The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 11, 1996, Page 13, Image 13

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Symphony begins tour in Lincoln
By Emily Wray _
Staff Reporter
The musical magic of the San Fran
cisco Symphony will sparkle when the
ensemble opens its 1996 tour at the
fci„. i Lied Cen
[Lied Center i 'cr for rer
_1 forming
iArts to
ll night.
I Music
I Director
Michael
Tilson Thomas will be at the helm for
the 8 p.m. performance.
Bruce Marquis, executive director
for the Lied Center, said the San Fran
cisco Symphony presented a unique
opportunity.
“This is not only their first tour with
new music director Michael Tilson
Thomas, but the Lied is the opening
night,” Marquis said.
This world-renowned orchestra has
made many recordings and been fea
tured in various movie scores like
“Amadeus” and “The Godfather III.”
Tonight’s program explores a wide
range of the symphony genre. Pro
gram numbers range from a 20th-cen
tury piece, “Synchrony,” by Henry
Dixon Cowell, to early 19th-century
‘“Symphonic fantastique,’ Op. 14" by
Hector Berlioz,
“Scenes from the Ballet ‘Romeo
and Juliet,’ Op. 64" by Sergei
Sergeicvich Prokofiev is the other piece
that will be explored at the concert.
“It’s a very interesting program,”
Marquis said. “The program is provid
ing quite a delightful range of orches
tral music in one evening by one of
American’s premier symphony orches
tras.”
Music Director Michael Tilson
Thomas has an impressive resume be
hind him, Marquis said.
“He was regarded as a prodigy of
American conductors for many years,”
Marquis said.
Ti Ison Thomas was named the Con
ductors the Tdarirr-tW^rthc
Musical America Directory and has
garnered several Grammys, Marquis
Photo courtesy of San Francisco Symphony
Michael Tilson Thomas, musical director of the San Francisco
Symphony, will lead the world-famous group in its performance
tonight at the Lied Center for Performing Arts.
■o
said.
“He conceived the New World Sym
phony,atrainingorchestra for some of
America’s brightest young musicians
based in Miami,” Marquis said.
Tilson Thomas also would relate
well to the audienee, Marquis said.
“Although he is 50 years old, he’s
See SYMPHONY on 14
Bantam
Continued from Page 12
wise go unsaid, Bantam said. But
the public money involved in graf
fiti cleanup would make Bantam
feel too guilty to commit the same
illegal act, although she sympa
thized with the artist’s cause, she
said.
There was a link between the
imaginative world ofchildhood and
the literature of magical realism,
which influenced Bantam early on.
“Childhood memories are very
crisp, clear and clean,” Bantam said.
“They have become a language that
form a part of who I am now.”
Later in art school, she was told
“to work with the paint” and aban
don all preconceived ideas, but that
influence is still easy to see.
The monstrous representational
beings of her paintings live on a
Pre-Renaissance depth of field,
growling and clinging to the edge
of the canvas as if they were about
to fall into the room.
In “Mountain Dweller,”
Bantam’s exaggerated sense of
space works particularly well. A
house on stilts, seen from the top of
a mountain, juts out toward the
viewer with a dizzying sense of
height. The black, rainbow-tiled
pool in the foreground, and the bird
shadow of the building all combine
to convey the looming strangeness
between architecture, nature and
man.
Bantam’s show is on display all
this month. Admission is free. Any
one interested in contributing to a
community art project should call
Bantam at 477-2728.
M Phoenix HAIR ARTISTS |
SPRING BREAK NAIL SPECIAL
M / _
ACRYLIC NAILS
with Rene or Janelle
50% OFF
FULL SET
$15 REFILLS
With UNL ID
Full Set Reg. $40.00
! Expires 3-31-96
3810 Normal Blvd. • 483-4726
Don’t waste your money
on fourth ‘Hellraiser’ film
By Gerry Beltz
Film Critic ’
Ouch.
The “Hellraiser” film scries had done so
well, elevating itscl fabove the typical blood
-1 and-gorc flicksand giving
Movie horror fans a bad guy they
D Aiii A«ai could bo proud to lose their
KCVICW skin and soul to: Pinhead.
But every dream must
end, and some dreams end
badly.
Such is the case in
“Hellraiscr: Bloodline.”
Covering four centu
ries, the fourth installment
in tne Hellraiser movie
series follows one family’s bloodline to dis
cover how the infamous puzzle box came to
be.
It is the 22nd century, and scientist Paul
Merchant (Bruce Ramsay) starts babbling
about an evi 1 he must destroy to save his soul.
Naturally, the people he tells this to think his
brain pan is leaking, so he begins to tell the
tale of his family’s woe...
Over the generations, his family has been
cursed with the knowledge of the box, but
also with an idea of how to seal the gateway
to Hell forever (until the next movie).
“Hellraiser: Bloodline” is a three-stage
movie. First, the toymakcr Phillip
Lemarchand makes the box, and the demon
Angclique (Valentina Vargas) makes an ap
pearance. She’s twice as sultry as Pinhead
and just as nasty.
Thus the curse on Lemarchand’s family
begins.
Cut to the present, just after the third
“Hellraiser” film—Pinhead shows up, and
he and Angclique start flirting. Pinhead’s “I
swallowed-a-thcsaurus” vocabulary starts to
swing, but without Clive Barker’s imagina
tion putting the words together, it has no
flavor.
Film: “Hellraiscr: Bloodline”
Stars: Bruce Ramsay, Doug Bradley,
Valentina Vargas
Director: Alan Smilhce (Kevin
Yagher)
Rating: R (violence, language, nudity,
more violence)
Grade: D
Five Words: Pinhead’s back, but
movie sucks
Again, the demons get sucked back into
the box, but Hell is still awaiting the next turn
of the demonic Rubik’s Cube.
Now, the future, where the entire movie
cuts itself down to the level of a gradc-Z
imitation of “Alien.”
Clive Barker’s original “Hellraiscr” Film
was a breath of fresh air into the tired atmo
sphere of the horror genre. But for this piece
of cinematic excrement, he served only as
executive producer, and the script and story
line show that.
And Pinhead is perhaps the greatest loser
in all of this. Once a horror movie icon who
put Freddy and Jason back in the minor
leagues, Pinhead has mellowed out and
started actingas comic relief. Excuse me, but
this guy has NAILS DRIVEN INTO HIS
OWN HEAD! Don’t give him lines people
will laugh at!
Interesting point of note: although di
rected by Kevin Yagher, the movie lists the
director’s name as “Alan Smithce,” the stan
dard name used by the Director’s Guild
when the original director doesn’t want his
name associated with the actual Film. (For
good reason, in this case ...)
Save your money. Rent the original
“Hellraiscr” instead.
LOOKMG
FOR FLEXIBLE HOURS
'"$6.25/hr + Bonuses
"Full and part-time shifts
r^id training • Flexible hours
"Advancement opportunities
"Benefit package
casual, clean & friend^
HjMpwwy m PH BHHp PRHHHH