I j'''''''''" mm M a ,yrnr. I(M,....IW iuir 1,1,..-.,- iu, I., -iici-r m - ia- mr mi"w"u"-iior--.ur p--im -rr-i.-j .-lu trm w -r jui o -ww i,.-in1-iWrr-mia-iiMr m.--wr mi x 'Uw-uir ur ro iji mr mr- mrm MrTHr-r-mi m, w.u.Tvr-mr-m-j-Vi
The Daily Tar HeelTuesday, August 28, 19843B
from page 1
THEATRE
3
"lb
to pen the ultimate Western film script.
Performances will be Sept. 27-Oct. 6.
Next on the ArtSchool's drama sche
dule is Afore Unnatural Acts Nov. 8-10.
This assortment of scenes, sketches and
original works will be acted and directed
by members of the Actors Co-Op.
According to Leah Talley, publicity
director for the ArtSchool, the Actors Co
Op is composed of local drama enthusiasts
who meet Mondays and Wednesdays at
5:30 p.m. "It's part of our effort to expand
theatre at the ArtSchool," she said. "It's .
also a good opportunity for students to
explore and get a chance to perform."
For ArtSchool ticket information, call
942-2041.
The Durham Theatre Guild's four-play
season begins with A Funny Thing
Happened on the Way to the Forum, a
farcical musical set in ancient Rome and
graced with a score by Stephen Sondheim.
Dates are Sept. 28-Oct. 13.
Next is Stephen Schwartz's popular
musical version of the gospel according
to St. Matthew, Godspell. The musical,
which palatably blends theatrics, song and
scripture, plays Nov. 30-Dec. 1 5.
Feb. 15 through March 2, two plays
by Brian Friel are joined in an evening
called Lovers: Winners and Losers, a
humorous look at love. '
The DTG season ends with two plays
by David Mamet, winner of this year's
Just weeks before its New YorlTopeningT
LKIAIk
ftXSGOO life W)EteS550D
A New Musical About 3 Stand-Up Comics
Sept. 9 - Sept. 23
Paul Green Theatre
Dscount Preview Sat. Sept. 8
TCKETSONSALENOW!
Call PlayMakers (919) 962-1 121
Charge by Phone: Mastercard & Visa
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Over 30 different varieties. Made,
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Pulitzer for his . Broadway hit Glengarry
Glen Ross. Duck Variations and Sexual
Perversity in Chicago offer a sampling of
Mamet's masterful language (which often
veers into the profane, as the second title
suggests). Performance dates are April 19
May 3.
For further information on the Durham
Theatre Guild season, the number is 688
4259. UNC isn't the only local university with
a drama department. The Duke Players
offer performances separated into two
categories, mainstage and studio produc
tions. Read big budget and shoestring.
Ushering in the mainstage series is
Bertolt Brecht's classic The Good Woman
of Setzuan. The play, to run Oct. 23-27,
offers audiences a glimpse of one of this
century's most innovative and some
times exasperating playwrights.
Moliere, one of France's most delightful
playwrights, is revisited with the Feb. 19
24 production of Tartuffe, the farcical
study of theatre's most wonderfully
loathesome charlatan.
To Kill a Mockingbird is no laughing
matter'April 9-20. Based on Harper Lee's
novel, a black man unjustly accused of
rape suffers a small Alabama town's fury,
and his defense lawyer's children leave
childhood behind.
The Duke Players Studio productions
get a head start on UNC's dramatic art
department with an early visit to eve
ryone's favorite ecclesiastic as Sister Mary
Ignatius Explains It All for You Aug. 29
Sept. 8.
Next in store is the comedy Clouds by
Michael Frayn, best, known for his
exhaustingly funny Broadway farce.
Noises Off. Dates are Nov. 7-10.
L?50 TTThnr TUn?TTDTT?
iilLilL In hJ' Ji JOIiLLi Ji. ill
Chapel Hill's Premier Beer Garden
Welcomes UNC Students
4 w owyg
J t 4
DONT MISS OUR CONTINUING SPECIALS!
Happy Hour 4-7 Daily Tuesday Draft Specials 8-1 1 p.m.
Behind the Pizza Hut on the Village Green,
Downtown Chapel Hill
Dec. 5-8, students will render a selection
of modern plays from Beckett to the
present in an evening titled Scenes From
Contemporary Drama.
Ending the Duke Players' season, two
original plays not yet announced will be
performed March 20-23, providing the
time and space for new voices to be heard.
For information on the Duke Players'
season, call 684-6069.
At N.C. State, student productions at
Thompson Theatre begin Oct. 19 with
Teahouse of the August Moon, which
ends Oct. 27.
Nov. 8-17, the small-cast musical
Working, based on the Studs Terkel book,
will be produced.
Theatrics spill offstage for audience
participation and festive eating with the
Fifth Annual Madrigal Dinner, which
Thompson Theatre director Charles
Martin calls "an extravaganza, with
marvelous food and entertainment.'' T
The dinner, nightly Nov. SODec. 5, will
recreate an Elizabethan feast, complete
with plum pudding, jugglers and lords and
ladies but, with respect for messy
historical accuracy, there will be no
silverware, and food must be eaten with
the fingers.
Paul Zindel's oft-performed play The
Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon
Marigolds follows Feb. 14-23.
Finally, Shakespeare's Kate and Petru
chio war for sexual equality (settling for
a supposedly happy ending of male
dominance and cheerful female submis
sion) in 77z Taming of the Shrew, which
is always entertaining despite its dubious
sexual politics. Performances are March
21-30.
For information on Thompson Theatre
productions, call 737-2405.
The Raleigh Little Theatre season
begins ambitiously with Andrew Lloyd
: Snack lunches of sushisrurirnp
3 id scrretirr.es suid or fresh tuna
Crtentalsourmet mater ieIs
Oriental cooking utensils
L-stant meals for backpackers
Fresh tcfu
Fresh bean sprouts mun$
and soybean)
Fresh tempeh and soybean
HOURS OF OPERATION
Monday through Saturday
i::":":- . x: ;':::.:as y::-yyy:
10:00 cm - 6:00 pm
Friday VI C:00pm
Gifts
Accessories
Hosiery
Shoes . . . and
Lingerie
Carr Mill
967-2345
ir
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HOL'N ONE
Monday-Thursday 6 am i am Friday-Saturday 6 am-2 am Closed Sunday
505 W. Rosemary Street
A And tho. Carolina Union
Y &r -n association with the Record Bar I
A PHESSIIT ?
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f AND I
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1 0:00 P.M.-''-- o
J Tickets available at the Ccrc'Ina Union Ccx Crnso 1
ft and at all Hscord Ccrs in Raleigh, Durham and Chapel Hill V
Webber and Tim Rice's musical retelling
of the Bible's coat-of-many-colors yarn,
Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor
Dreamcoat. Among other anachronistic
attractions, the musical provides a hip
jiggling pharaoh who Croons like Elvis.
Dates are Sept. 14-Oct. 6.
Neil Simon's humor strikes twice this
season in the Triangle with the production
of California Suite, four vignettes set in
a Beverly Hills hotel, scheduled Nov. 2
18. Feb. 1-17 hapless Blanche DuBois loses
her family manse to debt, her questionable
virtue to Stanley Kowalski, and even her
mind to madness in Tennessee Williams'
classic package of shattered dreams and
sweat, A Streetcar Named Desire.
Lucille Fletcher's whodunit, Night
Watch, whirls together a wealthy heiress,
her psychiatrist, a nurse, a husband and
various potential victims or perpetrators
in a plot designed to chill and entertain
willing onlookers March 22-April 6.
Finally, the operetta The Student
Prince ends the RLT season May 17-June
8 on a high note of bittersweet romance
and music by Sigmund Romberg.
In addition, a Christmas performance
of Cinderella, not included in the regular
season, will play Dec. 13-16.
Haskell Fitz-Simons, artistic director of
RLT, "We're excited about everything.
I'm .really looking forward to Streetcar
myself. With Tennessee Williams' recent
demise, this seems a special year to do
it."
Even without but fortunately with
that production, the year does look
special for area theatre. From melodrama
to farce, overture to denouement, Triangle
theatregoers have ample opportunity to
live a thousand other lives, laugh, dream
and (they'd better) applaud.
W1CAG3Y
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THE Daily Crossword byj.&p.Banick
ACROSS
1 Daughter of a
lord
S Sacks
10 Movie dog
14 Muscat and
15 Consume
16 Female
animals
17 Cloying
19 Achievement
20 "The Children's
21 Still
23 Native of: suff.
24 Table center
piece 27 Shred
29 Snack
30 Long-eared
animal
33 Croissants
34 Certain worker .
35 Pertaining to
taste
33 Time of
happiness
39 Cameo
40 Avian cry
43 Entreaties
45 Fix
48 Ship of myth
47 Cavity
49 Displaced
person
52 Sash
53 Cat. wine city
58 Sins
57 Sermon
59 Makes
palatable
63 Amerind
64 Adorns
65 Neighbor of
Minn.
63 Bristle
67 Slip away
63 Trucking rig
DOWN
1 John Passos
2 Drs.' grp.
3 Large knife
4 Audience's cry
5 Get, in a way
6 Sweep
7 Of the ear
8 Cluefln
9 Vheat variety
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All Rights Reserved
82884
10 WWI outfit
11 In a pleasant
way
12 Prickly herb
13 Fall flowers
18 Keep close to
22 Abandon
24 Recede
25 Black-and-white
bird
28 Painting
adjuncts
23 Rent
31 Mode
32 Fabric inter
woven with
gold
35 "Baptizee"
33 Merkel the
actress
37 To boot
33 Make sound
again
33 Sweet clover
40 Mission
41 Mental, for one
42 Mournful cry
43 Stills
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44 Rounded
43 To the opposite
side
48 Dissipate
50 Metrical writing
51 Bow
54 Knitting stitch
55 Exchange
premium
58 NX parrot
60 Elec. unit
61 Headgear
62 Travel on
runners