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Summer Repertory season opens t Lilla Barton re Lilla Barton is the central charai ? \ edy/drama The Moving of Lilla Bt 1 Vi X I r\lci \/vx/rioht_in_r?>c^Hp>nr,#* Tr*hn 1 4 \ j The play which opens tonighl jjft Theatre tells the story of Lilla B v ?.;\ who lived with her minister husban f J Saints. Jy / jb Now, a new minister is coming tc S a Miss Uilla decides not to mov { F%0'1 members and townspeople urge he I ?' V only becomes more resolved to sta Kk. r I "The play is about getting on > v\, / I J major loss and the fundamental c J / cur," MacNicholas said. "It's al v V ^ ff \ " ,i' t\j Christians that really get angry wil \ "It's a funny, yet compassioi \ presents a wonderful depiction of s /sa'd USC professor Jim Patterson, / -fe\ V \ Dlav. "Everyone will recognize someo /9 MacNicholas added. fvL t h, "The character of Luwanna H 1 J Igr creation ?half Episcopalian, h V- 0 agent," Patterson said. Y; I? Jk \ yhis js the seCond major coilab< V *' W j MacNicholas and Patterson. Last 5 t son directed MacNicholas' tran M French comedy Deja Vu, which ph ,*r \ ' audiences. V. \ Last February, Patterson stage \. v\ The Moving of Lilla Barton at Lon >. i and then proceeded to work with stage the play for the summer rept d Patterson calls MacNicholas' ne^ t: work". This is MacNicholas' fifth play p umbia. "Having a university envin a play in, then being able to work By PAMME EADES production is very valuable to creat Staff writer MacNicholas said. Everyone in Lowndes, Ala. wants to know why In addition to being produced Miss Lilla Barton refuses to move out of the All Moving of Lilla Barton will open Saints Episcopal rectory. Mount Gretna Playhouse in Penns m ITJn .HK# SB ssi? l ^ ffcfP ^ L==jjr*r... jM RHBB'flBHr r 19BHt^9mH9 ??^ I I B 19 v "B B B9 Hi it B | ^B L US IHg^B Sll 1S|!m? | Hr- Jfl - 4f^ , ' Damian Lang, Elvis Hitler, Warren Defever and John Defever are ELVIS HITLER who * /jf ^V/ ffpl '<s'ot much unless you're a fan of the ra (ft ( ?r^7 y\ // \ I ^~*\) Ing Detroit-based band Elvis Hitler appet | l \ Vr ing at Rockafellas' tomorrow night in Fi f/f _ Everyone loves Elvis and hates Hitk |f( So, sensing that people would either lo 9 4^^ him or hate him, Jim Leedy put together t M m$ two biggest names of our century. 9 B Thus, Elvis Hitler and the love-hate mo II B T was born along with the band's brand W ' I I tight, ultra-fast thrash. # Leedy's roots stem from a wide range i ||nfl*Alf llQfirfl eluding The Ramones, GBH, Misfits, Edc -L^C H HI l Uitllit Cochran and Carl Perkins, so Elvis Hitlei # punkabilly style and diversity will keep a r^Qcfl in diences guessing with its unpredictab n. Ivu l*-' v4loll III lyrics and new sounds. r # The group's album, Disgrace/and, fii On WPirfl n<ltYIP appeared in 1987 on the Wang Head lab ^-*11 TTvll vi. I fill 1IC but has been recently re-released on Restle Records, whose roster includes such grou as The Dead Milkmen and Green on Rec Ry BECKY ODOM With tunes like "Green Haze," t; Staff writer lovechild born of Hendrix's "Purple Hazt What do blue suede shoes and the Third and the them^ from the television she I, Reich have in common? Green Acres, Disgraceland more th; : ' PUGT^,, i r in 5 points \%?\ ? Columbia's best kept secret. . . V J | ? Lunch weekdays i ^ 11:30 am 'til 2:00 pm j I ; Chris Richards Thursday | Zacc David Friday & Saturday Live Entertainment Tuesday through Saturday $ \ 634 Harden^Street^Columbia, South^Carolina might fuses to budge cter of the com- will be staged by the same person who directed irton written by MacNicholas' Alexander Dumas at the Walnut Theatre in Philadelphia. Dumas also nremiered at t at Longstreet Longstreet Theatre. arton, a widow The cast includes Lisa Norman as Lilla Barton, d for 28 years at Ray Lind as Bishop Harold Clark, Karen Eterovich as Luwanna Harp, Paul McMahon as Jonas ) the church and Mabry, George Hughes as Matthew Parker and e out. Church Bernard Addison as Sheriff Hannibal Tate, r to go, but she Costumes were created by Sherry Lyon, Dean y. Wilcox designed the lighting and Robert x'ith life after a Kinglehoefer designed the set. hanges that oc- "Lilla Barton" marks the return of Bernard AdIso about good dison to USC theater. Addison, who acted in th each other." several productions as an undergraduate, recently nate play, that received his masters in Fine Arts from UNC at mall town life," Chapel Hill while earning his union card from the who directs the Actor's Equity Association. Lisa Norman, a veteran of summer repertory is ne they know," also an Actor's Equity member. Within five years, the theatre department hopes !arp is a lovely t0 achieve full professional standing for the Sumalf real estate mer Repertory program. The Moving of Lilla Barton opens the 15th xation between season of summer theatre at USC. Other produciummer, Patter- tions in the season include: Tennessee Williams' slation of the Summer and Smoke, Andrew Bergman's Social ryed to sold-out Security and Charlotte's Web, a production for children by Joe Robinette. d a reading of USC's Summer Repertory theater has produced gstreet Theatre, about 50 plays and given more than 500 perforMacNicholas to mances since its debut in 1975. irtory season. The company consists of 17 actors, 11 techni*/ play his "best cians, four directors and five designers. The Moving of Lilla Barton will continue iroduced in Col- through Sunday, then will be performed in rolling onment to write repertory July 7, 13, 15, 19, 21, 26 and 30. Perforclosely with the mances will be at 8 p.m. weekdays and Saturdays and 3 p.m. Sundays, ing new work," Tickets for the play are $8 for the public, $7 for USC faculty, staff, military personnel and senior in town, The citizens and $4 for students. Season tickets are still i in July at the available. Call 777-2551 for reservations, ylvania. Ebyjack street Staff writer Editor's note: Thi. series of book review A Turn in the So Alfred A. Knopf, Ne Acclaimed novelis Naipaul has penned a Southeast America. "A travel book is i as the travels," wrot the genre. Interviews Oxford-trained Trini< fascination with rack File photo Rednecks, cracker vill thrash at Rockafellas' tomorrow night. escape Naipaul's liter "raised to be belles' hilarious tales of life ig- fulfills the non-conventional reputation of yhe journeying at ir- the group. Atlanta, Ga., Charl ve Lead vocalist and guitarist, Elvis Hitler Fla., Tuskegee, Ala., (a.k.a. Jim Leedy), co-produced Tenn., and Chape jr. Disgrace/and with Len Punch, formerly of distances and the hea ve Snake-Out fame. slovv the pace (0 ai|( he There are apparently ties between the two pu]| 0f history. groups since some of Elvis Hitler's album Ethnic and racial tif covers were printed on the other side of mind Najpaui descri of Snake-Out covers. v in the New World, of Although the band's name has sparked . jt had brought toge n- controversy among Elvis-loving freedom now there was a con i:~ finhflnrt fonc Cliric Uiflnr nr\t ctonH fr\r uc 1151111115 ianj,?^ivi.j iiiui.1 uuov mui jLdi.va.w. common religion, -'s fascism, racial hatred, or bad movies. Booker T. Washii u- Rather, it is a symbol of the iconoclastic Naipaul read Up froi lie spirit inherent in the greatest rock and roll. journey. Respect for Other members of Elvis Hitler include emerges from Naipa st John Defever, lead guitar and vocals, Da- teachers at the eleme >el mian Young, who shares drums with Todd Trinidad were black. ;ss Glass, and Warren Defever on fretless bass. Naipaul writes: " PS neighborhood or toe 1. Rockafellas' will sponsor a matinee he showing of the group tomorrow at 6 p.m. ........ .................. ......... ........... for all ages. So, though they are no Bon >w Jovi, you can be sure that Elvis Hitler will jQJ an rock at Rockafellas'. MINIMUM $20 PAID Vith EVERY donation. Plasma & Whole nood. Programs avail Tor all oiooa types, a imple blood test is all that is needed to see you qualify. Special bonus program for tudents. ryr\ Serologicals, Inc. 2719 Middleburg Dr. Suite 105 Serologicals Columbia, S.C. 29204 254-653? ? rrom rectory * "'* iy -IB Hf V*^r I S H :: fl fe * % Pm^H m - ^ | m #??, ggg ;> j|*WW "M al ^^jjjji^ 'v ^bi ^ ' /<A7 I . V, ... . Karen Eterovich as Luanna Harp and Lisa Norman as Lilla Barton rehearse for "The Moving of Lilla Barton." Wem y x )us writer discovers lature of the South were not too friendly, then it could be a help if you knew who you were ?if you were depens is the first in a summer dent on other people for your idea of your own 1 columns. worth ?then you were in trouble." uth, V.S. Naipaul. 1989. History buffs will be absorbed by the anecw York, N.Y. 307 pages, dotes. The cheeseburger originated when black t and travel writer V.S. cooks served take-out food to other blacks. The in outsider's impression of cooks would defy the restaurant owners who refused sit-down service to blacks by giving out is much about the traveler cheeseburgers and double burgers for the price e Paul Theroux, master of of a single. conducted by Naipaul, an Less trivial stories are told by people along dad native, reveal his own the way. Descendants of South Carolinian il relations. planters relate the series of events which s and jive artists do not resulted in the economic decline of their ary undressing. Even girls families. ' and catfish farmers spin Before the Civil War, planters built the in the Deep South. houses of Charleston and Newport, R.I. After ithor takes the reader to the war, three great hurricanes hroke plantation eston, S.C., Tallahassee, dykes, boll weevils set in, California began Jackson, Miss., Nashville, agricultural production, and the Great Depres1 Hill, N.C. American sion finished off any remaining fortunes, it of the Southern summer Elvis Presley who, although born in a dirt)w an examination of the poor shotgun house in Mississippi, personified a whole new culture of "music and community, issues are never out of tears and faith." bes the "oddity of slavery Naipaul is bewildered at first by country the two far-removed races music. He writes: "How much talent was there ther, African, European, on display?" But travelling is learning, and imon language and even a Naipaul finds that country music is the basis for a distinctive lifestyle. -" 'nn ic .ouoroH- In font Trnvpllprs in fhp Snnfh pxnpripnrp a mix of 77 Slavery twice during his Southern hospitality and a "Yankee-go-home" and a rapport with blacks attitude. Suspicion of outsiders is common ul's training. Most of the which explains the "American Owned" signs on ntary school he went to in many motels. A Turn in the South is pleasurable reading for If you moved to a new anyone interested in travel, history and >k a new job, and people Southern culture. The Gamecock. Call 777-7726 Greenstreets this Week! 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