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Show io The Salt lake Tribune, Monday, March SO, 1910 Pianist Spreads Sunshine With Her Bach Concert r ActinirO to Distributin- g- of This Star Speaks U Inth Pres Writer ness to the businessmen those of tlie garnet rings and has long been telling them bow Ins films should he distnbuted and promoted, afier letting them know his views or. how they should be made. When Sou'hern Star" was being made, Segal complained of the theme song. Henrietta .VsMxiated - NEW YORK Geoige Segal is a new kind of Angiy Young Man. lie sometimes, sounds like he's out to reform the whole inuue industry, take it away from the guys with the garnet rings" and turn it over to tne artists. His trouble: Its hard to be Angry when youre basic all v a charming, guy who originally wanted to lie a s', ind up comic and still sees almost anything that hapjiens as laugh material. Thats why. in lus forthcoming film, Ixiving, there are some comedy overtones with a theme that could be grim and sordid enough for any the Angry Young Man falseness and suburol upper middle-clas- s e ban life, a breuking-uand a bteaking-doweasy-goin- Soppy Song if they get a hit think "They song," he says, "it will save the movie if it doesn't go well other wisp. But I told them it was a rotten song, a soppy song. They wpre hoping it would take off. But it had nothing to do with the movie." Segal feels he also won a "partial victory" on the distribution of "Southern Star." e The hoys were doing a "rotten job" on it, he asserts, hut he at least slopped a plan to open it on a local double bill. He also objected to distnhu-tio- n plans for the release of "Loving" and won a fight to get it into a small, intimate theater on the East Side rather than a big circuit house on Broadway. Personal Movie g n cuioer. Not llolhwuod Star Segal, who lives in a roomy Manhattan apartment with his wile and two small daughters, emphasizes that he is not a 'Hollywood star." Paul Newman is the last star," he says. "He's the link. V C "This is a personal movie the kind of movie that people tell other people to go see. Nobody In from New Jersey and walking along Broadway is going to come in off the streets to see it," argued e're just actors." comic came The would-btlie long route to film stardom the off Broadway, through Park Central Shakespeare Festival, television series, tel"Death of evision specials Of Mice and a Salesman, and M e n," "Desperate and featured roles Hours in more than a dozen movies, notably "Whos Afraid of Vir"The Longest ginia Woolf, Day," and Ship of Fools." He thinks one reason so many of those roles cast him as a heavy is that early in the game he played a very mean on television. Another could be his rugged physiognomy. No Nose dob e advised Segal to get his nose to declined fixed. Segal cliange it. J!e also declined to leave tlie business end of the busi DYAN CANNON Aw am winner Academy Joanne Woodward has been signed to play the title role in "Mrs. Beneker, film version of Violet Weingartens bestselling novel, which Norman c 22 X f XClUSIVf ARIA SHOWING MASTERPIECE! I I 1U Aia f ?B taliiClUk H i IIAI n ui I 3 5 30. 9 no AAAvWLl i CM HA UW t GENUAL tilHji it Pit Mtstl Hi NOMINATED WJm j, n f 0nii S i Ik M Patty Duke llN COMNItV IN "THI MOLLY MAGUIRES" NOON OPIUM. ,S ;pm C0i0 S3D Antfibny Quinn mmm Dram ofKings Itne Papas ViO JENDS .Ti Tomti ky U LU MON.I Inger Stevens S Technicolor (jJj evamafue ;7T7r'GRAGqRY f'tc SAINT . THE STALKING MOON and ROBERT REDFORD KATHARINE WitT TfflBSln ? Steve McQueen inThe Reivers" man mine OPEN AT BEST PICTURE Of THE YEAR" iHtAiMNIUHltiT M ( AWARDS MBiM Petto 2o FORzACACEMY ROBERT REWORD BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID dibUiUiiMllil COtO jursiuti's . V-- TlflUC NEWMAN W1 fi'I ! ' 'a aniifignW' IU vcooGans BLUff In man'll of the An Ingo Preminger Production SWOPE, txuil ! ZP E3ST WOOD El'J3y3 mn mm DAILY iv ENDS MON. I Wall Disiii RUtAM I GAVIN s Akvk BUXUtHCE Jf JOHN GP DATuMS lz I McShANE IAN A ir isa I Award i c4Boy Named Charlie Urown NASeeJ( RESERVED SEATS NOW At BOXOFFHE Oil BY NAIL rut - Academy - PATTON I Other works were the most difficult "Variations on a ROSS' JOHN KffiK PC "TELL THEM '.,THu V.WI IS HERE ! V. ACD'J jWILUE BOV MNAV1S10N paih'Si V CP Tja rrtTl ' K'.'OLTB (U o ft -- TECHNICOLOR ncHNcoion YRIG REDWOOD tP6MJ T E it I PMniStiirr WtLMOLVrP1CTU5(i CUNT - xun KIXSH SEBERG tiasai BMNnDUR WAGON TONITEIP.M. B BIIUX IK K A' Wed., Thurs., fn April IS. 18, 17 - FINEST CMtNtSI Cafe . . . flU AMFB'CN FOCCS 359-550- 5 - t - - FOR .... L ORDER MONEY C AN0 0R . FOR PERFORMANCES OF ... FOR $ ? JIWORTICKF'SATS ADULT TICKETS : Theta rwtmgs opply reieoted 4tr AAacS fHwn 1, 1970 dm .... jlf AODkfSolD .. . ...ZIP SlAr.iPfO fNVL0Pf v-- , . ... Jjj GP Suggested ir All ages admitted. for Adults sn rultod SugqBited for GENERAL audiences 7pm hms 7 I 9 30 00 Kids 50c ALASKA 1 50 Students 1 i . 1 ; MATUPC, audiences (parental guidance sugge'ted) All ages admitted. RtSTftlCTED Persons under 17 not admitted, unless ec (Ompomed by potent or odult guardion 'sons under 8'not odmtMed. ijik Great Family f OR tu - PLAN A skating partyi ; 4180 South, jutt writ of State la Hh ailUUIa at Marray - tM 1 14 FLY-I- MISAKS COULD MEAN A 100 Parr WALK OUT cnor I m,T 0 'l wJU w yn 'd ; t Sun. Odwy 7pm Showv 7 IS FUN TIME A R0U A nu k rrauxiv'ju;:uia &nr I Entertainment . ONE WHERE MILE BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR ! fi ACADEMY AWARDS Ptra Cod EACH S 66 0 Stt Open SEAL rttd wwwwwww Staff Mi) I I mdrcetos tk ft miwo eppreved wndr ts Motion Sdf EACH FKONE STATE PJAJf NriQ:( iiiiiiGUIDE 11 . AT STREET CITY m MOVIE AUDIENCE 00 ttnitiii E p.m. ihnHnp Conllmwu, from 1 p.m. Sit. THIS Mail to Salt Place. ICO So. West Temple, Salt Lake City. 84101 IS CHECK Opn 7pm i - - Sill 399t Show ROLLER CITY , m. Opm tMMv, Mt. e Sm. I Reserved Prices $5 - 34 - $3 Vt Price Juniors (16 8 onder) Sits. to price Juniors reserved seats only TICKETS FOR SALE: ZCMI Sears Stores Salt Palace Box Office Brigham City Mickeys Music FOR CHOICE SEATS ORDER NOW BY MAIL ENCLOSED K "H" SANDWICH Apnl 25- -2 P M 8 8 P.M Sun. April 28- -2 P.M. 8 7 P.M General Admission 32 2PM- .- Suns. 2 P M. 8 7 P M. NAME Cl BIG Sil - Ho 4961 Wed Wed April 22- -8 P M Thu. April 23- -8 P M Fn. April 24- -8 P M. - THEATRES HAMBURGERS, CHEESEBURGERS... PLUS THI SENSATIONAL NEW Primirj Children's Hospital Sat Apnl 18- -2 P M It, I P M Sun. onl 19- -2 P.M 8 7 P M. Show Mon. April 70-- No Tue. April 21 -- 8 P M PRESENTATION URIVt Y0 HIRES FOR thru APRIL 26 APRIL T5 COLUMBIA BEYTER SALT PALACE EOl A 1970 GREATEST OF THEM ALL" RUTHLESS 73 East Broadway I "TKI FOiDo , n (KXDtejmn AT MU Mi CENTU fA irv yax 'X.. InoriD BGi-omo- FLOWOP Storts Wednesday MARVIN EASTY.'OOD Q vfe.'STcBE i mZ7: mum LEE ... d ..(XVJ uiiiq- T was it Maxwell, U.K. chief. e HAUL BIALDEN Tf Head," Severed announced today by Setton, Columbia's European production do. Twain will produce under tlie Rastar Productions banner for Columbia Pictures. In the film, Miss Woodward will play a woman entering her middle years. A COCKEYED At r for the filming of "A TediAfce m&bigww ESllIS fr Joanne Woodward Signs Film Pact CEOItGEC. SCOTT PUTNEY tors Wmkast Earner's Elliot Tiemeyer never play'd the orchestra against the solo line, which could have happened in the Presto, but didnt. Again, Miss Thomas and the strings carried the to an end sound tightly e-- George Segal denies that he Is a "Hollywood star, but is serious about the job of acting. C "Humor in the jugular vein two-chor- Bob(PCarol Segal. Segal he "Back in the 50s. recallcL "they only wanted tlie pretty boy types for leads." A Hollywood friend Columbia Pic- LONDON' tutes has concluded negotiations with Jerry Gershwin and Intrusion No Orchestral hai-mo- 'Joseph Morgenstern. thinks actors conwith the themselves cerning total film find how its created a have handled "healthy dialogue. Ive been a party to everyhe says. thing I've done, "The movie executives always want to hedge their bets, and often they sign their own death warrant. There's this terror they have. Theyre afraid of a movie that doesnt cost a lot of money. They think a lot of money is going to buy quality. "I don't think you can go up now and not be involved. There's no Big Daddy anymore. no studio to take care of you. to say this script is for you. That was a Fascist dictatorship. This is just scuffling. But we'ie all together now, and its producing more intelligent movies " Film Negotiations concert. Technically Confident she is a thor- Technically, oughly confident pianist. But it was not strict keyboard that made the concerto work. It was a soit of "glad-- t 1 i ve" a b ef fei vescence, worked out in a laughing ca- o-- The 3 p.m. concert opened with Bachs Brandenburg also most Concerto No. 3 alive even without vii tuoso passages. It was played with ensemble joy. Happily. Tiem-eye- r bridged the two fast d with the movements adagio rather than another Bath incorporating passage or a harpsichord improvisation, as some conduc- audi- ble laughter, is quick to erase tensions in an audience. And once Miss Thomas had established this amiability with the audience in 'he Allegro, she moved into the Largo w ith the thoughts of all her followers m tune. Heie, her runs were underlined by softer strirgs. and some especially sensitive bass work by Pat Zwick and Frank Asper, who, actually, played the throughout beautifully when she plays Bach. Not when she plays so well. Miss Thomas was the guest soloist with Christian Tiem-eye- r and tlie University of Utah Chamber Orchestra in concert at the Music Hall on was campus. Her piece Piano Bachs sunshine-lik- e Concerto No. 5 in F Minor. front-offic- mur-iiag- p p e. laughter, like Mu.-.ic- It rained Sunday, but not on Tncia Thomas. It 11 never ram on Trivia Thomas, the piano play-"- -. Not by' Theme by Tchaikovsky, capably done Arensky and the Swi-- s Symphony" in C Major, by Mendelsohn. that was developed with communicated that denee, joy. Tnbure Staff Wnter ) B George Raine B t 48w 4 fLu Ocn . iowir gs o 7 'S d N QhHy 9 S Vatf jX P tfl lASFO IT ALASKA OutOOOS edaz; -K 0fl 7 00 ut flu W ld Seen, Bun Fr 9K.TUW COB9 |