Friday, April 18, 187S The DaHy Tar Had p3 DOSCOP Life Cat t Cradle "Home Across the Road" win perform at 9 p.m. Friday and Saturday. $1 cover charge. Town Hall "Brlce Feet Band" will perform at 9 p.m. Friday. "Steve Dasset will perform at 9 pjm. Saturday. $1.50 cover charge. The Frog and Nightgown (Raleigh) Teddy Wilson and His Trio" wfH perform at 9 p m. Friday and Saturday. The Pier (Raleigh) "Monroe Doctrine" will perform at 9 p.m. Friday and Saturday. $3 cover charge for singles, $5 for couples. Blueberry Hill (Durham) "Jim Barber and the Cavellers" will perform at 9 p.m. on Friday and Saturday. $2 cover charge, and $2 membership fee. Cinema On Campus "A Woman Under the Influence" A lacerating portrait of a woman trying to achieve the kind of domestic happiness she sees on television. (Alternative Cinema, at 6:30 and 9:30 p.m., Saturday in Carroll Hall, $2 in advance at the Union desk.) "Gone With the Wind" Re-live the Civil War. (Union flick at 8:30 p.m. today in Memorial Hall, 50 cents.) j "Odd Man Out" Sir Carol Reed, graduate master of the cinematic "chase" has directed a dandy in this 1947 film. It depicts the desperate endeavors of a wounded man.; (Union free flick at 6:30 and 9 p.m., Saturday in the Great Hall.) "Sabotage" This thriller stars Sylvia Sidney and it is one of the rarely shown Hitchcock's. (Union free flick at 630 and 9 p.m., Sunday in the Great Hall.) Chapel Hill "Shampoo" A sexual farce set in the sixties starring Warren Beatty as a Beverly Hills hairdresser who becomes involved with ; his customers. (Carolina, at 3, 5, 7 and 9 p.m., $2.25) , "A Brief Vacation" Chapel Hill's third subtitled film in a week. The story of Clara, A Calabrian peasant, who is a factory worker in Milan. (Varsity, at 1:35, 7 and 9 p.m., $2.25) "Dirty Harry" Cling Eastwood plays Harry Callaghan, a cop who does things his way. (Plaza 1, at 5:05 and 9:05 p.m., $2.25) "Magnum Force" a re-teaming of Eastwood and Siegel. (Plaza 1 , at 3 and 7 p.m., $2.25) "Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore" (Plaza 2, at 2:45, 4:55, 7:05 and 9:15 p.m., $2.25) "The Prisoner of Second Avenue" (Plaza 3, at 3:10, 5:10, 7:10 and 9:10 p.m., $2.25) Late Shows "Women in Love" Ken Russell's adaptation of D.H. Lawrence's novel. Russell catches tike no other film-maker the sense of an England under whose tranquil surface lie unexpressed fears and mysteries. Starring Glenda Jackson, Oliver Reed and Alan Bates. (Carolina at 11:30 p.m. today and Saturday, $2.) "Fat City" (Yorktowne) Durham ! "The Mother and the Whore" (Freewater Films, at 7, 9:$0 and 12 p.m., Friday at the Duke Biological Sciences Auditorium, $1.00) "At Long Last Love" (Yorktowne) "Earthquake" (Carolina) "2001: A Space Odyssey" (Northgate) Musk "The Memphis Blues Caravan" will perform at 9 p.m. Saturday in Memorial Hall. Admission is free. The North Carolina Piano Trio will perform on Sunday at 4 p.m. in the B.N. Duke Auditorium. Admission is free. The UNC Jazz Band conducted by John Harding will perform at 4 p.m. Sunday in Memorial Hall. Admission is free. Craftsmen and folk musicians will perform from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m today and Saturday on the Duke Main Quad. Peg Leg Sam, a South Carolina blues player, will perform at 8:15 p.m. today in Page Auditorium. Admission is $2.50. "Blue Sky Boys," "Ole Belle Reed," "The Southern Appalachian Cloggers" and "Virgial Cravens" will perform at 8:15 p.m. Saturday in Duke's Baldwin's Auditorium. Admission is $2.50. "The Dance Black Concert" will perform at 8:15 p.m. Friday, In Duke's Baldwin Auditorium. Admission is free. The Durham Youth Symphony Concert will perform at 3 p.m. Saturday in Duke's Baldwin Auditorium. Admission is free. Th Dally Tar Hael Is puMlahad by ttw Untvarelty of ! North Carolina Madia Board; dally axoapt Sunday, ! nam periods, vacations, and summer period. Tha following dates are to be the only Saturday Issues: September 14, October 5-19, and November 2, 16 ft 23. , .... . Office are at the Student Union building, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N.C 27S14. Telephone numbers: News, Sports 933-1011, 933 1012; Business, Circulation, Advertising 933 1163. Subscription i rates: $29.00 per year; 110.00 per semester. Second class postage paid at U.S. Post Office In) Chapel Hill, N.C. 27S14. The Campus Governing CouncH shall have powers to determine the Student Activities Fee and to appropriate ail revenue derived from the Student Activities Fee (1.1.1.4 of the Student Constitution). The Daily Tar Heel reserves the right to regulate the typographical tone of an adverttssmanla and to revise or turn away copy It considers ebac1onaela. The Dally Tar Heel will not consider aduaTSenta or payment for any typographical errors or erroneous Insertion unless notice Is given to the Buslneae Manager within (1) one day after the advertisement appears, within (i) day of the receiving ot ine war sheets or subscription of the paper. The Daily Tar Heel wUI not be responsible for more than one Incorrect Insertion ot ah advertisement scheduled to sun several times. Notice for such correction must be given before the net Insertion. Reynolds O. Bailey. Elizabeth F. Bailey.. Business Mgr. .Advertising Mgr. Robert WstkJns will present a piano rtciUI at 8:15 pjn. on Saturday in the East Duke Music Room. Admission Is free. Thja Four Orchestras of the Duke University String School will perform at 3 pjn. on Saturday In Baldwin Auditorium of Duke East Campus. Admission Is free. A Duo-Recital by Giorgio Ciompi, violinist and Jane Hawkins pianist win be presented at 8:15 Sunday in the East Duke Music Room. Admission is free. J The Carolina Haymakers will present! Shakespeare's Twelfth Night," a fantastical celebration of love and love's confusion at 8. pjn. today through Sunday, and Thursday, April 24 through Sunday April 27. Tickets may be purchased at the Piaymsker's Business Office, 102 Graham Memorial, or at Led better' Pickard in downtown Chapel Hill. The Carolina Readers are presenting an adaptation of Euripides' "The Trojan Women" at 7 p.m. Saturday and Sunday (ralndate Monday) on the front steps of the Morehead Planetarium. . Television "Alice Cooper The Nightmare" A theatrical rock spectacular to be presented on , "Wide World: In Concert." The special is' based on Alice's new hit album "Welcome to My Nightmare." (At 11:30 p.m. Friday on Channel 5. tandin Assignme 'ajr . . . r. ifen IT" TOO v? Krin at STTQO'd. STT(Q)C2ES T7WPBS CINEMA ARTS SERIES PRESENTS.2 aa Uaanoata. r" t hi i i n i n i .. ml ' i I -1 " I i " His most powerful picture in years: o Starring STACY KEACH & JEFF BRIDGES LATE SHOW SATURDAY 11:30 r 7: aurora A jjL or BE Ml NEK ) SUNDAY BRUNCH, U .3 1 ' y 452 IV. FRANKLIN I :::::::::::::::: i ..... . "SHAMPOO IS THE MOST VIRTUOSO EXAMPLE OF SOPHISTICATED KALEIDOSCOPIC FARCE THAT AMERICAN MOVIEMAKERS HAVE EVER COME UP WITH. Like the comedies that live on, it's a bigger picture in retrospect. Julie Christie is one of those screen actresses whose every half-buried thought smashes through . . . there's friction in each nuance. She's not only an actress, she is in the high-class-hooker terms of her role the sexiest woman in movies right now. Coldie Hawn is everything her admirers have hoped for. Lee Grant is such a cool-style comedienne that she's in danger of having people say that she's good, as usual. Jack Warden is the biggest surprise in the cast He's both a broad cartoon and an appeal ing character. The central performance that makes it all work is Beatty's. I don't know anyone else who could have played it" Pauline Kael, New Yorker Magazine "THE LA DOLCE VITA' FOR THE 1970's. Warren Beatty's 'Shampoo,' a double-leveled work in his Bonnie and Clyde tradition, establishes the actor as a serious-minded film-maker with a cool eye on our society. This is his best comedy performance to date and his co-stars are dazzling. UndfirHal Ashby's astute direction, "A RICH, COMPLICATE COMEDY ABOUT THE PER ILS OF DON JUAN-ING. To imply that Beatty alone is responsible for its -success is unfair to his sharp eared co-screenwriter, Robert Towne, his sensitive director, Hal Ashby, and his brilliant co-stars, Julie Christie, Coldie Hawn, Jack Warden and Lee Grant. 'Shampoo' has become some thing much more than an updated Don Juan fable: a satirical account of human disaster that is far more devastating than that other study of disaster in Los Angeles, 'Earthquake'." Charles Michener, Newsweek " 'SHAMPOO' IS EROTIC IN EX PRESSIVENESS, SERIOUS IN ITS APPROACH TO CHARACTER AND BEAUTI FULLY DIRECTED. The setting is Beverly Hills. What does stand out, early and late, is the quality of the per formances. Beatty has put himself in wonderfully fast company when he acts with the great Jack Warden, or Lee Grant. Julie Christie is up to the pace and so is Goldie Hawn. In short, this is a picture rough enough to please those who can accept a hard look at contem-. porary social dirt and yet good enough not to be down-graded as mere sensa tionalism." Archer Winsten, New York Post "'Shampoo' is a thoughtful, even poi gnant, portrait of a frightened man . . . Warren Beatty has never been more appealing. 'Shampoo' is that best of all possible film concoctions one that keeps us entertained while, we're see ing it, and then, keeps us thinking about it for a long time afterwards." Aaron Schindler, Family Circle "'SHAMPOO' IS A BRILLIANT, BLISTERING, SCATHING STUDY... A VOLCANO OF A MOVIE, TRENCHANT, TOUCHING, RAUNCHY, AND HILARIOUS. Perhaps the sharpest tone poem on Hollywood life since George Cukor made "What Price Hollywood?" in 1932. This is an origi nal, deriving from no other movie made before. It has its own truths and its own rhythms and its own complexities and it does not seem to be written, directed and acted though it has been most magnificently in all categories but simply to exist, moment for moment, with a life of its own. A perfect cast acts flawlessly. I am also lost in admiration for Hal Ashby's choreographic wizardry and sensitive understanding of flesh pots behavior, the mordant intelligence behind the Towne-Beatty screenplay." Bernard Drew, Gannett Newspapers m m X. I a m i M w i m mmm m m m mm w-m m-m m w m m m -a aw m m 1 H jr Jf - W W V . w mw k ' I - ' "" " 1111 111 1 1 ""' " -1 1 V Q y St :v:-x-x-:-rf:w:--: I tmmm m&mrntm (imtM u r i RESTlCTffDurdf P'wu-et- "A BRITTLE DELICIOUSLY BITCHY COMEDY. Though it be gins as a brittle, deliciously bitchy com edy, charting 24 hours in the life of a horny Hollywood hairdresser named George, 'Shampoo' soon tackles some thing far more ambitious in effect, the decline of Western Civilization as witnessed in the vicinity of Beverly Hills. Beatty, Ashby and company make their cool, raunchy 'Shampoo' one of the most original and outrageous examples of fashionable back-bitting since Julie Christie went into orbit as 'Darling'." Bruce Williamson, Playboy IT IS, I THINK, ONE OF THE MORE IMPORTANT AMERI CAN FILMS OF THE PAST FEW YEARS. 'Shampoo' is a ter ribly bright and laceratingly witty rec ollection of where we were on that win nerless night, it's also a terribly jolting reminder of where we've been stuck ever since. -Frank Rich, New Times 'Shampoo is a black-tinted comedy that touches memorably and pain fully at the roots of our moral malaise. The movie sees us clear, the way we were, everywhere." Judith Crist, New York Magazine "IT IS GOING TO BE A SMASH. I THINK IT WILL BE ONE OF THE BIGGEST PICTURES IN A LONG, LONG TIME. 'SHAM- POO' is a frenzied biopsy of one strand of salon society. SHAMPOO is stylish; it's a cut above most Hollywood farce, and it is streaked with laughter." -Gene Shalit, NBC-TV "IT IS THE FIRST UNBLINK ING, UNBLUSHING, UNEM BARRASSED SORTING OF THE SOCIAL CONFUSIONS IN WHICH WE ALL FOUND OURSELVES FLOUNDER ING IN THE LATE 1960V 'Shampoo,' as blunt as any major Holly wood film has yet dared to be, will E revoke shocked gasps and shrieks of lughter for its abundance of outrage ous one-liners." Richard Cuskelly, L.A. Herald-Examiner "SHAMPOO' WILL BE WORTH STUDYING A CEN TURY FROM NOW TO KNOW WHAT A PART OF OUR TIMES WAS LIKE. Its language wipes out whatever reticences were left in the screen's playback of life as spoken. Its images manage fairly in geniously to keep a few letters east of X and yet the combination of word and half-seen deed makes 'Shampoo' seem more explicit than 'Last Tango in Paris' and Warren Beatty out-reveals Marlon Brando by a few square inches of sacro illiac." Charles Champlin, L.A. Times "HOW AM I SUPPOSED TO WRITE ABOUT AN IMPOR TANT MOVIE THAT COM PLETELY SATISFIED ME WITHOUT SOUNDING LIKE A CIGARETTE AD? Shampoo' is my favorite film so far in 1975. This isn't just some trivialized, glamourous look at California. 'Shampoo is a water shed movie. It takes one shameless, bright and decadent microcosm of U.S. life (those gilded Jet Nothings of Bev erly Hills) and shows us what a lot of us were like in 1968. The acting is all super sensational. It is both hilarious and horrible, tough and tender. But this movie has heart- and if the final love scene between Warren and Julie doesn't get to vou, then you've got none. There are at feast twenty separate moments in 'Shampoo I'd love to talk about in de tail but you go see it, youH find them for yourself." Liz Smith, Cosmopolitan ,robert townewarren beatty mi . i irichard lylbert wpmltimonl p ib, warren beatty Mhal aihby from Columbia Pictures A Penky-BrightVUU FMturt I SOMETIMES DEVASTING, IT IS THE MOST SUCCESS FUL AMERICAN COMEDY IN YEARS. 'Shampoo' is one of those projects that seems to draw the best from everyone associated with it. The characters are so tellingly drawn that whenever two or more faces ap pear on the screen it has the effect of satiric counterpoint, latter-day Hogarth." Howard Kissel, Women's Wear Daily "'SHAMPOO' IS A PERSONAL TRIUMPH. A POLITICAL MANIFESTO WRAPPED IN A BREATHLESS SEX FARCE. The movie is full of ribald laughs, but it's real intention is the cor ruption of power and the immorality of affluence. 'Shampoo' is a personal movie of a superior caliber. Under the soft-edged, effortless style of director Hal Ashby the performances all mesh with graceful verve." Joseph Gelmis, Newsday 3-5-7-9 STARTS V" 1 1 1 mT9 A CHAPEL Hill A STARTSTp 3-5-7-9 ..v.v.V.Vrt,.sv v.v.w.w.v.v." 1 I S 1 I 1 I 1

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