January 25,1977
Chap/in and his Times
With a tip of battered
derby and a bounce of worn
shoes, this stunning musical
review launches us into one
of America's most prolific
artistic periods. Chaplin and
His Times is a powerful yet
touching portrayal of an era
that spawned such masters
as W.C. Fields, Gish, O'Neill,
Swanson, Berlin, Fairbanks
and Hemingway - an era
'Women as Shapers of Culture:
Tradition and Innovation'
The role of women in creat
ing and transforming cultural
patterns both in the arts and
in society at large will be
investigated in a series of
11 programs to be presented
between Jan. 19 and April 6
at Guilford college.
The series, organized by the
Guilford College Colloquim, is
open to the public free of
charge. Each program will
begin at 3:30 p.m. on
Wednesdays in the Gallery of
Jan. 19 Rachel Benfey Traditional Fabric Treatment
Lynda Kotani
26 MaryWakeman Questions Women are Raising
in Religious Studies
Feb. 2 Andrea Deagon Mid-Eastern Dance in America
9 Sandra Hughes Woman in the Media
16 Rachel Davis Pioneering in Intercuitural
Dubois Education
23 Nancy Morton The Craftswoman: Pottery and
Lisa Young Weaving
Mar. 2 Sheila Carver The Human Voice: Performance
as Art
16 Janet Zolinger Shaping the Future of Women
Giele
23 Martha Zelt Innovation in Visual Art
30 Mamie Gutsell The Folk Tradition in Song
Apr. 6 Marge Piercy The Poet as Transformer
which enabled Charles
Spencer Chaplin to rise from
the "Little Tramp" to the King
of Comedy. Through tears
and laughter you'll share in
the suspense of Chaplin's
exciting and controversial
career, Tuesday, January 25,
1977 at 8:00 p.m. Tickets are
on sale now for $7.00 and
$6.00. Students and Senior
Citizens may obtain balcony
seats for $3.00.
Founders Hall on the college
campus.
Each speaker will explain
and demonstrate her own
creative or investigative
process, and a panel will
explore through dialog the
relevance of that process to
cultural and personal develop
ment, according to Ann
Deagon, editor of the Guilford
Review, and Carol
Stoneburner, coordinator of
Women's Studies.
The Guilfordian
Spring Film Series
Announced
Tuesday, Jan. 25 The
Wild Child, based on a remark
able journal of a French
physician who in 1806 finds a
child living in the forest like
an animal. He sets himelf
the task of educating the boy
is alien to "Civilization."
Francois Truffaut directed.
(Sternberger Auditorium)
Friday, Jan. 28 Love and
Death, the Woody Allen film
dealing with anguish, despair,
dread, fear and loneliness,
which he feels are the basics
for comedy. Allen stars with
Diane Keaton. (Sternberger
Auditorium)
Tuesday, Feb. 1 Satyricon
a chronicle of what the author,
Petronius, observed at the court
of Nero before he fell out of
the emperor's favor. It was
written as evidence for future
blackmail. Federico Fellini
directed. (Sternberger
Auditorium)
Friday, Feb. 4 Once Upon
a Time in the West, a monu
mental study of revenge and
loyalty in the American West.
Henry Fonda, -Claudia
Cardinale, Jason Robards and
Charles Bronson star.
(Sternberger Auditorium)
Tuesday, Feb. 8 - Death in
Venice, Visconti's film adap
tation of the classic novel
about an artist whose
search for purity and beauty
leads him to Venice. Dirk
Bogard stars. (Sternberger
Auditorium)
Friday, Feb. 11 - The
Twelve Chairs, in which Mel
Brooks tells the story of the
mix-up between 12 chairs, a
strange priest, three other
people and a fortune in
diamonds. Dom DeLuise is
Mel's partner-in-crime, and
At UNC-G this week:
The North Carolina
Symphony will play in Aycock
Auditorium on tuesday,
January 25, at 8:15 p.m. with
guest cellist, Daniel Shafran,
free to Guilford students -
Information Desk, Founders.
Informal coffee with Fred
Graham, legal correspondent
for CBS News. Previous
Supreme Court correspon
dent for the New York Times,
he is the Harriet Elliott guest
Lecturer for 1976-77. His
Ron Moody tags along for the
fun of it. (Dana Auditorium)
Tuesday, Feb. 15 The
Loves of Isadora, an elaborately
constructed biography of
Isadora Duncan, the high
priestess of modern dance.
Vanessa Redgrave and Jason
Robards star. (Dana
Auditorium)
Tuesday, Feb. 22 The
Discreet Charm of the
Bourgeoisie, a crystal-clear
social comedy of surreal shape
about a small group of chic,
upper-crusted Paris residents
who spend most of their time
trying unsuccessfully to
dine together. Directed by Luis
Bunuel. (Dana Auditorium)
Tuesday, March 1 The
Hour of the Wolf, Ingmar
Bergman's study of the dual
personalities of a husband and
wife plagued with night
marish versions of madness
and demonism. Liv Ullmann
and Max von Sydow star.
(Sternberger Auditorium)
Tuesday, March 15 The
Grapes of Wrath, movie version
of John Steinbeck's classic
novel dealing with the poverty,
hardship and disillusionment
experienced by a family forced
to leave their Oklahoma farm
in the early 1930's to work
in California. John Ford
directed Henry Fonda, Jane
Darwell and John Carradine.
(Sternberger Auditorium)
Friday, March 18 Little
Big Man, peopled with such
characters as the sole survivor
of Custer's last stand, an
adopted Indian brave, a mule
skinner, a town drunk and a
gunfighter. Dustin Hoffman
and Faye Dunaway star.
(Sternberger Auditorium)
Friday, March 25 The
UNC-G
Arts Series
topic, "Privacy is a Bad
Word," will be delivered at
8:15 p.m., January 26, in
Cone Ballroom of Elliott
University Center. The coffee
is 3:00-4:00 p.m., on the 26th,
in Joyner Lounge of Elliott
Center. All students are
invited to come by!
EUC Council presents '
Johnny Porrazzo in concert '
next Friday, January 28th, at 1
8:15 p.m. in Aycock Audit- [
orium. Porazzo is a contemp
orary avant-garde performer 1
Page 5
Cocoanuts, the Marx Brothers'
first film, contains intact some
of their best stage routines
while the plot concerns a
Florida hotel mismanaged
by Groucho with some stolen
jewels thrown in. (Sternberger
Auditorium)
Tuesday, March 29
Marat / Sade, a deeply
complex and troubling film, a
wrenching intellectual and
emotional experience. It
shows the persecution and
legendary assassination of the
physically ill and mentally
troubled French revolutionary
Jean-Paul Marat as performed
by the inmates of the asylum
of Charenton. Patrick
Magee, Glenda Jackson, lan
Richardson and the National
Shakespeare Company star.
(Sternberger Auditorium)
Friday, April 1 Revulsion,
a macabre story of a female
psychopath torn between her
craving for and loathing of
men. Roman Polanski directed
Catherine Deneuve.
(Sternberger Auditorium)
Tuesday, April 5 Experi
ments, animations and studies
by some of the best indepen
dent film makers of our
generation. (Sternberger
Auditorium)
Friday, April 8 The Blue
Angel, the original in which
Emil Jannings, as a dignified
university professor, falls in
love with a vulgar nightclub
singer, Marlene Dietrich. His
descent from pride and impor
tance to humiliation and
insignificance provides a
brutal lesson on the excesses
of human passion. (Stern
berger Auditorium)
with tremendous stage
presence and a natural
audience charisma. His
wardrobe is reminiscent of
Gino Vanelli; and musically,
he is a Jose Feliciano type.
He has appeared in major
entertainment club showcases
and has rapidly become an
act to compete with to date,
he has never failed to receive
a standing ovation in any
club showcase appearance.
This concert is a "must" on
your calendar!