theatre 'Roses' opened Monday at Wilbur; script slight, actors tired THE SUBJECT WAS ROSES, by BJ 1.arrJ Stark Fran!< D. Gl!ruy. Producffi hv Ed~tar Lan~h•\'1·· Di re<:teBosToN now, but the script itseH was a CAST little tired to start with. There is John Cleary .•...... Jack Albert. as much as an and too familiar to make impres FREE. Works -of J. s. Bach, interpretation. Signor Fellini has "real" people of her life. It is a C. P. E. Bach, Haydn. Wellesley realized the futility of trying to tribute to FederiC'O Fellini's skill sive theatre. 1 "1 never was sick Madrigal Group assisting orch· C'Ompletely understand a woma.'l that the line between spiritual and a day after l left here," says Tim estra. and has, · instead, woven her into tangible becomes not C'Onfusing my. " lt look me a long time lo Jastrumeatal ud Vocal Music - a fabric of rainbows and textures but ambiguous. A next door neigh flgure out why." l ll is almost as TUES March 8, 8:30 p.m New and fantasy, into the sensuous bor's beach with its brilliant yel though Frank D. Gilroy atl:!mptcd England Conservatory Concert manner 1!1 which women are said iow oikirus and OnentaJ servants at Jorda.'l Hall. FREE. to perceive things. appears almost as unreal as the to turn a profit by turning his J. S. BACH - Partita No. 1 In B And so, above all, he has made somberly C'Olored hallucination oC analysis into a play. a slave barge which follows. A$ if Brf~MS~ Rhapsody No. 2, Op. 79 a lovely film. Whether or not Giul In all Cairnes, however, the play SCHUBERT - Impromptu in C Oat ietta's character is fully probed she were bathed in clairvoyant is much better written than it is uS:f".:. ~~.~ 1n B minor seern_s immaterial. What is impor- light Giulietta is seen intercut in A Program et Jewish Music - tant 1S texture and tone and C'Olor. both these scenes in brilliant acted. There is good , spontaneous MON March 7, 7:30 p.m. Rapa- 0~ .shot especially bears this out; white-on-white. dialogue developing most of the In his first C'Oior film, Fellbti porte Treasure Hall, Brandeis. Gmlietta steps into the back· action of the play, but the cast is less the story teller than the FREE. Tapes, discussion, recep- ~ and the camera pulls focus rarely conveys the unspoken ten tion in honor of the publication mto the foregJ:'OU!Id and onto a ,painter. The screen is a canvas so of "Hebrew Cantata: Poems of vase of violets. End of shot. The brilliant in style and form that lou Gilbert In "Juliet of the sions which lie beneath it. In the Halevi" by Prof. H. Shapiro. character has been overlooked for one is often blinded to the story. Splrita." first scene .. . the morning after DuDSter House Music 6odd7 Con· love~. . . His cutting is very swift, never a homecoming-party . . . the long lingers, o!lly gives a glimpse of a eeri - SUN March 6, 3 p.m. . It 1S ~le to divorce this film. As a result, "Juliet" is never pauses, between clipped and hesi Dunster House Library Har- film from its C'Olor, for both the new face at the end of a longish, dull. It may take a second view vard. BACH - Gamba 'Sonata fantasy and Giulietta's character involved pan, and off away to a ing to see the method to the mad tant lines, say very little. The au No. 1, English Suites Nos. 4 & 6. 8~ .too interwoven intrinsically new shot. In the first few opening ness, but a lovelier piece of mad dience understands that they are Warren steel, harpsichord; '!lth a spectr~ ~· At shots the audience is dropped, ness has rarely captivated an being t'Old that something is wrong, Keith Orner, gamba. ~her ~ucmations, !he spir· groping for Grientatio!l, into the audience. but the te!lsions really don't exist midst of activity. Fellini keeps the laD ud Sylria. Folk singers SAT tts of the title, are earned over In the face of this style, depth on stage. March 5, 8 p.m. Cousens 'Gym, by hue and even face i!lto the activity g'oing for the length of the or profundity are hardly impor 'hfts, 666-4097. $3, $2.50. ta..'lt. Some may call this super In particular, Jack Albertson as Clncllmatl Symplloay .- . SAT ficiality on Fellini's part, but only John "puts over'' most of his lines March 5. Symphony Hall. $6.50, in relation to his earlier, soul with a solid comic delivery and $4.50, $3.50. IB.U. Celebrity probing works. Giulietta is not timing. The laughs are there, to Series) Guido, the self-searching, intense, be sure, but this is not a comedy, MOZART - C major Symphony, lt. director-hero of "8ll.t "; she is seH and much of the depth in the play 200 searching only in wanti'lg to know NEILSEN - Symphony No. 4, Op. is lost by playing it so. 29 ( "Inextinguishable") how to win back her husband. BEETHOVEN - "Emperor" Concerto Some may also object to the un Martin Sheen tends to "play it conductor: Max Rudolf piano solo: Claudio Arrau resolved ending. Giulietta is left for laughs" too. His best "scenes Vleua Choir Boys - SUN March in a tenuous and alJlbiguous rela are in the mid-sectin of the play, ~ 3 p.m. Symphony Hall. CO 6- tion with her spirits. This again however, when he begins accus 1492 rB.U. Celebrity Series) is kl keeping with the slice of ing his parents of persecuti!lg one CROCE - Cantat~ Domino canvas the film is. Just as the another In the awkward first DA PALESTRIKA - Salvatore Mundi scene, wherein the returned son BACH - Aria from Cantata 'o. [06 audience is dropped into the film CAPLET - 0 Salutaris Hostia it is lifted out at the end. ' does everything wrong while try. ROMANVSXY - Laudate Pueri ing to please both parents, every BRUCKNER - At Midnight Also. folk song5 from ·around the Film of 'Merry Wives' one fails, but Sheen even fails to world. understand the surface motiva Eddy ArDGid - FRI March 4, 8:30 opera shown next week tions of his character. p.m. Symphony Hall. $4.50, $3.50, $2.50. Featuring Dottie Wea, The film version of "The Merry It is hard tn tell whether Martha Don Bowman, Jim Edward Wives of Windsor," the opera bas Scott makes Nettie appear di B~ . ed on Shakespeare's play, will be vorced from the group, or whether Cooeert of New · Mask - SAT presenred for a special two-day this in i!lherent in the character March 5, 6 p.m. Kirkland House engageme!lt Wednesday and itself. Her touCh-me-not aloofness Junior Common Room, Harvard. Thursday March 9 and 10. elquently describes Nettie's frigid - FREE. Continuous performance The opera, by Otto NiC'Olai, re ity. But in scenes when the lasting about 5 hours. C'Ounts the adventures of Shakes Clearys enjoy one another's C'Om Vocal Recital - SUN March 6, peare's irrepressible comic hero, pany, there is never any sugges 8:30 p.m. Adams House Junior Sir John Falstaff, and his wooing tion that Nettie is really joining Common Room, Harvard. Rob of two "respectable married la in the fun even a little. ert Gartside, tenor, presents dies" who play a series of mis- songs by Schuman.'l, Debussy, chievous tricks on the befuddled Most plays C'Ome to Boston haH- Sixteenth-Century l u t e n i s t s, and fmally bewildered knight. dressed, hurrying toward Broad- Charles Ives, and Keith Humble. In this area, the film will be way. But, after a lo!lg pre-Boston Bach Cantata Singers - WED shown at the Orpheum Theatre in tryout in New York, "The Subject March 2, 7:15p.m. Holme.'- Hail, Boston, The New Coolidge Cinema Was Roses'• is still a spotty, un in WatertoW!I, and the Communitv satisfying production. ( CoaUaaed laslde) Sandra Milo and )Giulletta Maalna In "Juliet of the Splrlta." Playhouse in Wellesley. Where did you go? Out· 'Lord Love a Duck' £u~nts of Note lf1un for tlfe 1J1nrtnigl}t CCo.tlDued fl'OIII Pap 1) Civil Center, Brandeis, $1. T F s only. s ... T w New York Pre Muslca. FRI. Mar. Radcliffe. Excerpts from Can· Hanant: o.w.e ol a cealempor 2 3 4 5 What did you do? Tickets 25, 8:30 pm. Sanders Theatre, • • • tatas Z1, 56, 64, 78, 131, others. ary UDinral&y. William Ben· b 7 8 9 10 II 12 Boston Harvard. FREE tickets avail· WUma ,.._m.,_, M~raao tinck..Smith. TUES March 8, 8:15 13 14 15 Without a complete guide to entertainment in Boston the able by mail only from Mason ASTOR - ( LJ .2·5030) - MON March 7, 8:30 p.m. B.U. p.m. Cambridge Center for Adult ------ Available college community has been at a disadvantage. When lo~king ''The Sl~nder Tluead" COOLIDGE - (9!H-2100) Music Foundation, 59 Fayer Daily: 9:45, 11:45, 1 :4.;, 3:45, 5 :45 Through TuM: Concert Hall, 855 Comm. Ave. Education, 42 Brattle St. 90c. for a place to spe~d .a free afternoon or a Saturday evening, 7:41;, 9:45 ' "lperHS Fil@" Peace Corps volunteers in India nckets for all eveats ln thJs Ust FREE. B.U. Faculty Recital. All Evellias with &be Arilst. Si weather St., Cambridge. you have been lumted to rummaging through the Sun Sun: 1:45, 3:15, 5:15, 7:15, 9:15 "Spy Who Came in from th@ Cold- lSS minutes). are avallable by mall now. Wben Through Tues, Mar 15 Orllinal chamber music of An· Cohen. WED March 2, 6:30 p.m. Welleeley ordering tickets by mall, always \'lctor Borge in a new version of day paper and chec.lcing the campus bulletin boards. Both thony NewmB!l, BU graduate Feldberg Lounge, Sherman Stu these sources are sadly Jacking for neither is equipped to in BEACON HILL- (CA 7-667(1) Next Week enclose a stamped addressed en· his "Comedy in Music". SUN. "The Loved Ones" (CE student. THURS Mar. 3, 8:30 dent Center, Brandeis. FREE. Dall,.: 10. 12• .2 • .(. ll, 8, 10 COMMUNITY PLAYHOUSE- S- n lope, Unless noted, these tlcltets Mar. 'n, 3 pm. Symphony Hall. clude the myriad activities of this exciting city. 00.'1) p.m. Concert Hall, 855 Comm. New World aDd New Ideas, Geo Sun.: 1:30, 3 :30, 3:30 7::10, 9 :30 Through Tues: are now also avaUable at tbe box Tickets available from Boston Boston After Dark was created to fill the gap. Published "Spy Who Came in from the Cold" Ave. FREE. p-aphlcal Diseoftl')' ud Ule Iuiie Community Music Center, 251 BOSTON CINERAMA - ( HU 2~515) Dfflce. ~eekl~ ~nd distributed free to colleges throughout the "A Home of Your Own" Plano recital by Marie Clodis. Thoupl o1 Ute ReDalsauee. •aattJ. of doe Bul~re" DuJIIter Hollie Music Society Coa· Jose Greco, and his Spanish Gypsy Commonwealth Ave., Boston. city, It IS the only complete guide to all entertainment: Woo, Tues. nu. Fri: 8 :30 Concert Hall, 855 Comm. Ave. John H. Parry, Prof. of ocean· Wed: 2. 8:30 cert - SUN March 13. 3 p.m. Dancers. FRI. Mar. 25, Sym SUD: 8 :30 Theatre Sclaedule FRI Mar. 4, 8:30 p.m. FREE. ography. THURS March 3, 4 RAiger WUUams and the Duntton from hockey games to coffee-house theatre from chamber Sat, 1:30, 5. Dunster House Library, Har phony Hall (CO 6-1492 ). Mail THE INSPECTOR GENERAL Musical aad Uterary evellia1. p.m . Rabb Lounge, Bra!ldeis. Ensemble. SUN. Mar. 20, 3 pm. music concerts to underground films, from pr~-Broadway try CAPJU - (CO 7-9030) vard. orders only. Box office opens outs to free lectures. "Judith" Rwsian drama by Nilcoli Gol!OI Helen Zimbler, soprano, sings FREE, Symphony Hall. m Thun: opeoin& rught 7:30 Roek 'a' Roll Concert - SAT You .can help us to complete. If your organization is "The Oscar" Pr~Vit'W toni~tht, 8:30. a Broadway comedy playwright, "Lord Love A Leonard a'ld Rev. Allred J. Jot Lee Masters. Reading, THURS March 12. Sar. Gym, B.U. $2 sp~:msonng an event, or If you know of anything we have Sun ·Thurs: I, 3, .o;:l.o;, 7 :30, 9:45 IVANOV, by Cbelcbov producer, and director, makes his son, S.J. will speak at a sym· Fri, Sat: 1, 3:10, .';:40, 8, 10:20 Pre-Broadway tryout Duck" is v ruely reminiscent of March 3, 4 p.m. Tufts Arena advance, $2.25 at door ne." The fast p.m. Fulton Hall, Boston Col· : ._. " ' • ' SUBJECT WAS ROSES, Emerson College. Clancy Brotben It Tommy Mak· active, ~nd fun. And 1f we help you to enjoy Boston, then we FINE ARTS - ( 282-11878) By Fran\ Gilroy satirizing the tribal customs of the moving amt>ons are obvious, he Drama Society ODe-Acls - WED lege. Trough Sat: Touring Company Southern California high school added, b · itbough the lines are Tbe StriDI Quartets of Beetllona em - FRI March 11, 8:30 p.m. are servmg our purpose. "He Who Must Uie" 2, 5:15, 8 :45 Wilbur Theatre (HA 6~827 ) FRI. Mareh 2-4, 8:30p.m. Cam· Back Bay Theater. $4.50, $3.50, "Never on Sunday" 4, 7, 10 Eves: 8:30 set. Roddy McDowell and Tuesday fu!Uly a ey rarely gen· pion Hall, Boston College, SOc. Prof. Klaus Liepmann. 111URS Sun-Tues: Mat: Thurs, .2 :15; Sat, 2:30 Weld are the teen-agers. Harvey erate big au . March 3. 5 p.m. Music Library, $3, $2. "The Fate of a Man" 2, 6 :30, 11 :45 SPRING'S AWAKENING My Eye Sees Not So Far-THURS Classic Guitarist Andrew Capo "A I<•xandrr Nrvsky" 3::.10, 7. 10 By Frank Wedekind Korma!l as the high school prin "Lord Lov 1 A Duck" opens to MIT. FREE. In conjunction with SAT, March 3·5. Agassiz Thea· DOIJ'O - Loeb Drama enter, Cambridge cipal, Lola Albright, Martin West, day at Sym~ony Cinema I and Beethove!l String Quartet con· FRI March 11, '8:30. GARY - (Ll 2-7040) UN 4-:2630) ter, Radcliffe. Cambridge Ce!lter for Adult Ed· -n.. Sow>d of Mudc" ThursSat Mar 3-6 and Ruth Gordon represent the the West En( Cinema, and March cert ( see music listing). Nl«ht ol the Iguana by Tennessee ucation, 42 Brattle St., Camb. Daily...,, : •2, 8, :30 WPd-Sal Mar 9-12 o lder generati on . 9 at the H ar1ard Square Thea t re. Pref. Tullio BarlotU. Director, Ec· 5 2 7 30 Williams. WED, FRI. SAT, Kl 7.Q89. $1.25. Selections from MUSIC HALL - ( 423..:!300) ·+"+"+"+"+"+''+'~"+"+"+"tl'+':+'~ '+"+' :+' ~"+' ~'+"+"+''+''+"+"+' ~'+"+'~"+"+ ...... ~· :.· :...... : +'~"+':+-i.·~·· ··+':+":;._...... •• .... •• .. · onomics Institute, Univ. of Pa· •Thund.,.ball" ·" """"" """ "" ·· """ "" "··""" ·· ··" "" """ ·· ··" ·' ·· ··" ·· ··" "·· .. ·· .,... "" ·· "·· ··" .... "·· ··" •· .....+ •• + .;+.,+.. • ..+ . March 2, 4, s, 8:30, Bates Hall, Bach, Villa Lobos, Sors. YMCA, G16 Huntington Ave. KE dova THURS March 3, 7:30 10. 12:30. 2:55. 5 :20. 7:45. Cbamber Orchestra MON Da~So COFFEE HOUSES 6-7800. $1.50. Presented by the p.m. BosToN San: 1. 3:15. 5 :30, 7 :45, 9 :55 George Sherman Union Aud., March 4, 8:30 p.m. Jordan Hall. Ofll'REUM - ( 542-5557) '+"+' "+"+"+"+'~····:."+"+':.. ·+"+':." +' ·+':+"+'~ '+"+'·+'~'+''+'"+"+"+' ·•··+"+' :."+ '+'~"+"+' '+' '+''+"+'.+"+"+"+'.+"+"+'.+' .+' '+"+"+' "+"+''+'"+"+"+"+'·+·:•·-.··+'·+':+' Phoenix Players. Throu,llh Tnt•1dny ' ·· ·· ...... ·· .. ·· ·· " " ·· ·· ·· " .. " ·• ·· ·• " " ·· ·· ·· ·· " ·· " · · '' " ·· " ·· '' " ·· ·· ·• ·• " ·· " •· " " " " ··" " ·· " ·· " " ·· " ·· " " " · B.U. "Italy and Her Economic FREE. !New England Conserv· DIICOUNT PAIIICINO ...._ Pause and BegiD Alain - MON ..liVID POll l,GIO CA.. Problems" atory>. POll CHilli PATIIOIII. IM 4 20 7 March 7, 8 p.m. YWCA, 7 MlLHAUD - C~ation of the World "'iJ~~:r;!~~:os~~;. 1:3S. ' • • MON March 7, 3 p.m.1 Confer· AUDITORIUM Q A It A 0 E Rose offers stimulating theatre, comfortable chairs Temple St., caffib. A revue on COPLAND - Concert for clarin~t ftnd A8DVI THIATIII. Wed, Thurs (Mar !1, 9): atrina: orchestra "Mmr Wivr< of Windsor" Tucked away in a snug second- ticularly to Io!lesco, whose tech· ''The Lion" points out that all ence Room 315, B.U. Union ~0 DALTON love and war presented by the ~u<'st solnist . Felis Vbcu~lia STit[[T rARlM~J~T s 10. 12:45, 3:30, 6 :15, case :10t only fc·'~ music talent, but year-old man who peevishly and in war is an eVJI, childish sport. The TUES March 8, 3 p.m.: Confer 5 3-5. Kresge Aud., MIT. $2.50, $2, March 10, 7:30. Symphony Hall. Sun: 1. 3 :40, 6 :35, 9 :05 theatrical work by Boston actors baby-talk refuses to eat his cereal. General stanjps his foot petulantly ence Room 515, B.U. Union $1.85. Tech show cstudent writ $2.50. Srnrh Wn/. Mnr. 9 . as well. Suddenly he becomes a general and pouts~ause be wants a re- "Profit in International Ec .. Fl•l-!ht nt th,· l,hot•n•x" , -T ten musical>. Donald Wlllln': Ol'(all Concert - P~RJS - 128'1-8181) One group that has been per· chauffeured about in a little red port in pencil. The most onomic Thought" C:opyri,:ht 1966 llton Aft<"r Dark J>nhli•hin~ Company The World of Sholom Alelcbem - SUN March 13, 6 p.m. Sym Boston After Dar~ is publishecJ every W eclnesday. £Y':b~n;- i'oCbertloarl" forming there is the Tempo wagon while barking military com- importa!lt st ategy of the war, he THURS March 3, 8:30 p.m. VletD&m - Its Cost to Americall Ideals. Sgt. Do!lald Duncan phony Hall. All couesponcJence shoulcJ be sent to: Boston Alter Dar~ PARI: 'so'. CrNEMA - (542·22201 Theatre. Under the direction of mands at the audience. Then he says, is~ :n.itk our losses in blue Temple Shalom, 475 Winthrop FRESCOBALDI - Toccata 1 !formerly with the Green Ber ;~~~~~ ~ ~h~ , rK. i~;o Jack Sheridan, who believes becomes a shy shoe salesman, and pencil a~ U¥>seif the enemy in St., Medford. FREE. BACH - Prdudr and Fu~~:ue In D P.O. Bo• 92 4 0 ets>, Sen. Stephen Young, Julian minor ( "Fiddh·" ): Fugue in G SAvoy - the Theatre of the Absurd, par- through similar vicissitudes. coffee-house in Boston. March 7, 8:30p.m. FREE. The Blue Hill Ave., Roxbury, SUN JAM[S COBURN· . -~. lr- ..:\ \ ··~ · ~ · · · ·· · · · FREE. March 13, 3 p.m. Publishet ...... •...... •.... James T. Lewis atre Company of Boston, Hotel CO LOll bv 0[ l JYL · !.Jill M~ WJI'I / ,, (1~1:1:\ . . ~.- 2 SHOWS TODAY wis~M~ The Rose Unicom , ( • 1 • • 11 I l :UU ._ Managing EcJitor ...... •...... Marsha Wishny .. Lord Luvt• a Duck" Touraine PoetrJ Readlac SCRUHED TODAY AT: h ti'-7. 8:30 f".lol. 122 Salem St., North End, Boston 825 Boylston St., Boston Theatre - - \ • ISU~ . 7 L(j &. Crifics . • . • . • . • • . • . • . . • • • • . • • • . • . . . • . • . • . • . • • Larry Stark Daily: 12. 2 : 3(1, 4 :35, 6 :55, 9 : 15 Robert Peu Warren alld Wllllam 10: 110 A.M., 12:H , 2:H, 4:110, ' ' " • !'.un . I, 3:1.'), 5 :35, 7:.';0, 9:45 262-9711 Fll• 730 nu John Geeza day: co 7·1406 Alfred reading from their own The Play of Daniel - SAT March I :M AND lO: ot I".M. eve.: 523-8537 thru Sun. 13 - Tom Paxton, le Mandrells Experimental films - MON March 1Z, 8 p.m. Sanders Theater, William Sarill Cambridge 7; 8 & 0 p.m. Rm. 54-100 Earth works. FRI March 4, 8:30 p.m. Patrid O'Neil Thurs. 3 - John Cowles Club 47 Arlington Street Church, $1.50. Harvard. Presented by the Cam I!RATJ'LE - (TR 6-4226) Sciences Bldg., MIT. $1. bridge School of Weston. Timf'S, rsct'J)I ,.. noted: Fri. 4 - Tempo Theatre presents "The Lion" 47 Palmer St., Cambridge BUNl.IEL - Land Without BreAd Benefit for SNCC. Dailv: 5:30. '7 :30, 9:30 Spring Drama Festival - Jewett Sat. 5- Los Ninos De Los Reyes A .. KATZ - Wisp Lewis Turt:e reading his own work THIS Mat. Sat, Sun: 3 :30 U N ~266 MJDEKE - Nigbtride Arts Center Aud., Wellesley. 75c. GEORGE Throuc:b Sat: Mon. 7- Gil DeJesus ILatin guitar festival> FRI March 4, 8:30 p.m. Cam MOTION PICTURE AXELROD'S ''Th<' MAnit·d WomAn" $1.50 admission plus ~1 me~rship per year B~.,JWAGE - Dog Su.r Man : Parts FRI. March 11 LAST 4 WEEKS ! ! Snn-Turs: Thurs. 10- John Cowles bridge Center for Adult Edt~a· YEATS - Purgatury IS AN ACT OF ··cvnh•m•'' .. Wed. 2, Thurs. 3, Fri. 4, ~. 5 - Muddy Walen Greed. Erich Von Stroheim's si- tion, 42 Brattle St., Camb. KI GIRAUOOUX - Madwoman m Fri. lL - Candlelight Players prese!Jt Tennessee Chaillot (scenes) PURE AGGRESSION Wrd-Snt (M"' 9-12): Blues Band lent clasic. WED Marcb 2; 7, 7~. $1.2.5. Prof. Turco's work Symphony Cinema I "Shunt tht• l'iano Play~r " Williams' "The Case of the Crushed Petunia" JCOPIT - Oh Dad, Poor D.•d . .. t~ ~i\7 1R~J~I(I3 iiJ ESQUIRE - ( 491-7130) Sun. 6- hoot 9:30 p.m. 2 Divinity Ave., Cam- has appeared in Atlantic Mo!!th· (scenes) Huntington at Mau. Ave. "Darline" Sat. 12 - John Perry & Penny Freeman SMITH - The Drunkard ( ,..1...,. Daily: 7:15, 9:30 Mon. 7, Tues. 8, Wed. 9 - nes Square Two bridge. ly, New Yorker, Saturday Re· THIJNDERBALL lions) SCREENED TODAY AT 10:10 Sat, Sun: 2 :30. 5. 7 : 15. 9 :30 Sun. 13 - Italian Guitar Festival Thurs. 10, Fri. u, Sat. 12 Jim xweskin & The Restricted Films view, Kenyon Review. He has SAT. Man:h 12 HARVARD SQ. - (UN .f-4580) had two books published. DELANEY - A Taslt· of Hont'y A.M., 12 : 30, Z:55, 5:20, 1:45 Throu)th Tu~s: Where It's At Jug Band ( first act ) and 9:55 P.M. I :45, 4 :SO. Only students, faculty, and staff "To Trap A Spy" 8 WILLJAMS - Clan M ena~e•ri• • CHARLIE'S LITTLE PENTHOUSE "Spy With My Fact>" 3 :50. 11:30. 660 Beacon Street, Boston Sun. 13 - hoot of the school mentioned are ad Sports < •~ne ) ,ugmu ;~p;; MILNE- ~adinRS and mime The most beautiful cocktail lounge in the country 9 :40 266-3850 Beawer mited to these films! Hockey - Bruins. Boston Garden. Sn<'ak Pll',.i,.w: Fri Mar 4, 8 pm "ony BU: all films in George Sherman Rlgbt Up YOW' Alley - March 14- PENS MARCH 30- KlR K IJOUGLA! plus a piano bar and music cover: $2.50 THURS March 3, 8 p.m. N.Y. "CASJ A GIANT ~HA OCY>" ~lar 9-15: 56 Bcry"lston St., Cambrldg U!lion. BU ID required. SOc. 30. Hasty Pudding Club, 12 Hoi· CHARLIE'S HAPPY HOURS - 4 P.M. to 7 P.M. "Lord Lo''" " Duck" 2, 5:50, 9 :45 Fri. 4, Sat. 5, Sun. 6 - Jose Feliciano, The Moon SUN March 6, 7:30p.m. Toronto. "\\'hat's Nrw Pussycat" 4, 7:50 354-9624 FRI Mar 4, 8 pro: "Sous Les Basketball - Celtics. Boston Gar yoke St., Camb. No cover· No minimum-Serving hot and cold Hor d'oeuvrea light Walkefs cover: 50c Mon. & Tues.ll Toits de Paris". France, 1929. den. 10A Eliot Street, Cambridge in Harvard Square Film Show times- Fri. & Sat.: 8:30, 11 p.m. Sun.: 3:30, minimum: SOc Mon., ~ .• m.~ . Directed by Rene Clair. WED March 2, 8:15 p.m. N.Y. ·------~Oscar nominees 8:30p.m. every Mon. & Tues. - ~ Perpr SAT Mar 5, 8 pm: "Things to SUN March 6, 2 p.m. Phila. Ken Jacobs: Undei'IJ'Ound Mories Moondial Come" <1936) and "Forbidden FRI March 11, 8:30 p.m . Odd· Arlecchino Planet" 11954). Miscellaneous fellows Hall, 536 Mass. Ave. 4 4580 53 Berkeley St. (near Tremont), Boston 58 Boylston St., uN - u • u ~ can be seen here MIT: MIT 1D required, SOc. Aqaatlc UceDSe, synchronized 542..0169 354-9839 PoelrJ Reading • Of the five nominees for the FRI Mar 4, 7 & 9:30 pm, "Re swimming productio!l. Water every !light: Miguel, 0 0 oscar as "Best Picture of the Fri. 4 thru Mon. 7, Wed. 9 thru Sun. 13 - Guela pulsion" ballet. Wellesley College Swim Sound, Rhythm and Tbeme ID ~ Year", only two can now be seen Gill, Israeli singer (flamenco & classical SAT Mar 5, 5:15, 7, 9:45 pm. Club. FRI, SAT Mar. 4, 5. 75c. Paradise Lost- Poetry readbg •0 Through Tuesday: • L'l the Boston area. Room 26-100: "lpcress File" Festival of Natlolts. Fair and show by Martin Mueller, inst. in Eng· •0 o "Darling" is currently at the Turk's Head Orleans SUN Mar 6, 8 pro. Room 10..250. sponsored by the BU Intema· lilh. WED March 9, 4 :15 p.m. "To Trap a Spy'' • €squire Theatre in Cambridge and Loft "Blockheads and Chumps at Ox tional Students. FRI. SAT Mar. Rabb Lounge, Brandeis. FREE. 13 Charles St., Boston •0 1:45, 4:50 8 ~ .,,The Sound of Music" at the Gary 71~ Charles St., Bo•ton ford." 4, 5. . LA 3·9391 • tn Boston. 227-3524 The Fair: George Sherman Sports I'R[~nns cover: 75c •0 "Spy With My Face" 0 "Ship of Fools', the third nomi Wed. 2 - Ray Pong Union Ballroom, BU, 755 Hockey - Bruins, Boston Garden Wed. 2 - Bill Staines L'Expa.DSloll Pbenlcieaue en Med· ACARLO PU nPR OC·UCTION 3:25, 6:30, 9:40 ~ nee, played earlier this year at Thurs. 3- Carl Watanabe Cmm. Ave. • 11 a .m." p.m. SUN., March 13, 7:30 p.m. De •0 llerrBDee a Ia lumtere de l'hls • the Astor. Fri. 4 - Steve Koreb Thurs. 3 - John Perry FREE. troit. "Dr. Zbivago" opens March 16 Fri. 4 - Monte Dunn tolre des cu.Jtes. The show: Hayden Hall, BU, 685 DAVID LEAN'S FILM •0 Opening Wed. Mar. 9: 0 Sat. 5 - Leonda Basketball - Celtics. Boston Gar • at the Saxon. Sat. 5 - Mitch Blake MON March 7, 5 p.m. BoylstDn Comm. Ave. 7:30 p.m. $1. OF 80P:'3 PI-STEP. iAV.S "Lord Love a Duck" Sun. 6 - John Perry den. SUN. March 13, 2 p.m. Bal· •~ o The fifth nominee, "A Thousand Sun. 6 - John Rowllngson Hall Aud., Harvard. FREE. PeJ!ce Corps - WED March 2, a timore. Mon. 7 - Nancy Michaels Denis van Bercbem, Prof. at • Clowns", wi11 not be seen here Mon. 7 - Ed Freeman p.m. Sanders Theater, Harvard •0 o until spring, Tues. 8 - Paul MacNeil Univ. of Geneva. "Peace Corps: Revolution, lm· Lectures Tues. II - Steve Koretz nocron. Wed. 9 - Ray Pong Vupard Science. Dr. Isaac Asi· perialism, or Waste?" Pa!lel CoalemporBJ'7 stained Glasa. J~ TR Wed. 9 - Peter Childs mov. Sponsored by the Office discussion. THURS March 3, BRATTLE SQ. 6-4226 u • o ~ 8m~ftr.-mP.fti- Thurs. 10 - Sallie Comins seph Ferguson. TUES March 15, Thurs. 10 - Paul MacNeil of Adult Eduction. TUES March 7:30p.m . 2 Divinity Ave., Camb. ZHiVAGO Fri. 11 - Steve Koretz 8:30p.m . Cambridge Center for •0 Fri. 11- Nancy Michaels 8, 8:15 p.m. Olin..Sang Amer. "A Choice I Made". Film aboot • Through Saturday: • Adult Educ. 42 Brattle St. KI 7· IN PANAVISION' AND METAOCOLOR 0 "The Married Woman" 0 6789, 90c. RESERVED SEATS NOW BY MAIL OR Sunday through Tuesday STEAKS - ~t"'I~Kt.ISAIS Schools ill Pft-Blbllcal ud Blb ~ ~ Uc:al Days. Samuel Noah Kra AT BOX-OFFICE OPEN DAILY tt:OD A.M. TO !:00 P.M. • "Contempt" • On Open Chdrcoa! mer. TUES March 15, a p.m. fO R SPECill THEm ~ Shows daily 0 d!b L."'ncheons & Oin.,e~s at 5:30, 7:30, 9:30 219 lREMOHT ST. PARTY AIID GROUP RATES McElroy ComlnooS, &.ton Col TEL RES. lJ 2·4500 ~ Sat. & Sun. Mats 3:30 ~ ::~(- ,., ~-:"'1 . • ~ ..... 5d+ ._ I I -" ..... t -:> ICc ...... lege. $1. CALL MR. BARRACM, Ll 2·2323 ., 564 MASS AVE . CAMBRIDGE - 354-970~ 1 1 J• u• o • o • o• u• o• o • o • o • o • o • o• o • o • Five shows opening her this weelc Theatre Co. new play festival starts Thurs. Gogol's 'Inspector Generar at Charles Theatre Company of Boltaa'a Tbe arrival of an official who Festival of New Plays opens to may be "Tbe Inspector General" morrow with the premier of ""lbe throws a small Russian town into Infantry", by Andy and Dave a tizzy. Nikolai Gogol's satirical Lewis. There will be a preview to J night. comment on the bureaucrats of Burris de Benning will play the his time and ours bas been newly lead role of Wiley. He was Jut translated by Thomas Butler, Pro: see!l as Claudio in Theatre Com fessor of Russian at Tufts Univer: pany's production of "Measure for sity. Lawrence Pressman is the Measure." Resident actors Paul Benedict and Larry Bryggman are official from St. Petersburg, and also featured. Benedict played Ronald Bishop, Gwyllum Evans, Stanley in "The Birthday Party" Maureen FitzGerald. and Ly!ln and Henri in "Yes is For a Very Milgrim are featured. The fifth Young Man." Bryggma"' played production of the season at the the Nazi officer in "Fear and Mi sery of the Third Reich." Charles Playhouse is under the Set ID Wartime Germuy direction of Michael Murray. "The The play is an account of nine Inspector General" opens tonight young American soldiers, their and will run for six weeks. To Nazi prisoner, and a Germa!l girl, night's curtain time is 8 p.m. The scene is set in the kitchen or a German home just before the Brendan Burke and Gwyllum last American advance across enemy territory. Jim Kennedy, Paul Benedict, and Burrla deBen· Evalla In a acene from Gogol'• The authors claim that the play nlng In a 8Cene from "The Infantry." "The lnapector General" now at is not intended to be a war drama, the Charlea. but rather a documentation of the vant's of the People", Sam Shep times, and a story of personal ten· hard's "Icarus' Mother", and Called lurid, obscure sions and revelations that result Geoffrey Bush's "Frank Merri from individual Involvement in the well's Last Race". war. Two more premieres: Adrienne Wedekind's 'Spring's Awakening' at Harvard The play runs through March 20. Kennedy's "Rat's Mass" and "Ser Curtain tomorrow vice for George Axminster" by "Spring's Awakening," a tum "Spring's Awakening'' does not sent to a reformatory, breaks out, is at '1 :30. George Denruson, will open April of-the-century German play by shame chlldhood: it criticizes, with and finds himself at the end in a Otller New Plays 14. cemetery, seriously contemplating Frank Wedekind, will be presented humor and pathos, the ugly way The festival of New Plays will Tbe Festival of New Plays is suicide. March U and 9-12 at Harvard's in which childhood mysteries are continue with three ~e-act plays presented by Theatre Company of Loeb Drama Center. The third and most naive of the from March 24 to April 3. They are Boston under a $10,000 Rockefeller Wedekind has suffered from the twisted by misinformation a'ld three children, Moritz, becomes a Lawrence Ferlingbetti's "Ser-Foundation grant. reputation of bei!lg the "naughty adult secrecy. victim of the sYstem. He fails at boy of modem German drama," It tells of three adolescents com school; he fails his parents; he Pre-Broadway tryout his plays often viewed as filth and ing to puberty in a world commit fails to understand what be calls junk. Two years ago, England's ted to keeping sexual matters a "the first stirring of ma'lhood." National Theater Company cancel secret. Wendla, who is fourteen, The play represents a dramatic led plans to do "Spring's Awaken has difficulty abandoning her little form which later was to be per John Gielgud, Vivien Leigh star fected in the hands of Bertolt i!lg'' because, among other fact girl's life and yet reels a secret ors, the board ..of directors found curiosity which focuses on Melch Brecht ! who knew and admired in new adaptation of 'Ivanov' the play obscure and lurid. When ior Gabor, the most popular, gift Wedekind). In ninetee!l brief it was finally and successfully pro ed, and attractive !itude!lt of his scenes, the world of adults is con Sir John Gielgud and Vivien Gielgud is best known as a duced · last year in London, the community. Melchior feels a sim trasted with the world of children; Leigh head the cast or Anton Chek Shakespearian actor, however he Lord Chamberlain still demanded ilar curiosity, yet is unsure whe dreams and harsh facts are jum hov's "Ivanov", which ope!Jed has also appeared in Cbekhov's cuts in the script. After the only ther to treat is as enlightenment bled together. Monday at the Shubert Theatre. "Cherry Orchard", "Three Sis American professional productio!l, or sin. When Wendla and Melchior Tickets are available at the This is a new adaptation of the ters", and '"l1Je Sea Gull." in New York in 1917, one news make love for the first time, Wen Loeb Drama Center box office, 64 play by Gielgud, who has also di Vivien Leigh has received Aca paper repoi'Uld: ALL CHILD dla becomes pregnant and dies of Brattle St., Cambridge; phone UN rected. The pre-Broadway engage demy Awards for three film roles: HOOD SHAMED. a botched abortio!l. Melchior is 4-2630. ment will play here through Satur Scarlett O'Hara in "Gone With day Mar. 12. The Wind,'' Blanche in "Streetcar Named Desire", and the divorcee films This is the first major American i~ "Ship of Fools." Miss Leigh production of Cbekhov's early play also· has stage experience. She has about middle class morality. Giel played a number of Shakespearian gud plays a moody, poetic, tortur roles, and bas starred twice op 'Daisy Clover' bleached out version of the book ed man who is consmned by guilt. Ill posite Sir Lawrence Olivier. Miss Leigh plays the role of his 8yLarry8&arll INSIDE DAISY CLOVER. Oi~ed by m ade her live with a horror Of a "Ivanov" recently played Lon Robert Mulligan. sc;reenplay by Gavin sister and brother-in-law. They op disgarded wife. don, and will play Philadelphia, Lambert, based on bu novel of the same The Natalie Wood version of "In name. Produced by Alan J. Pakula, for posed her marriage to an actor Reuben Ter·arutunian designed Toronto, and Washington before side Daisy Clover" is a movie with Wam!'r Brotben. At I:oew's Orpbeum. who turns out to be queer. And the productio!l, and Ralph ~ ope!ling in New York April 25 for a begL-ming and part of ·a middle, Runrun~ Time: 12" mmutes. they deveo 1 ped be r sin gmgan· d ag did the lighting. a seven-week engagement. and little else. It can.'lOt make up CAST acting talent to the point where its mind to be a musical extrava Daisy ...... • . . . Natalie Wood they can make lots 8Jid lots of ganza, or a searing revelation of Raymond Swan . . Christopher Plumm<' r money. Everythi.'lg is done sketch M<'flora Swan ...... Katherine Bard the Hollywood star system, or a Lewis Wade ...... Robert Redford ily, with no real emotional com 'Roses' touring company at Wilbur kid's eye view of grown-up sex. The Pealer ...... Ruth Gordon mitment on anyone's part. When Frank D. Gilroy's Pulitzer Prize Scott and Martin Sheen, continue It tries all three alternately, more DaisY gives up all at the end of winning play ''The Subject Was in the roles they created in New or less sucoessfully, but the sum a has-been at eighteen. The film the picture, she is really no more Roses'' opened a three-week en York. total is zero. suggests, though, that she is hap ~mpatbetic than her so-called gageme!lt at the Wilbur Theater "Subject Was Roses" is review Those who have read Gavin pier giving up her career than persecutors. Lambert's no~el, and know how she was livi!lg it. Daisy is seduced, married, and on Monday. Its three Broadway ed elsewhere in this issue. stars, Jack Albertson, Martha very good it is, will be disappoint There are nuggets buried in the then deserred on her weddi!lg night The play, about an Irish family ed that he bas made such a super mud, but no effort is ever made by matinee idol Wade Lewis n Cocktllil Loungt" in Harvnrd Squar't" Old..st award and the New York Drama is o!lly a plot-summary of the book Oddly enough, some of the best into the sordid sex-live of Holly Restaurant. here, and everything that made footage in the film are two musical wood. Natalie Wood and Robo=!rt Critics Award. i Wursthaus Restaurant the book great seems to have been numbers. They suffer from very Redford play together very well. 491-7110 Gilroy's first play was .. Wbo'H bleached out before it reached the badly dubbed sound, but they have Redford is a cynical Shakespeare 4 Boylston St., Cnmbridge Save the Plowboy" , which was cameras. the flavor of excellent late-forties quater, who asb.s DaisY to play at Lit>Surt"ly c:ocktail with Elaint' presented off-Broadway in 1962 Le Paris at the organ Tbe plot is the same: Daisy musicals. being grown up for the first time. and won an Obie. Clover is a star at fifteen <" Amer One sequence shows Daisy film At first wary, she joins him in a ica's Little Valentine") married at ing a song <"The Circus is a Happy new kind of childish freedom. sixteen, divorced at seventeen, and Place"). The lyrics speak of the There is a $0<1 deal of subtle, ex .. circus being ~ot the kind of happy pressive acti!lg from both Redford place it looks, but still too wonder and Miss Wood in these three or The Larry Stark Press rul to give up. This is a comment four brief scenes. But, as usual, on the story at the time, but it is the film moves on berore anything proudly announces two new publication•: DANCING also a good musical number in the impressive can develop. Open 7 Days grand tradition. Christopher Plummer is largely wasted as Raymond Swan, the TALES OF A BALLAD &INGER A Week Daisy's rirst film is a short black-and-white dance number to producer. He is required to stand Th ree linked novelettes of the folk 4 P.M. the song "You're Gonna Hear about in a crisp business suit, 75c music world - by Elaine Burr To Closing From Me" i!l which Natalie Wood looking ramrod stiff, coldly busi THE JOYOUS CITY at does a dance in the style of Fred nesslike, or fatherish. 1!1 only one P oems a nd prose in praise of Astair. Stars and planets are add scene, wherein he tells the jilted Cambridge -- by Kip Crosby 50c ed as dancing-partners by trick Daisy the facts of love and life in LA DISCOmQUE photography. It sounds corny, but Hollywood, is there any real use Other publications include: it works in a way that little else made of his talents. ALMOST GROWN a nd other stories, by NICOLE in the film does. "Inside Daisy Clover" can satis Peter Guralnick 50c The " realistic" parts of the film fy no one. Everything is tentative THERE'S ROSEMARY, new poems by J udith Namias 25c are concerned with the backstage and U!tfmished. many beginnings EMBERS, poems by Nancy J oyce McDowell 25c Au Club Henri IV life of the star. The film is adver and half a middle. Money and time Tel.: 176-40f6 ••• EL 4-f60l tised as "The story of what they would be better invested in read HAIYAitD sq.. CAMIIIDGE 2nd Right Off Boylston Str.. t did to a kid". Well, they commit ing Gavin Lambert's novel, which French Atmosphere •nd Wines ted her senile mother to a rest may some day get the fll.m treat home, agai!lst Daisy's will. They ment it deserves.
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