Area groups brighten Lincoln entertainment This is not a lively weekend as far as Lincoln's entertainment goes. No major acts are in town, although some of the better regional groups are to be found. 1116 ,Z?? fftures Home Cookin', purveying their particular jazz-rock blend for all comers with a 50 cent cover charge John Walker and Pete Blakeslee, meanwhile, are putting in a stint at St George & The Dragon and Cliffs Lounge offers Friends a' guitar-pop-folk group who do not seem to appear as often as their audiences would like. The Rendezvous, 56th and Comhusker, is featuring Patchwork who reportedly put on a well-polished performance. For those who have the irresistible urge to dance, the Royal Grove offers local powermen Steele Avenue. The Colonnades Dinner Theater's production of Murray Schisgal's Luv is coming to an end, with final performances tonight and Saturday, with dinner served from 6:30 p.m. and the play starting at 8 p.m. New or re-released movies in town this weekend include: Chinatown, loaded to the scuppers with Oscar nominations, at the Plaza 3; The Dragon Dies Hard, another compilation of obscure footage of the late Bruce Lee: at the Plaza 2; Turkish Delight, a medium-core Dutch Love Story playing in tandem with Oh! Calcutta! at the Cinema 1; and Never Give a Sucker an Even Break plus the Marx Bros' Horsefeathers at the Hollywood & Vine. Sheldon to feature Sunday film premier Two movie presentations are on hand this week at the Sheldon Film Theater. Friday and Saturday the Women in Film Series will show Douglas Sirk's Tliere's Always Tomorrow (1956) and on Sunday a special Lincoln premier showing of John Cassavetes' A Woman Under the Influence will be held. There's Always Tomorrow stars Fred MacMurray as a man caught in a love triangle with his wife (Joan Bennett and a former lover (Barbara Stanwyck). It is a 1950s women's weeper directed ' by Sirk, a little renowned filmmaker who has become a favorite of critics largely because of his ability to operate with a continuing excellence within the confines of the cheap Universal B pictures on which he worked. In There's Always Tomorrow, according to Women in Film Series coordinator Molly Haskell, "Sirk makes a devastating critique of the nuclear family." A Woman Under the Influence is the latest from John Cassavetes, the only American filmmaker to emerge from the underground to become a critically acclaimed mainstream director. The film has been nominated for several Academy Awards-Cassavetes for best director and star Gena Rowlands (Cassavetes' wife) for best actress. Rowlands has won wide acclaim in her role as a psychologically unpredictable woman whose husband (Peter Falk) decides to have her put away. There's Always Tomorrow will be shown Friday and Saturday at 3, 7 and 9 p.m. Admission is $1.25. A Woman Under the Influence will be shown Sunday only at 7 p.m. Admission is $2.00. I L Casey's 1020 "P" J Ayr r v j mm lml Car & y i fJtal Mta -:i;;tei;imriKtH'fi..- MX 'J - . ...-8 1 IT . iv I !J 1 i SHELDON ART GALLERY 12th & R ST. presents a special special screening of cademy Awar i A i est Actress- d Nominations I H B Gen a Kowlands est uirector-jonn tassavetes If '' o '1 t i 'i 7 'w x.f ' r- S 1 r rrroU . Lis.- rt ; ; ,s a-jt o 1 1 m.4 kt '.uiidi nM.w ifew-ttswfcaewJ V.a.-.-i.-!4vh ItM.dWviikfiu V lj ii . Hi 111 r"V I f Produced by SAM SHAW Written and Directed by JOHN CASSAVPES CS(R,1 April 6 at 7p.m. AdrJssIon $2.00 - Tickets availab!a at 0:39 it Hatch for tb openbg of this fib at tha Plaza Theatres cn April 11th. daily nebraskan paga 13