Musical's satire foolproof By JIM LOCKHART Collegian Arts Writer “Little Mary Sunshine” is a ' .foolproof play. It is written to L be played so broadly and so good-naturedly that even the most inept of -casts could carry it off with great suc cess. That is one reason it is one of the most-produced of summer stock plays. The Festival Theatre' group now doing “Mary” at the Pavilion Theatre is far from inept. They brought an . energy and sparkle to last night’s opening 'that would Jeffersonian thought revealed in lecture - By 808 FRICK Collegian Staff Writer ' Thomas Jefferson -believed that the alliance of religion and government had caused deadly damage to human life and liberty through the ages, according to Merrill D. Peterson, the nation’s best known scholar on Jeffersonian thought., Peterson, speaking Wednesday night as part of the Bicentennial Summer Lecture series, quoted Jefferson as saying, “Millions of innocent men, women and children since the introduction of Christianity have been burnt, tortured, fined and ftnprisioned, yet we have not advanced one inch toward uniformity of religious rights.’’ ’“What had been the effect of this coercion, Jef ferson asked? To make one-half the world fools and OiD. FREE AND CONFIDENTIAL 24 hours a day drug & alcohol crisis information & dispatch hot line information & referral 237-5855 236 A South Allen St. (a service of, for, and Y.,,. by people / Jewel Box State College “Mr. Tom” THE WA TCHMA KER I‘OM is lien* tn repair & tkuii \mir uauhes. \ll oi»r uauh repairs tin* done m ihe store l>\ loot. lOM otters *is an in* trmimtnr.y oiler. a uenernl nserhaiil lor onl\ J 9.95. win over the sourest of songs. Indeed, the characters light. They could easily have “*a~. . , are . refl dy break into song gotten by with their cartoon just to make the play run Mary is a musical satire at the slightest pretext. And - characterizations, but each longer. It picks up again near of the Jeannette MacDonald- * n keeping with the spirit of one also brought a strong the end when true love and Nelson Eddy movies from the theplay, not one of the songs voice to complement their t the American flag are called 30’s. But there is no need to be bas any aspirations to roles. upon to draw ovations from familiar with these films to seriousness. They even dared The second leads (David W. the audience, enjoy the play. Just to rhyme June and moon. Czarnecki and Audrey The lighting of the play is remember that good always Tischler) went for the comic exceptional. Mary seems to triumphs over evil and you iGVIGVv relief, if there can be said to control the sun itself in “Look will be fine. be such a thing in this play, for a Sky of Blue,” and the There is a plot of sorts Paul Farin plays Captain They also brought some much party sequence is reminiscent concerning a renegade Indian Big -Jim Warrington with needed dancing to contrast to of warm summer nights in the and the Forest Rangers a square jaw that would make the many songs. garden, assigned to capture him. But Dudley Do-right blush. Sheila The play does tend to bog Mary the Girl is Goodness fortunately the plot never McCarthy is Mary, the down in the middle with a few itself. Mary the Play is a close gets in the way of the 24 epitome of sweetness and songs seemingly thrown in' second., 238*2367 NITTANYMALL Welcomes' the other half hypocrites,” Peterson said “Jefferson was not an especially religious man, by some standards not religious at all,” Peterson said. “He would often be called an atheist or an infidel, particularly after he became a' highly controversial religious figure around 1790,” he said. Peterson quoted James Madison, Jefferson’s good friend, as saying after Jefferson’s death, “He was a man of immense learning and varied at tainment, who left the philosophical impression of his mind on every subject he touched. But what distinguished all this activity was an early and uniform devotion to the same cause of liberty and the systematic preference of a form of government in the strictest degree, for equal rights of men.” “Liberty was not just a cause to Jefferson, it was ami jP* ** tBI ** ** ! FREE! ] 1.. Buy any 'Dj*™ ! ■ Medium on* or mor* toppings |||| « at the regular price ■ | Get identical Medium PIZZA | ■ BSIBBB AT THIS LOCATION ONLY I I 88888 ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER I t Little Caesars Pizza | "ACROSS FROM OLD MAIN "ABOVE MY-O-MY BAR" . m Entrance Front & Rear (Boro Parking Garage) Deliveries from ■ 237-1481 *P-m.-la.m. ■ ki M mm MM WBB ■■ mm Ji a holy cause,” Peterson said. In Jefferson’s system of values, according to Peterson, “The most fundamental liberty of all was the liberty of mind and of conscience.” The founders of the American Republic were distinguished perhaps beyond any other generation of leaders known to history for the depth, the range and the fertility of their political ideas, Peterson said. “What for Jefferson was freedom to gain is for us freedom to lose, what was the dream of mastery of nature has turned into the nightmare of the an nihilation of nature,” Peterson said. Peterson quoted Jefferson as saying, “When we get piled upon one another in large cities, as in Europe, we shall become corrupt as in Europe.” TOESDAV, sIULV 2.7 % PM • |C>| umimiiuw kepN I wmSm workshop ” arts DR.- L.W. Hamilton FftPM **OMC ec CttGUbtei* SERUIC6 Steiger, as Fields, saves film If ever a movie was carried by the efforts of one man, it is “W.C. Fields and Me,” now playing at the Flick. Rod Steiger as Fields is apparently the only person connected with the film who put some thought to the task at hand. The rest, from the screenwriter to the director to the supporting players, all must have been out to lunch. Steiger has the Fields’ talk, grimace and mannerisms as under control as James Brolin had Clark Gable cosmetics and mimicry seem to be the saving graces of modern screen biography. Steiger, goes far beyond the physical aspects of the role. He has the wisdom to .make the off-stage Fields a completely new character, one not afraid to admit his loneliness. He still kicks dogs and small children, but it is more out of habit than spite. Beyond Steiger, the film soon falls apart. As a biography, it is the proverbial crock. We see Fields struggling to break into films 17 years after he actually made his first picture. Fields was a star when Hollywood was an unknown suburb of Los Angeles. Even though the Me in the title refers to Fields’ mistress, Carlotta Monti (Valerie A Calzone can best be described as: a) An Italian-made racing tire b) Uncle Guiseppe’s middle name c) A creamy cheese & meat-stuffed turnover available exclusively at at HiWay Pizza’s Cut Pie Shop, M 2 S. Garner Street. Come in and taste the newest delicacy in town! HiWay Pizza—Cat Pie Shop 234-0349 (an affiliate of Dante’s, Inc.) RYDER rents TRUCKS _ I /fnlimited 1 5% RENTAL DISCOUNT \Urent.alls\ if you make your ONE-WAY RESERVATION 238-3037 on or before Aug. 13 140 N. Atherton St. ('A block N. of College Ave.) (Present This Ad) Get on Arbys Roast Beef Sandwich for 79< To help you br the hamburi habit, Arby's cut the pr on their tend roasted bee sandwich just It’s a big break oh the price and a big break from the burger. t pr- —1 79 e SPECIAL | 79 c SPECIAL | WITH THIS COUPON I ■ WITH THIS COUPON | OFFER ROOD ONLY AT | I OFFER ©OOO ONLY AT ■ 111 SOWERS STREET | I 111 SOWERS STREET j SATURDAY, JUNE 26th & SUNDAY, JUNE 27th C '->D SATURDAY, JUNE 261 h i SUNDAY. JUNE 27th 0; | The Daily Collegian Friday, July 23,1976 Perrine), it could easily have been a whiskey bottle. Adhering to the Even-Famous-People- Have-Troubles Theory of filmmaking, the script focuses on Fields’ unsuccessful battle with alcoholism. But in order not to become maudlin, the film has as many scenes of Fields emptying his bladder as those of him filling it. Valerie Perrine spends most of the movie doing a repeat of her role in “Lenny,” the star’s mistreated but loyal plaything. This time, though, she keeps her clothes on, which means her talents are exhausted long before the picture is over. Jack Cassidy plays Jack Cassidy and edits it John Barrymore, as ifit made any difference. Cassidy manages to steal one scene, however, as the life of his own funeral. Anyone who goes to this movie expecting a comedy in the Fields tradition will be disappointed. There are a few recreated skits from vaudeville and films, but they lack the energy of the originals. Aside from a scene where Fields gets his two-year-old co-star drunk, the personal life sequences are serious, even to the point of tedium. 8 COUPONS IN THIS ISSUE —Jim Lockhart c 1976 Arby’s, Inc