87 import Squirrel and G-Man was produced by John Cale (yes, the John Cale) features sort of jangley electric guitars and first-rate rhythms. Bummed followed it up in '88, and is definitely their full lengthy magnum opus. From "The Country Song" to "Lazy Ihis," they addictively trench into pop border- ing on rock with few funny ma- chines (or so it seems). Hallelujah, their '89 EP, experiments in more direct house music than its predeces- sors and thereby features loads o' remixes making you want to shake your booty. Last year's Pills 'N' Thrills and Bellyaches mixes the club channels with the moree straightforward pop ones. 2. The Song. "Wrote for Luck," off Bummed, the re-mix tacked on the end of the American version of that album and on Hallelujah is just dead brilliant. "I wrote for luck/ they sent me you! ... you give me poison/ ya used to speak the truth but now you're clever" Ryder sings as the band jams, tight as fuck. His inflection borders on perfect and he even mumbles at the end adding a ca- sual mocking air. Because the song has that snatch quality, it was easy to remix into equally stunning tunes. 3. The Cover. "We didn't know Step On .... As soon as we heard the bongo drums that start the song, we said ... we'll sample the bongos and everything else, and I'll sing about three lines off it, and we've done it in about two seconds. ... It was ... the easiest thing we've ever done," said Ryder. Their American record company wanted John Kongo's. smash from 1971 covered for a spe- cial album. No matter how little they actually did on it, the song in every re-mix blasts dead center. With the uncomparable back-up dec-e'> larations of "he's gonna step on you See MONDAYS, Page 12 knko-'s r I the Lrt Or evensquare. 'u~ )85 - Best inAnn Arbor - 186 - Best in Ann Arbor )87 - Best in Ann Arbor WESTEN AT THE 530 S. STA TE, ANN ARBOR 763-2236 liii H COPIES wmUh this couoon 8 1 /2 X 1 1 wvhite , eit serve or auto ted only 540 E. Liberty 761-4539 1220 S. University 747907 Open 7 Days Michigan Union 662-1222 8 & 1O 18 & OVER UM ID required T H E Z Z~gZi CLUB-~ 1988 1989 1990 - Best in Ann Arbor - Best in Ann Arbor - Best in Ann Arbor U ________________________I U North Campus - 927 Maiden Lane 995-9101 Main Campus - 546 Packard 665-6005 CELEBRATES EUJROPEf 0 4 I -f S PARIS SUMMER PROGRAM 1991 Intersession: May 27 - June 14 Summer Session: June 17 - July 26 U