Bli dU Cut a rug with Cuttin' Heads, a Southern-influenced rock band. Their blues-based music will put a smile on your face and a wiggle in your hips, as will the psychedelic hippie rock of Baked Potato. Mmm-mmm. Catch 'em both at the Blind Pig tonight; doors open at 9:30 p.m. Call 996-8555 for Page 9 more information. Wednesday, November 1, 1995 M. Butterfly' compels and provokes , Kristin Cleary - the Daily The Ann Arbor Civic Theater ACT) has taken on an ambitious and allenging work which promises to zzle audiences this weekend. David nryllwang's "M. Butterfly" opens at Mendelssohn Theater on Wednesday ght, a show that has tapped into the ativeresourcesofhundredsofpeople, ording to director Simon Ha. Theshow, whichis amodernvariation the traditional opera"Madame Butter- " by Puccini, is set against the back- >p ofthe Vietnam Warera. "M. Butter- "revolves around the relationship be- een a French diplomat and the Peking era diva with whom he falls in love. e resulting situations, including a trial respionage, provide for an interesting ist to the traditional love affair. fhe show opened on Broadway in arch 1988, and stayed on for 777 secutive performances-making it e of the longest-lasting Broadway tys in history. "M. Butterfly,"a Tony ward-winning play, also became one the first Broadway plays to com- tely bypass any kind of off-Broad- y venue. Playwright Hwang is one of first Asian-American playwrights to achieve national prominence with his story about the stereotypes and misconceptions between the Eastern and Western societies. The plot, which is based on a true story, depicts a role-reversal that in- verts the conventional ideas of Asian women during the era of the play. The stereotypes are historically based con- cepts that, according to Ha, most of societytoday does'nt evenunderstand. "The stereotypes are used without ... thinking it through or without even knowingwhatthatstereotypeisabout." Director Ha was attracted to the pro- duction not only for the compelling story and dramatic plot, but also for the exposure of these stereotypes. "In the United States I think a lot of people have a very stereotypical image of people from the East in general - one aspect that is easily recognized is about Oriental women. They are seen as be- ing mysterious, exotic, even at times subservient," he said. Ha also stated, however, that the stereotypes in this encounter are two-sided."It's not just the West misperceiving the East; the people from the East also have a part to play in the willful use of misperceptions," he said. "I think the playwright has a critical attitude to- wardbothsides."Bydirectingthisplay, Ha hopes to shed light on, as well as question, some ofthe stereotypes exist- ing in society today. This week's production of "M. But- terfly" has been a monumental feat for the AACT and everyone involvedin the play. The play has several scene changes that have required extensive effort and preparation. Inaddition,choreographer and assistant director Man Wong has been busy with the show's Peking Op- era segments, which involve dances with the entire opera corps as well as a musical score by Lucia Hwong. Wong has toured with the original Broadway production of"M. Butterfly,"and at the pre-show Chinese Cultural event he displayedsomeoftheoriginal costumes from these productions. The union of all the various efforts in the play should make it a spectacular production. "We want to make ( M. Butterfly') work through the combina- tion of several elements," said Ha."We want to bring the audience into the world that this Chinese opera singer lives in so (the audience) can experi- ence the cross-cultural encounters em- bedded in the play." Ha said the direct- ing crew has worked to preserve the highly stylized nature of the play that has attracted audiences since its origi- nal opening on Broadway. Ha mentioned that one ofthe strengths of the play is the number of different ways people read it. "The nature of the story is so compelling that it causes people to get involved and to interpret," he said. "Everyone will have different experiences depending on their back- ground and point of view." This open interpretation of the play, according to Ha, makes it extremely interesting for everyone involved. Many people have been employed to bring this theatrical masterpiece to the audiences of Ann Arbor. The work put intotheproductionofthisplayhas been astronomical, and the results should be out of this world, "M. Butterfly" prom- ises tobe avery compelling and thought- provoking work of theater. Go see M. Butterfly before it flutters away. Cedars' a full, rich work Elizabeth Lucas ily Arts Writer If we all try very hard, we might be letorememberwhen courtroom dra- is could be good books. "To Kill a ockingbird" is one example that mes to mind. In the past decade, wever, this genre has been taken er by John Grisham, Scott Turow and like. But perhaps we can hope that nes are changing again. David terson's "Snow Falling on Cedars" intage, 1995) succeeds in being both ourtroom drama and a real work of :ratore. The book's secret may be that, as in o Kill a Mockingbird," legal battles only one facet of the plot. The most sic description of events is that Japa- se-American Kabuo Miyamoto is arged with killinga white fisherman, rA Heine, in 1954. Lookers-on in- ide Kabuo's wife, Hatsue, and mael Chambers, alocal reporter. But trial encompasses the past of all the vel's characters, and the questions of ismthatlingerfromWorldWarTWo. [he novel's major theme is personal ponsibility in the face of chance nts, and it is reiterated in the charac- s intertwined stories. Kabuo's sup- ed motivation is that his father was :ated out of land by Carl's bigoted ther. This event parallels the intern- nt of Japanese-Americans during rld War Two. The novel is set on an nd offthe coast ofWashington, with irge Japanese population, and their :ed relocation points to the implicit It of their tacitly approving white ghbors. he internment has other long-rang- ingeffects.ItforcestheteenagedHatsue and Ishmael, who have been carrying on asecret romance, to separate. Hatsue meets and marries Kabuo; Ishmael is drafted and sent to the Pacific. Years later, at the trial, it is his turn to choose whether or not to accept responsibility for past actions, as he comes across a crucial piece of evidence. Every character in the book eventu- ally has to decide how they will react to unexpected events, and their choices shape the plot. The novel does a par- ticularly good job ofshowingthis inter- action between history and people's lives. Perhaps the most striking thing about the novel is that it is Guterson's first ,although he has written a short- story collection and anonfiction book on homeschooling. His prose is jour- nalistically simple and surprisingly poetic, at the same time. The novel reads clearly and quickly, andis made sharply real by phrases like, "He slept curled up like an autumn leaf." Real- ism is also present in the novel's thor- oughly researched descriptions of fishing boats, strawberry farming, and World War Two battles. Above all, the novel is remarkably unified. Guterson doesn't dwell on ei- ther the trial or details of life in intern- ment camps more than is necessary, and so they never overwhelm the plot. 'Girls' rings i By Chriatopher Corbett Daily Arts Writer I never really wanted to see this movie. I wanted to see something loud and kickin' - something like "Waterworld."Not any artsy-fartsyjunk about two girls in love with ... Whom are they in love with, anyway? Just whomever? Wait. Are they inlove with each other? Are they like those women who grab ice picks and poke holes in men after a wild night of sex and co- caine? WHAT?! Fromthe opening scene in which agirl is making out with herscheming lover in a"Ladies"room, we discoverthat,in fact, this is not some strange, outlandish film as the title suggests. It is a love story. Randy Dean (Laurel Holloman) works at a gas station in a town of about four people. The three other people who live there all hate her. Randy's miserable. When people aren't scream- ing "Diesel Dyke!" to her face, they're saying behind her back: "Her family are, like, OhmiGod, all lesbians!" But how often does a love story make its lonely main character suffer through- out? We suspect her rose will bloom, and soon. Lo and behold, Evie (Nicole Parker) pulls up in a Range Rover and asks for help. She's looking very fine. Evie,you see, thinks her back tire is out of air. But she's like the perfectly healthy person who believes everything ails her. She, not the tire, lacks something inside. In fact, we get a neat close-up - when the pair meet again in the bath- room of their high school - of Randy facing Evie. Behind Randy, we see Evie's reflection in the mirror. She has a hidden, secret side that's as small and undeveloped as her image in the glass. Evie visits Randy for more than just to say,"What up?" She hasrepressed feel- ings. And the two characters' connec- tion fascinates us because we under- stand how much they could unlock in one another. While Randy is getting to Evie, the two girls are getting to us. Because we get the details about what makes them tick, we start to see them as flesh-and- blood characters. They start out as near- opposites.Randy knows what she wants, a e = |a aa - credibly tie The Incredibly True Adventures of Two Girls in Love Directed by Maria Maggenti; with Laurel Holloman and Nicole Parker At Ann Arbor 1 & 2 and her "lesbo household" is messy, chaotic and carefree. Evie, though,hold- ing so much back, lives under her mother's strict, well-ordered roof. As her mother says, "Evie, you are my perfect little girl." What does mom think when she comes home and finds Evie has smoked joints, drunk a $200 bottle of wine, had an orgy with all their food and, well, is asleep in her mother's bed with a naked girl lying on top of her? She goes O.J. They scramble out onto the street in their underwear and burn rubber. We laugh during the discovery scene, but we also enjoy the fact that Evie has finally let loose, she has finally lived. Director Maria Maggenti winds us up. Throughout much of the film, she puts the two girls close only to interrupt and kill the mood. We end up wanting -as much as Evie and Randy do- for the two characters to actually make love. And when the moment comes, Maggenti gives it to us not with vulgar explicitness, but tastefully, with class. Sure, we see skin, but the girls aren't pieces of meat with appendages flap- ping with hysterical glee, as they would in a "Basic Instinct." Rather, Randy and Evie's sex comes across as human as the characters themselves. The scene - white-hot - can make almost any- one cheer: "Don't stop-get it! Get it!" Randy teaches Evie not to care about what anyone else says. "Do what you want! Go for the gusto, bro," she sug- gests. The message comes to us loud and clear, too: In the final scene, as so many people scream and yell at them, the two girls in love place their hands over each other's ears. The image prac- tically burns itself into our memories. Everyone in the novel is fully charac- terized, and every story serves to rein- force the theme, which is finally and simplystated asthe novel ends. Ishmael, living up to his name, has remained to tell the tale, and concludes that "acci- dent ruled every corner of the universe except the chambers of the human h e a r t . " There is nothing accidental about this novel; all of its elements work together to create an incredibly satisfying book. tECODS own twest What we have here is some arena rock. ice the band has metallic all-stars Phil selmo and Pepper Keenan, the arena ality of the band is hardly surprising. rOLA" carries a lot of baggage along th it, and it shows. The sound is the first visible luggage. ere is, after all, a fairly conservative fan ,e that needs to be addressed. Most die- -dmetalheads tend to not latch onto new rdsunlessitisrammeddowntheirthroats. thereislittlesurprising to be found. It's a idZ-Rockingalbum,full ofthebleeding tatintensity expected of it. It's executed tty well, and while predictable is not ntertaining. [hen there are the controlled substance gs. "Rehab" is nominally about drink- although on reflection that may not be .Thenthere'sthebloodypotsong,"Hail Leaf,"the presence of which is becom- nearly as predictable as that of love ts. lixinafewdepressionsongs,acoupleof dictable genre songs used to show the versity"ofthe group, andyou'vegot the aminyourmind.Sinceyoucanseeit,you surely intelligent enough to make the perjudgment conceming it. - Ted Watts oifield itsm umbia 'm not a big fan of"synthetic music." I me old-fashioned, but I'd take the power trio over the sampler any day. Leftfield is synth music. Leftfield reck- lessly employs samples and drum ma- chines. I like Leftfield. Go figure. Itwouldbeunfairtocall Leftfield"techno;" I've always felt techno was a term reserved for what's played during half-time dance showsofHigh Schoolcheerleadingsquads; namely,the classic"James Brownis Dead." Unlike a lot of techno I've heard, what makes Leftfield so contagious is not their deep synth-bass lines and uptempo drum beats, but rather, everything else. For ex- ample,"Afro-Melt"samplesanAficantrbal chant, which seems to dictate the dynamics ofeverythingaccompanyingit. othertracks throw in some fimky keyboard effects and live-sampled drums, like the bongos on "Space Shanty." Not all of Leftfield's focus goes to the party music. They threw in some slower tracks on the album,each of which sounded like it was straight out of "Indecent Pro- posal;"I was waiting for Sadetoshowupin thelinernotes,but Icouldn't findhername. Leftfieldis proofthatsamples and synthetic stuffcanbecool,buttheyareequlproofthat samplesandsyntheticstuffcangotoofar.In other words,one Sadeonthissmallplanetis quite enough. Asfarassyntheticmusicgoes,Leftfield is as good as I've heard. I wouldn't be surprisedifsomeoneintEngland buys this album; it'sthatgood. But really, Leftism impressed me, and the nearest my CD collectioncomestosyntheticsissomeold Jesus Jones stuff. Go figure. - Brad Haywood Martin Lawrence Funk It! EastWest That's right, Martin from the show "Martin" and that cop buddy movie with Wil "Fresh Prince" Smith. But don't worry, it's just a comedy album and not some Joey Lawrence/Bruce Willis vomitous musical side project. And after that it'sjust a good ol' com- edy routine, just without the visuals. Lawrence's stand-up has a rep for being significantly beyondwhatevenFox would allow him to do on the air. And so this is a fine way to get access to that. You get plenty of sex jokes, racism jokes and other things that didn't really have aplace on "Martin." Lawrence still exudes the likable guy presence he did on TV. But on disc he's more like the friend you had in high school who told dirty jokes. If you liked that guy's jokes, get this; Lawrence does it tons better. - Ted Watts JOIN THE MOST PROMISING PROFESSION OF THE 21ST CENTURY Prospective Teacher Education Meeting Tuesday, November 7, 1995 6:00 p.m. Whitney Auditorium Room 1309 School of Education Building Call 764-7563 for more information. MINORITY CAREER FORUM Sponsored by: Anhder Cnsltn A er7"nrr"tr Thel 'eo Bnett Company Partial list of Employers: A"ricanE,pressF al'^'Ad. TOREG Federal Reserve System 3 indust Boson onsnG op CNA IrsyfanceComrpanies Cim CmpaqCoputrCopton Crims mst & Young LLP 201 B Fdelity Inesmnts Cmb, FoidaPowr & Light Company lphi.Sagica, GMC(617 ManrCar, Ic PreWatrhouseLLIP Principal Financial Group Prudnta InranceG ' PrennormREGIST RRDonnelly & Sans Novem US SeAN MrSe!ice PLUS MANY MORE!! Meet adIi Frida, January 6 Fairmont Hotel, Chicago, IL ISTE R send your resume with ry preferences on the back to: ,on & Brown Associates lroadway aridge, M'A 02139 868.0181 phone 868-0187 fax terview with leadingemployers free airfare for Juniors and Seniors selected for interviews! CRNA Scholarships Consider becoming an Air Force CRNA through the Armed Forces Health Professions Scholarship Program. For more information, contact an Air Force health professions recruiter near you. Or call 1-800-423-USAF. AM HN Health Professions J