Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / April 17, 1970, edition 1 / Page 3
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
! I 1 "jf" ff' UPC "'jjffi' j!f fU Fridoy, April 17, 1970 THE DAILY T.Ak HEEL Pce Three Good eekend Movie Selrd ion In Area uwer M h A And A Q JT7FJ QV if u 77D ' jr 77 kj Jim. kjti(f,um&w JLPqjMu, i j f f i ff f I By Harvey Elliott fn tertainmen I Editor CHAPEL HILL Best Bet MASH (R) The antics of a mobile surgical unit operating during the Korean War provide the unlikely theme for the best American comedy since "The Russians" came. Elliott Gould (Ted of "Bob and Carol and Ted and Alice") and Donald Sutherland (a familiar face from "Joanna" and "The Dirty Dozen," now getting proper attention and top billing) co-star and share the honors and credit. (At the Varsity, shows at 1,3,5,7 & 9.) OLIVER! (G)-Two good movies playing simultaneously in Chapel Hill? It's true, with last year's Best Picture Oscar-winner finally making it around here. A lavish musical that's not cornball in the least; really sinister, in fact. Oliver Reed plays a frighteningly I RON MOODY CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS I -Lubricate 4-Floating in the water ' 9-Definite article - 12-Exist 13-YelIow in hue ' 14-Carpet - 15-Tried 17-Soliciting " earnestly 19- Transgress 20- C6nfirmation 21- Waik 23-Hebrew letter 24-Egyptian native 27-Pronoun -28-Athletic group 30-Roman tyrant .31-Sungbd 32-Time of day "34 -Pronoun 35-Siave '37-Melody 38- Toll 39- Transactions 41 - Symbol for tellurium 42- Hairless 43- Drinks heavily 45- Small rug 46- Dried plums "48-Sepa rated " 51 -Possessive pronoun 52-Chemical compound . 54-Man's name 55- Golf mound 56- College officials - 57-Hurried ; . ' DOWN . 1 Grain 2- Anger 3- Fewer 4-SoIar disk 5- SmalI lump 6- Symbol for gold 7- Urge on 8- Long-legged bird 9- lnsignificant thing 10- Vandal 11 - Urge on 16-Gratuity 18-Proceeding 20- Member of pea family (pi.) 21- Fragment 22- Plague 23- Saucy 25- Bay window 26- Carried 28- Preposition 29- Possessive pronoun 32-Gourd 36 - 38 - 40 - 42 - 44- 45- 46- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 g9 10 11 il T3" :u 57" 16 T7 18 2P2P 27 28 29 30 31 32 ' 33 g 34 33 36 " 39 40 46 47 48 49 50 " I "1 III Bay I I Distr. by United Feature Syndicate, Inc. Dickensian Bill Sikes. Ron Moody a somewhat lighter Fagin and Mark Lester a blond and bland (melt-your-heart kind of kid) Oliver Twist. (At the Carolina, shows at 1, 3:38, 6:16 & 8:54.) DURHAM Best Bet: MASH (R) At the Center, shows at 1,3,5, 7:05 & 9:10. BOB & CAROL & TED & ALICE (R)-A good (and award-winning) screenplay is this flick's strongest point, with a good assist by supporting actors Elliott Gould and Dyan Cannon. The decor: strictly Southern California, and does it come in for a beating! Other targets: the new morality, Esalen psychology and truth games (''ou know, we have a very basic relationship"). (At the Yorktowne, shows at approximately 1,3,5,7 & 9.) A WALK IN THE SPRING RAIN (GP)-Ingrid Bergman goes to Appalachia and finds Anthony Quinn and true love. Filmed near Gatlinburg, Tenn., this romantic drama is what people used to call a "woman's picture." The screenplay is by Stirling Silliphant, who did "Charly" and "In the Heat of the Night," So you can be sure there's melodrama to be tapped. (At the Northgate, shows at approximately 1,3,5, 7& 9.) MIDNIGHT COWBOY (X)-Thank God the Oscar voters had enough integrity to give this flick its due: Best Picture of 1969. Though not the numerical champion at this year's Oscars, MIDNIGHT COWBOY got 3 of the most important awards, for Picture, Director (John Schlesinger) and screenplay (Waldo Salt). (At the Carolina, shows at 1:13, 3:11, 5:09, .7:07 & 9:05.) May be replaced on Sunday with TELL THEM WILLIE BOY IS HERE, with Got you Honey a little something. We have Carolina Sweatshirts, Mugs, Monogramed Shirts, and many other Unique items. Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle IS1HI&L jci&r IATjONiEF iTlOlRjPlOjRLME N IjAlL MBL E iMiE W o Hef (sic a rHo aIt s e5 t eTrTjs ciaIEi Jr Is "Tzja" UTTjTj a l e Kr. rTT prntE Alst j dJa r !e POT A T Of ;R;E (AiPlE -P IN'EInI.. jElLt jA'S'E 17 33-Compass point Essence More obese Haste Prohibit Actual being Planet Vesset 47- Regret 48- Writing implement 49- Guido's high note 50- Noise 53-Symbol for tantalum 'Mill m t. SUTHERLAND & Robert Redford and Katharine Ross. RALEIGH Best Bet: MIDNIGHT COWBOY (X)-At the 'Anastasia' Three exciting stories of five exciting women will highlight this weekend's Carolina Union free flicks in the Great Hall. Tonight, ANASTASIA, starring Yul Brynner and Ingrid Bergman, will be shown at 7, 9:30 and 11:30 p.m. The 1956 film tells the storie of an ex-White Russian, General Bounine (Brynner), who plans to get the $10 million long ago deposited in the Bank of England by the assassinated Czar. He trains a starving amnesiac to impersonate the Czar's youngest daughter who had supposedly escaped the Bolshevik massacre. Bergman, returning to the screen after a seven-year absence, portrays a girl with an intriguing sense of mystery. She won the Best Actress Oscar in 1956 for this role of Anastasia. Film magazine Sight and Sound called ANASTASIA a " . . . . highly polished and somewhat free version of the Anastasia legend ... Anatole Litvak's directional pacing is built up around a series of neatly constructed dialogue scenes ... production gloss almost reminiscent of the old-style Hollywood of the thirties." The Saturday pace when changes on JOANNA, a 1968 release, is shown at 7, 9:30 and 11:30 p.m. Ultra-mod in theme and tone, this is a story of an innocent, feather-brained but beguiling 18-year-old girl who comes to London to study art and "taste life." She is quickly accepted by the kooky artsy-craftsy crowd and with the help of Beryl, an exotic black model, becomes flip, amoral and makes her way I ' c2 I I 1M SA 24 jit 1 .LADIES SEAMLESS STRETCH 1 jf A p PANTY HOSE I Y iC Anrrllobl frtH,, Med. J, I Cg f Tall and X-Tall. fr f JS&- M J Charm . KWfcc - CAocoj'o S 'TH TOW H. ICewLAI ff, SAVE I3c Jr i WASM CLOTH IEMUI 3 SAVE 1 1 BATH TOVELS, i I 4 " "TCH"6 WASM CLOTHS 1 J S' f i ff "' Cto. u oi 9 j J ( I SHELLAUSTfttCT.' j I hi . mmd I 111" t' 1 .: I'U il ' li'. I .i - I XI J Elili iWrfe j A ) i r GOULD: MASH' Cardinal, shows at 1, 2:53, 4:53, 6:58 & 9:03. ZABRISKIE POINT (R) Michelangelo Antomoni's:. First American film is a. scathing indictment of the land - from bed to bed spirit moves her. when the She knows something important is lacking in her life ; when she learns from a dying philanthropic playboy that she , must find some commitment in life and accept its f- And .-i ) : i ' i I X iS- V I - i i- viiT.m rnna. II tf T HAYES AND BERGMAN IN "ANASTASIA Weekend TOM WICKER WILL SPEAK at- the annual tapping of the Golden Fleece tonight at .7:30; Everyone is invited; however, doors will be closed at 7:30 p.m. FRIDAY NIGHT SUPPER at the Wesley Foundation tonight. Please call by noon today to make reservations at 942-2152. PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM Dr. W.J. Thompson of UNC will speak on "Nuclear Spin and Nuclear Forces" today at 2 brave. Filmed in Death ns two VaHev ur.Kr.o-. ti !2nd. sccorc:n to critics. incorr.reter.ti actors. 2ABRISKIE POINT is capturing all the film controversy this spring. Critics disagree, with the most influential ones leaning toward a strong dislike and boredom. At the Colony, shows at approximately 1.3.5.7 & 9.1 A N N E OF T H T H O U S A N D DAY E S (GP)-Mediocrity COmDletelv trinrrnh didn't at the Uscars after all. Universal Pictures' campaign for ANNE's votes only paid off with a single award, for costume design Oscar voters overlook the creativity involved in costumes for films such as "They Shoot Horses" and are impressed with tacky Renaissance repetition). It's about Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn. And the Burtons failed once more in becoming husband-and-wife Oscar holders. (At the State, shows at 1:50, 4:10, 6:35 & 9:05.) : BUTCH CASSIDY AND of 'Joanna' Are Flicks responsibilities. Artfully written and directed by Michael Same (who is currently filming "Myra Breckinridge") and featuring the music of Rod McKuen, JOANNA stars newcomer Genevieve Waite in the title role and features Campus p.m. Hall. in room 265 of Phillips FILMS, SPEAKERS AND WORKSHOPS AGAINST THE WAR will be sponsored by Duke students tomorrow beginning at 1 p.m. at the Methodist Center on Oregon St. between East and West campus. You are urged to attend. FOLK FESTIVAL tomorrow featuring Jerry Jeff Walker, the Southern Folk Festival and many local acts. The activities begin at 12:30 p.m. on Ehringhaus Field. It will be held in Memorial Hall in case of rain. CAROLINA BELL, SOPRANO, will have her senior recital Sunday, April 19, at 8 p.m. in Hill Hall. 1971 FINE ARTS FESTIVAL will have its oranizational meeting at 8 p.m. Sunday in room 202 of the Carolina Union. All are invited. The ' Intimate THE SUNDANCE (GP)-Winner of 4 KID Oscars. Donald Sutherland (of "MASH") as the playboy. On Sunday night, audiences will be treated to a compelling film version of Anton Chekhov's THE THREE SISTERS which has never before been shown in theatres. Shelley Winters, Geraldine Page, Sandy Dennis and Kim Stanley co-star in this Actor's Studio production which, because of contractual hangups, never was released to theatres. Set in Russia at the turn of the century, the drama focuses on the individual attempts of three sisters to adjust themselves to life when the cozy glow of security is snuffed out with the death of their father, who had commanded the army camp in their remote town. Directed by Paul Bogart, under the artistic, direction of Lee Strasberg, this presentation is essentially the same version ""' which played 119 performances on the New York stage. Due to the length of the film, shows will begin at 7 and 10 a.m. on Sunday night. Calendar DRAFT COUNSELING SERVICE will be held in Suite C of the Carolina Union Sunday from 3-5 p.m. VALKYRIES WILL MEET in the Carolina Union at 8 p.m. Monday, April 20. FINANCIAL AID RENEWAL APPLICATIONS have 'now been sent to all students who are presently receiving financial aid administered through the Student Aid Office. Any student who has not received these forms who should have received them is urged to come by the Student Aid Office, 300 Vance Hall, and pick up these forms. Deadline for submission of applications for academic year 1970-71 is May 1. Students now receiving aid may do so by acquiring the application forms in 300 Vance Hall. Above deadlines also applies. NOW ON DISPLAY! Oriental. Art Original etchings, serigraphs, ink-suspension warercolors and lithographs by 14 contempor ary artists. Abstract, naturalistic, impressionist, surrealis tic and figurative works, from $25. Show con tinues to April 25th. iTQJ w aiierv jf9 Second floor, The Intimate Bookshop Chapel Hill Open evenings until 10 o'clock i ' 1 more than any other film in 1969. Well, two of them were for its music (original musical and score and best soiig) and the others two were for its screenplay and its cinematorgraphy. The flick has probably already broken records for a non-roadshow film in Raleigh and it's still going. Fun and funny. (At the Varsity, shows at 3:15, 5:05. 7:05 & 9:05, with a 1:20 afternoon show on Sunday.) THE ADVENTURERS (R) Candice Bergen, the star of this Harold Robbins Jit "Wait a minute, Officer does this have something to do with a girl who's blonde, pretty, about 5'6" with big brown eyes?" "EVERYTHING!" Next weekend the Hoofn'Horn Club of Duke University will present BELLS ARE RINGING, a musical comedy that has EVERYTHING to do with the girl and the chaos she causes in a New York answering service. Ella Peterson, played by Lynn Zidantic, a Women's College senior from Independence, Ohio, works in her cousin Sue's answering service, Susanwerphone. She (Kate Bell) warns her cousin, "Just take the calls and deliver the messages don't get involved with the customers." But Ella, warm-hearted and impetuous, cannot follow this advice, and in her attempts to help people she gets herself hopelessly involved not only with her customers, but with the police. Ella's major involvement, however, is with Jeff Moss, as portrayed by Kelly Payne, a freshman from Huntsville, Alabama, a playboy playwright who is finding it difficult to write without the aid of his former partner. But while Sue has warned Ella not to get too friendly with her subscribers, she herself has fallen in love with Sandor (Mark Feldman), a suave Austrian who, unbeknowst to Sue, is using Susanswerphone as a front for his bookie ring. BELLS ARE RINGING, with lyrics by Betty Comden and Adolph Green and music 'Bells Are R is su. b..v thas prrv to-. 'The P:-V (.-?: v "i r.: to u. arci t.r. the . - rea-vot vht TT:;fc it c.,...:, $ho rm!vrf frf, I n.M t!;-: there are !e- p.vr.f.;! u r. to ex. t.M :ne Arr..vv. '.-r. shx"-.is I.-.v.1;. 4: H :v 7 .'."? A WALK IX Till: 'll(l RAIN i Gin-A! the Vf-t hv-, zi 1:11. -: !.'. I.M. GKKKNSIUMU) Iest Ue:: MWS'H (I-U-At the Ttrr.!i"e. shnv s at 1. 5.5.7 I AM CURIOUS i Vi'L! (V.V j (X- Though this S.vv!; wrr.mentan- i rr.ot f.v.:uK; (or n headlines i: taboo breakir;. it hn;;'d be view ed as an honest .ipprail of its cu n'.ry n:end. .intl uil! emerge a thouphful. .it ti:r. ery provoking, piece. IVopie will find it boring if they p all hoped up for st' and don't h ko to iisten to peditirs. but if you're interested in a Scandinavian "Medium Cto!" youll probably like it. (At Janus '2. at 1:30. 3:.;o. 5:30, 7:30 & 9:30.) TELL THEM WILLIE BOY IS HERE (CP) -A social conscience, imbedded in a western that should be bitter than it is. The Indians are fuller than former "Me Tonto" characterizations, and Robert R e d f o r d ' s playing is interesting, but it somehow should e been more. rn En&cts IFlSFEFZf? by Jule .Stynt-. was first produced on Broadway in 1956 at the Shubert Theatre and starred Judy Holliday and Sydney Chaplin. After a successful two-year run, it was made into a film, with Miss Holliday repeating her role as Ella, but this time joined by Dean Martin, u ho played Jeff Moss. The show includes such familiar songs as "The Party's Over" and "Just, in Time," as well as less familiar numbers "Plaza OU33" and "I'm Going Back" which neer fail to stop the show. The cast is being directed by Scott Seltzer, a I960 Duke graduate who starred last year in Hoorn 'Horn's HOW TO SUCCEED IN BUSINESS WITHOUT REALLY TRYING. He also directed the successful SWEET CHARITY in spring of 1968 at Duke. Another SWEEK CHARITY veteran, Pam Parkhurst, has returned to choreograph BELLS ARE RINGING. Miss Parkhurst has spent some time with the Atlanta Ballet Company since her graduation from Duke in 1968. Production dates are April 24 at 9 p.m. (after the Blood, Sweat & Tears concert) and April 25 at 8:30 p.m. in Page Auditorium. Tickets are on sale for S2.75, S2.50 and S2.25 at the box office (681-4059) and at the Record Bars in Durham and Chapel f fill. Mail orders can be received through Box KM, Duke Station. urn) o Xcj lisl y Apr 20 Monday Evening . at Light Battling Butler with Buster Keaton Based on a Broadway comedy, Battling But ler (1926) differs from Keaton's earlier films in that it, like Chaplin's Great Dictotor, has a suprisingngly straight dramatic ending. Public Health Auditorium Adnissisn 51, cr by subscription ($1.50 for 3 films . 'Mil 1 i ! f s if M
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 17, 1970, edition 1
3
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75