PAGE 4 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1969 Eeydau's 6f rentic,' French farce to premiere by Nelson Potter The University Theatre opened its season Wednesday night with a production of the classic French farce, "A Flea in Her Ear," by Georges Feydeau. A frenetic, athletic, "Laugh-In'Mike, MaCk' Sennett slapstick, the university group's production cuts the usual three hour (rvith intermissions) three r. it-comedy to a record-time ;3rformance only two hours and ten minutes long. The play can be seen on Friday and Saturday nights this week, and on Wednes day, Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights next week at the Howell Memorial Theatre. "A Flea in Her Ear" is pure entertainment. It depends for its effect on the fast pace, the sight-gag, the sudden reversal, the surprise, and the change ot FURNISH YOUR APARTMENT ATTRACTIVELY RENT CONTEMPORARY, EARL AMERICAN, OR MEDITERRANEAN FURNITURE Z. OCTOBER SPECIAL 10 OFF CONTEMPORARY ITEMS Inferiors Oivtrsilltd 1234 South St. 432 MJ1 UNDERGROUND HOPE Coffee home 1445 N. 27th Featuring Don McKinnon FRI. SAT. FRI- Z. D M u r.m. pace (though that effect is not used often enough). It is all humor and little wit, all prat-fall and little of the comedy that is a reflec tion on character. The au dience (to say nothing of the actors) are left panting and exhausted with laughter and with the effort to keep up. The Feydeau classic is set at the turn of the century in Paris. Mme. Chandebise (Diane Lee), for scarcely adequate reasons, thinks her husband is unfaithful. She connives with a friend (Susan Vosik) to send a love note to her husband, as from a secret admirer, inviting him to meet her at the infamous hotel, the Coq D'Or. (Does the name have a double meaning in French, as in English?) She will there trap her husband in his flagrant intention. By a series of passingly plausible mixups, switches and confusions, all the Chandebise family, their friends and hangers on, end up at the Coq D'Or, avoiding one another, looking for one another, trying to kill one another, running after, being run after, surprising and being taken by surprise, for the duration of a madcap, absolutely abandoned second act. The relations between the characters have then been tied into so many knots that in Smaf PRESENTS THE DEAN TWINS SENSATIONAL SINGING DUO Playing Friday on 2nd Floor AFTER THE COMEDY "THE BREAD ALSO RISES" AND SATURDAY in lfr SatlfakriUr From 9:00 to 12:45 432-1465 13th&PStreet FEATURE TODAY AT 1 P.M. 4:30 8 P.M. Tickott On Silt At Thj Door 11.21 till t P.M. Ih.n 11 .71 Undv 14, 7JC ACADEMY AWARD WINNER! "BEST FOREIGN FILM" ngineers: Join the diversified world of Martin Marietta (G it takes the entire third act, which again is full of mistaken identities, chases and outraged confrontations, to untie them all. The play has the classic form of a farce: the founda tion for complications is laid, complications ensue, and they are then resolved. But there are problems with the play, indeed perhaps with much of the genre of the French farce. The main pro blem is with the stock characters. One of them, Camille (well played by Jan Van Sickle), has a cleft palate, and hence speaks without any con sonants, so that no one can understand him. Feydeau's premise is that his speech defect is funny; it is, in fact, about as funny as Stepen Fetchit. And then there is a Spaniard; he can't talk right either he'th got a lithp, like all Spaniards and like all Spaniards he's ridiculous ly hot tempered. And there is a Prussian, who is sup posed to be funny just because- he can speak only German. These characters set. the tone: we will laugh at, and never with the characters. We will always see them from outside. There is never in the background of the play a feeling that it is real human beings who fall into com plications because of human lovable frailities as there is in the ancestor of "Flea," Beaumarchais' (and Mozart's) "The Marriage of Figaro.". Nor is there the background of social com ment that one finds in Beaumarchais, In Feydeau the complica tions are little more than plausible excuses for slapstick. So "Flea," though WC TWO PART PNOOUCTION Of LEO TOLSTOY S WARandWEAGE mUNTU II THt WM.TIK MAM ODOANIIATION AND tATU IN CtXOA ML' PART I sas NOW SHOWING n a nT tt .... I I M 11 I 11 THE SURMNG OF MOSCOW'' O I AfV I O UU. M I It H WW'1, in Ifoaf PRESENTS II II THE SPINNING WHEEL PLAYING SATURDAY AFTER THE FOOTBALL GAME UNTIL 6:30 ON 2ND FLOOR AND AGAIN SATURDAY NIGHT AFTER THE COMEDY THE BREAD ALSO RISES II ZS and help create tomorrow's technology in: Missile Systems. Launch Vehicles, Space Exploration, Advanced Electronics and Communications Systems. 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If unable to Schedule Interview, please send resume to: Director, College Relations Aerospace Group Dept. 115 Martin Marietta Corporation Friendship International Airport Maryland 21240 An Equal Opportunity mpoytrAfa or f email FEATURING Rutabaga Palace Electric Jug Band Playing On The All New 2nd Floor At in Smaf 2:30 to 6:30 Reduced Prices on Beer All Day Sorry No Minors humorous and properly farcical, Is also shallow and morally hollow. A production of a French farce shoud be fast paced, mannered, slapstick and without depth of charac terization and the University Theatre's pro duction entirely measures up to these requirements However, on the whole, the pace and the volume were too unbroken and too high. In the first act too many good lines were thrown away In .he pursuit of pace. Some of the funniest moments were the occasional quiet moments, and they were funny because they came with a sudden change of pace: They ask of a porter (Stephen Gaines), resting in the drawing room, "What's he doing?" They look at him, and he, oblivious to them, slowly and luxuriously belches. It's funny, because it is such a shocking in termezzo: it is for this that everyone has quieted down. Again, Gaines is funny as he responds to the Doctor's (Bill Szymanski) lullaby by looking at once sleepy and queasy; and when the Doctor says, "A bird tells me you want something to drink," and Gaines replies, slowly, quietly, "Sly little bird." Diane Lee's mugging of fear, horror, delight, expec tation, and all the rest, is wonderful in its melodrama like exaggeration; she's like a young Margaret Rutherford. Mitch Tebo manages to stay outraged as the absurd Spainard from the beginning to the end of the play; if there were more moments of calm and reason in the pro gress of the play, they would provide a background against which the abusrdity of his character would stand out more sharply than it did. Susan Vosik is very pretty and properly frightened as Mrs. Mad Spaniard. Gaines Is excellent as the respectable M. Chandebise, and the unrespectable porter, Poche. Paul Baker is funny as the bordello hotel owner,, though .his roie does not give him the scope ihat his Mr. Malaprop role did in last summer's "Much Ado About Nothing." Chris Ballant 1 is funny in his small role as" the rheumatic. Some smaller touches add '.o the production: The actors are exaggeratedly made up, which is in keeping with their exaggerated, c 1 o w n -1 i k e roles. The period furniture and the period costumes aro effective, especially the former in the richly-colore.l drawing room. And there k humorous, effective, attention-getting blocking of the actors In the third act. Finally, the problem of pacing is a natural first-night problem. There will probably be better use made of the change of pace, and the oc casional contrasting quiet moment in later evenings' performances, (Siflmflsr, 1 Friday, Oct. 24 Nebraska Union Noon Regents 12:30 p.m. Placement Student Affairs Discussion Group 2 1:30 p.m. A.Ph.A. 3 p.m. AVS-"Shirley Chisholm" 7 p.m. Muslim Student Ass'n. MOVIE: "The California Ur derground" ($1) 7:30 p.m. Pi Beta Phi Agriculture Economics Dept. Reception Inter Varsity Christian Fel lowship 8 p.m. MOVIE: "The California Un derground" ($1) l IUKMWHWW3 RfiriM OPEN AT 7 P M FFATIIBF AT LINLULN TftMlftUT ! 7.1 C 9 0 434-7421 CONTINUOUS SAT. & 5UN. 54th & O Street FROM 1 P.M. 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