psgoB daily nebresken Kaplan movie breaks away from most sports films By Peg Sheldrick Fast Break is like Dr. Pepper: though it lacks the sophistication of champagne or the wholesomeness of milk, it is none-the-less bubbly, cool, and refreshing under the right circumstances. m FGUE3UJ York rather than play follow the leader with her basketball-obsessed spouse. Sandor Stern's screen play is not without stereotypes but he avoids some of the more obvious schtick and gives his chara cters at least a semblance of dimension. They are not the unreal buiTooms of Kotter country. Stem contents himself with chuckles instead of belly laughs (al though there are a number of those) and the result has a bit more grit find intelli gence than the TV series. The casting of the team itself could not have been easy, but it is highly successful. Harold Sylvester, Michael Warren, Bernard King, Reb Brown and Mavis Washington all have sports in their backgrounds, but not all of them have acted before. Yet, they come off as natural and believable as the plot permits. And by all appearances, they aren't a bad basketball team. The game sequences are exciting, hardly resembling the pitched battles they are in fact. Members of the audience have been moved to shout as enthusiastically as they would at an actual game. Fast Break is not to be confused with Citizen Kane, but for what it is, it's very good. For the sports fan it offers laughs and action, and for the rest of us it offers an engaging cast in a fine comedy. It's another in the recent slew of "athlete-with-a-crazy-dream" movies, and it chooses to emphasize the comic potent ial of the fable rather than the melo dramatic aspects. . Fast Break is the story of David Greene, a delicatessen clerk who has a chance to realize his dream of coaching basketball. He decides to "go for it," forsaking wife and job, and heads for rinky-dink Cadwall- ader University with a band -picked team pVf V taken from the streets of New York. I J His team includes a hood on the run, a pool hustler, a former evangelist (evading cultists who want to punish him for getting the leader's daughter in trouble), and a young woman who has to pose as a young man to play on a team worthy of her talent. In addition to his motley crew, Greene copes with a piece rate salary ($60 per victory), an amoral team manager (who thinks Nixon got a raw deal), and the knowledge that he must get a game with top-rated Nevada State and beat them if he is to continue coaching, ' Not exactly cinema verite. but it works despite all of the improbabilities. This is Gabriel Kaplan's first movie, and it is a good choice for him. David Greene is not unlike Gabe Kotter, Kaplan's TV image, but Greene is more of a human being than the paragon of understanding Kotter is. The TV series was a natural extension of Kaplan's stand up comedy act, and the movie is something of an extension of his TV role (although the film was not written to be a vehicle for him). The contrivances of the plot could easily turn the movie into an inane farce, but thanks to a good supporting cast and a well -handled script, the story never goes too far afield (or, rather, off court). Randee Heller is especially good as Jan Greene, the wife who elects to stay in New . '; i ... a ttj) o $ off, w - :u 21 Photo courtesy ml Columbia P icturtt. Inc. Gabe Kaplan, of TV "Welcome Back, Kotter", takes time off from teaching to portray a coach in the movie "Fast Break' Conductor complements Concordia Choir s performance By Scott Miller The Concordia College Choir from Moorehead, Minn, skidded into Lincoln Saturday night in fine style. They present ed an exceptional program of acapella music ranging from a Bach motet to the contemporary style of the choir's own con ductor, Paul Christiansen., Christiansen showed flair as a conductor throughout the program as the choir seem ed to mirror the musical expressiveness conveyed by his conducting technique. Christiansen has conducted the choir since 1937, and has written a large number of compositions and' choral arrangements, widely performed throughout the country. ; The choir has an unusually mature, al most dark quality, as an ensemble, which worked quite nicely on the opening piece, With Thy Spirit Uphold Me," from Opus 29 by Brahms as well as on the next two pieces, one by Hermann Schien and the other a Kyrie Eleison, based on a plain song melody. Diction suffered However, when the choir performed the Bach motet," Thy Spirit Also Helpeth Us, the darkness seemed to obliterate the in dividual lines in this contrapuntal style and even though the motet was sung in English, the diction seemed to suffer on this piece. It Is fcnpcrttst to note here that the haS at nrtf-Ryraouih Church b exceptionally Eve which could account for part of the vagueness of individual lines. , Part two of the concert included con temporary pieces, by Benjamin Britten, Richard Feliciano and Gustav Schreck. The choir showed nice ensemble balance on the Five Flower Songs by Britten as well as an excellent fed for dynamic unity throughout the selections. Of particular note on this piece was the alto section which sang with almost perfect ensemble and a rich, warm sound. Tight harmonies Two Liturgical Songs by Feliciano were quite enjoyable as the singers straightened out the tone and sang with fine control the tight harmonies of the piece and closed it with a pianissimo that was balanced and exciting, yet almost inaudible to the humanear. . .The Advent Motet by Schreck featured a small section for mixed quartet which un fortunately was covered by the rest of the choir during the entire piece. What was heard of the soloists on this piece was en joyable, and again a mature sound. The final section of the program consist ed of pieces by Christiansen himself and various arrangements by his father F. Melius Christianson as well as a few crowd pleasers thrown in an encore numbers. From He&en Above, arranged by F. Melius Christiansen, is worth mentioning because of the unidentifiable soprano solo ist who sang with t vehrety tone and tm usually controlled evenness throuiout the range of the piece. Perhaps the best piece on the program was Four Letters of St, Paul by Christian sen which used much more useful harmon ies than the piece done earlier by Christian sen. .: This piece seemed to show off every aspect of the choir from diction and feel for .ensemble, to the soloists. Everything seemed to come together here. A baritone solo ras featured in this piece, and was sung dearly, and articulately -with the choir doing a nice job of adjusting for the soloist. . Another highlight was an American, hymn, Winds Through the Olive iTrces, which featured a soprano soloist who sang with a good line and consistency through out the piece. Back-up by the choir was splendidly done. One could have shut his' eyes and dreamed, but it was too exciting to miss a second of the precision and delicacy with which this piece was done. Encore numbers Among the encore uumbers performed was the spiritual Rock-A-My SouL It seem ed as though the choir regressed a bit here as the sound got a bit shouty, and the feel for ensemble lacked unity. The soprano soloist did a nice job on this piece and the tenor section as a whole showed a flair for this style. Closing the program was Beautiful Sarbr arranged by F. Melius Christiansen. This beautiful piece was done superbly. The alto soloist was remarkably controlled and sang with richness and warmth which complemented this subtly exciting piece. The subtle expressiveness and even phras ing of her voice was exceptional; , r . ; The Concordia Choir takes a deliberate -approach to ; its music making. . Every 'gesture by Christiansen is definite and each movement signals a musical thought, noth ing is wasted in his conducting technique and it rubs off on the choir. Nothing was wasted in. the music: performed and the entire program was memorized by choir and conductor alike. . ; 5 ; The Concordia Choir is a well disciplin ed group of fine young singers under the command of an exceptional leader. ; - - Praised film to be shown Celine end Julie Go Boating will be shown through Thursday at Sheldon Art Gallery. - - The Foreign Film theatre product ion, directed by Jacques Rivette, featur es Juliet Berto as Celine and Dominique Labourier as Julie. - Celbte cii Julie Go Bozir.z m shown at the New York Film Festival and was credited with "delightful slap stick" by the New York Times. No series tickets is necessary. -Admission Is $2. Screenings are at 7 pjn. '