4The Daily Tar HeelFriday, January 20, 1984 Mime troupe to perform in Carrboro A rmy is not laughing in 'Streamers By IVY MILLIARD Surf Writer North Carolina's professional mime theatre, TOUCH, recently received a $6,000 grant from the state to help it reach even wider audiences with its inventive brand of mime. This weekend TOUCH will give a benefit performance at their homebase, the Art School in Carrboro, Friday and Satur day at 8 p.m. They also will give a special children's perfor mance Saturday at 2 p.m. titled "The Wizard Who Couldn't Smile" and other stories. Unlike more traditional mimes, which bring to most minds somber, serious figures in whiteface pulling on invisible ropes, the three members of TOUCH use masks, costumes, music and noise and they never wear whiteface during their perfor mances. ' Jef Lambdin, one of the mimes, explained that the group's work is about human beings, not clowns, and that whiteface hides the face and makes a person less human. "Mime is an art form to be played a couple of ways," Lamb din said. "It can be a guessing game with the audience trying to figure out what you're doing. In our work that's taken for granted, and the objects we deal with are just part of the land scape. "That lets us focus on characters, their relationships on stage a 'i the situations they' jr.." I ambdin, along wi;h mimes Sheila Kerrigan and Skip Mendler, pianist Paul Whetstone and a lighting designer, try to include original pieces and improvisations based on audience suggestions in their performances. "We're trying to take mime to the limit of what you can do," Kerrigan said. "For us mime is what we can communicate non vcrbally but not silently. We put mime in the content of the theatre, so we have a fusion of both." Both Kerrigan and Lambdin said they are very excited about the grant, which was channeled from the State Department of Cultured Resources for ti ; Theatre Arts section or the North Carolina Arts Council. Lambdin said part of therant money would be used as a salary support for a staff to handle the administrative duties of the group to give the performers more time to woi k on their art. The largest part of the money will go to sponsor a South eastern Regional Mime Festival in Greensboro at UNC-G during Memorial Day weekend in May, Lambdin said. "Artists will be attending from Alabama, Georgia and North Carolina the best mimes in the Southeast," Lambdin said. "There will be two nights of shows featuring six mime groups and three days of workshops." Lambdin said that TOUCH is the only mime company recognized as a professional theatre in this state, and one of the few such groups which tours frequently. Founded in 1976, the group's members come from diverse backgrounds. Lambdin said he left Colorado State University, where he was a forestry major, to study mime after seeing his first mime performance, because he was impressed with how people were communicating at an emotional level with mime. Kerrigan said she took ballet for eight years when she was growing up in New York, but a knee injury forced her to stop dancing. It was then that she became interested in mime. "It was a challenge to me, because I was so terrible at it in the beginning," Kerrigan said. "I ended up studying it for five years. Skip Mendler, who later joined the group, studied at Harvard University and founded an improvisational theatre group before moving to North Carolina. The three met in a mime school, and since then TOUCH has traveled in a 16-state region giving thousands of performances and workshops. TOUCH'S evening show, called 1984: A Question of Balance, deals with issues as love and hazardous waste in a way that is both funny and serious. One piece, called simply "Garbage," deals with an ordinary object like trash. We see it every day but do not always realize what dangerous effects it could have on us in the future, Ker rigan said. "Our pieces are a series of related images," Lambdin said "It's like an animated film sometimes a culmination of all the images you see. Not just a story." Tickets for the Friday and Saturday performances are $4 for Art School members and $5 for non-members. The children's show is $2 for members and $2.50 for non-members. Call 942-2041 for more information. V x : mi mtm$ ELLIOT ROAD at E. FRANKLIN 967-4737 BARGAIN MATINEE-ADULTS $2.00 TIL 6:00 PM EVERYDAY! J .III. l.l ..in i Miii. H'MHUigSg,' WEEK! : a S?- 4-50 t ;tg. r v 7:10 mt fii . 9:30 ' t212sT t4- Vi IHfcrc rncrc to do In sxtsv titer lllilill ii s IV V v : -;:tr 4t A :::';i::.:;:: '( ?: ? Vxl . ,t a a, , , " 4 WW fit WJf 'H -V . Liif. S f, n ... x,, 'r XfV ""Milff ay. 1 It AN EDWRD S, FELDMAfi PRODUCTION "HOT DOG.. J mate'' UmV NAUGHTON RATRKX HOUStK TRACY N. SMrrHJOHNRWRCKREGERnw( 2Z CHRISTOPHER W. KNOT MKE MARVIN -SSS PAUL G. 'KfPHS2t PETER BtRNSTtW :ME MARVIN "-EDWARD S.FEIDMAN PETER MARKLt I MTW1M O E M11 v KUWHH ti !' ' i ii ii mill 2ND WEEK! 3:20 5:20 o 7:20 9:2Q t: ; ? - 1 it a t 1 V-y V ji 1 Ii ( if ; ; R 'l ' 1 I ' "I I o ; it ir- 3 fefr r. -x..,, v -i i t 4 "" .-.: aC-. ' (( (( )) ! r J KCf' IF)jRii WILLIAM HURT LEE MARVIN" KOCHKERKWOOD - "GORKY PARK" BRIAN DENNEHY IANBANNEN ...JOANNA PACULA Z JAMES HORNLK DENNIS POTTER MARTIN CRUZ SMITH Z'Z? RALF D. BODE. A. S C. r PAUL SYLBERT XTT EFREM H ARKHAM - URI HARKH AM 'CZ: BOB LARSON JGENE KIRKWOOD - HOWARD W. KOCH, JR. MICHAEL APTED 03agii -MOWAMO M tCMUSIfM R tnarwcTc 9 4TH WEEK! 2:15 o 4:45 o .7:15 o' 9:45 SBCS to zofi business meeting Sunday The Sexuality Education and Counsel ing Service will hold a business meeting at 8 p.m. Sunday in the Union. The meeting had previously been announced as on Monday. All volunteers are invited. By JEFF GROVE Arts Editor The first scene of Robert Altman's new film, Streamers, is a good metaphor for the whole movie. Two combat weary sergeants tie a firecracker to a sleeping soldier's bunk. They attack several yards of fuse to the firecracker, light the fuse and wait for the results of their prank. Streamers itself is a long fuse tensely burning down to an ex plosive climax.. Review Altman, responsible for directing such films as MASH, McCabe and Mrs. Miller and Nashville, has said of his newest work, "To synopsize Streamers is not impossible, but I think it is inadvisable. The storyline the se quence of events is one thing, but its meaning is quite another." The statement is true but misleading. The story of the film is just as en grossing as its deeper meaning. The set ting of the film is a stateside U.S. Army base in 1965. While Sgt. Rooney and Sgt. Cokes dream of going to Vietnam to "kill some gooks," three young draftees in their charge are forced to deal with social, racial and sexual ten sions. Richie, an educated, somewhat elitist homosexual, spends his time making witty reservations on the Neander-' thalisms of his cronies. Billy, an All American boy from a small Wisconsin town, asserts his masculinity by reacting heatedly to Richie's teasing. Roger, a Southern black man, rolls with the punches as a way of getting along. Into this set-up walks Carlyle, a street-wise black draftee looking for "the colored boy" he has heard lives in the barracks. Carlyle' s recurring presence leads the film to its violent, exhausting conclu sion. The actors in the film form such a tightly knit ensemble that they jointly won a single Best Actor award at last year's Venice Film Festival, but in dividual performances can be singled out. Mitchell Lichtenstein's Richie ex presses his inner conflict about his sex uality without being a stereotypical "self-tortured pansy." His obvious in telligence engages the audience's sym pathy. As Carlyle, Michael Wright gives the most overtly emotional performance in the film. Trapped in a world that wants io strip him of his identity and indi viduality, he plays by his own rules. Wright makes Carlyle's actions seem almost acceptable because he shows that Carlyle is a victim of his own instincts. Matthew Modine's Billy, a somewhat brooding characterization, seethes with repelled fascination at Richie's cn croachments. Roger, in the capable hands of David Alan Grier, emerges as a character slowly grasping at truth. Guy Boyd and George Dzundza are ef fective as Sgts. Rooney and Cokes, and Dzundza has two powerhouse monologues which he makes especially compelling. David Rabe's script, a slightly cut version of his 1975 play, is brilliantly written. Its overwhelming sense of op pression is mirrored in Steve Altman's one-room set design and Norman Smith's tight editing. The main idea of the film seems to be that violence is an unavoidable result ' when the army or any other group robs people of their individuality. The opening and closing credits, which are superimposed over shots of a crack drill team at work, symbolize this message. Altman also seeks in Streamers to ex plore masculinity and courage odd themes from a director known for his sensitivity in working with women in such films as Three Women and Come Back to the 5 & Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean. Is it more "masculine" for Billy and Roger to go outside and play basketball than it is for Richie to stay inside because he does not need to "prove" his manhood? Is Carlyle less brave than Rooney and Cokes because he's openly scared of combat, or is he braver because he admits his fears while the sergeants hide theirs? Altman never really resolves these questions because there are no answers. This is where the title of the film comes into play. Rooney and Cokes tell stories about "streamers" paratroopers struggling in mid-air when their parachutes fail. Everyone in Streamers is grappling with thin air, too blinded by fear to see any escape from his situation. That's a very different tone than was manifest in Altman's last film on a military theme, MA SH. But the two films are not so dissimilar; each deals with people being put into combat against their will and inventing their -own way out. Altman himself admits the similarity; he has said that MA SH and Streamers are the same story only he isn't laughing any more. housing From page 1 Kuncl said that when the new 500-resident dorm opened next fall, more upperclassmen would be able to return to campus. Last fall the housing department was 1 WEEK ONLY Educating Rita 7:00 9:00 PG I I NCNBPLA. ROSEMARY 967-8284 able to find space for more up perclassmen in a shorter span of time than the previous year, Kuncl said. He at tributed this success to better communi cation with the students. The rates for on-campus housing have not been set. Kuncl said he would present the projected budget and rate recom mendations to the Housing Advisory Board, the Residence Hall Association and Odum Village family housing com munity. It will then go to the administra tion. Kuncl said he expected an estimate by Feb. 1, and a final figure within a few weeks. CHAINSAW HORROR Pieces 7:15 9:15 WCHL LATE SHOWSFRI. & SAT. 11:30 THE ROSE ANIMAL HOUSE r ' i i i i n j i r irnrm m mini i n iini..r.iii,,iiiiii - I I 9UffiwwwwiiJWin wwinn iom wwiioniiMiDOM.twuwjiiwuumwwwi I , , EWtrrg THE CAROLINA THEATRE "MORE STARTLING AND POWERFUL than it was as a play. . . People hungry for a movie of substance will be riveted and rewarded." waii street Joumai Limited Engagement Daily 7 9:10 . Sunday 1 3 5 7:10 9:15 NC Premiere Tonight! PistribuMd by L'n:tsd trusts CIsss&s CLASSIC SCHEDULES AVAILABLE IN LOBBY!! LATE SHOWS FRI. & SAT. The dead will walk the EARTH in All Seats $2.25 Michael Keaton O 12:00 9 HELD OVER!! CAROLINA CLASSIC original uncut version rv iTnmsi m far Kssr tssarr xssisss ess owt 2:30 1 5:05 EAST FRANKLIN STREET 942-3061 DEBRA WINGER SHIRLEY MacLAINE 2:00 4:30 7:00 9:30 A PARAMOUNT PICTURE HELD OVER!! William Hurt Meg Tilly Kevin Kline TTKIE M(& (CMLL COLUMBIA PICTURES 7:15 9:15 (Fl- THE ABSOLUTE WORST "The exuberance and energy of genius... insanely logical, horribly funnyr -Andy Warhol's INTERVIEW yr The Ne &TY 1&2 Franklin. Cnopel Milt n7-45 LATE SHOW! Friday & Saturday 11:30 ONLY! "Where do these people amus. amd edy with ths come from? Where do PgiKFLAJ&NGOS GANG in JOHN WAT CK j) 7 I C2 they go when the sun goes down? Isn't there a law or something?" -N.Y. POST E In color from . . f Saliva F.lms NO ONE UNDER 18 FINAL WEEK Robert Duvall Friday, January 27: Meryle Streep in SILKWOOD m iiii L I t o A r "BEST ACTOR -NY Film Critics -LA Film Critics -Natl Board of Review 5 GOLDEN GLOBE NOMINATIONS BEST PICTURE, BEST ACTOR. BEST DIRECTOR, BEST SONG BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS MUST END THURSDAY 320 5:20 750 950 V) Sequences in this movie will make your jaw drop open in amazement. . . an utterly absorbing drama a sensory feast." David Ansen. NEWSWEEK A CARROLL BALLARD FILM NEVER CRY A TRUE STORY From Walt Disney Productions 1 PRESENTED IN KINTEK STEREO EXCLUSIVELY AT THE VARSITY 3:00 5:00 7:05 9:10 THE Daily Crossword by Elaine D. Schorr 1 ACROSS Scarlett's home 5 African antelope 10 Devious doing 14 Skip 15 Director King 16 Menu mixture 17 Stop 19 Stop (with "in") 20 Deleting item 21 Distinct 23 Drag along 25 Got the message! 26 Mockingbird state 30 if not 33 Church an nouncement 34 Conductor Georg 36 Pair 37 Stupid one 38 Paris pops 39 Coconut fiber 40 Calendar abbr. 41 "Green Hat" author 42 Moroccan port 43 Husky owner 45 Hemlock drinker Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: XmSlTriPTR E S A TSIAISIHI 10. A Rj OILER 'MUTE A R C A ;U NIP" E R W AJT E B SHIM e n-JSBEa. mm 1 pad rTeT war ml 1 tToTa s mi fsjc" 0. Q IX-l JmI'Zlkl R 61 , jat e ie C.A S I NG TTTFeTd D I N.G. K NOT nE POXYlIVAG tj X R J. 1. JJe j h je TTv A E L IT AGENDA !!I R IM. en. j To A.u.8. ANII"II.II ilf.ll 12084 47 Tissue -swelling 49 Seven 50 Pleasure seeker 53 Vilifies 57 "Unto us is given" 58 Closedown 60 Computer fodder 61 Moray -catcher 62 Big brass 63 Decamped 64 Play 65 Prognosti cation DOWN 1 Drink too much Asian river Stymied Turns in side out 6 Writer Yutang 7 Puts two and two together 8 One who observes 9 Quitters 10 Horse of a color 11 Took to one's heels 2 3 4 5 12 Settled down 13 Horsehair 18 Signs of the times 22 Vedlc god 24 Painter's prop 28 Letter group 27 Ausculta tion sounds 28 Stopped 29 Skin woes 31 Retinue 32 Shore birds 35 Gauzy materials 33 Guaranteed 33 be (expires) 41 So be it 42 Muscle problem 44 " choose to run" 48 Rhythmic pause In melody . 48 Son of Jacob 50 Pluvial bombardment 51 Fief drudge 52 Max. fiber 54 Like a hive 55 Court wear 58 Arch 59 Pro (for the nonce) E9 TT ' 75 TT" TT" " T5- """" To "-" " ; IT" mmm" if "" "" "" TT" "" -"" ir" " ls T" """" '2rT27n"28 29 """" 30 "" "" 3f32" "33 "" 34" 35"" "" 3i "" 3jjj - - if" " -"" 'if "" " " 73 "" 44 - 45" "" iC "" 77" ii f ' TT" mmmm lo"l 1T "" "" siT " "53" """ " S4lw"lii" T? ! " Ii 53" "" " " " " ' -I- I I I rl l l I i Hril 1934 Tribune Company Syndicate, Inc. All Rights Reserved 1Z3I4