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Show Friday, May 1@, 1996 THE DAILY HERALD,Provo, Utah — Page)? Selanda: Museum opensrockart exhibit MOVIES: ‘Fiddler on the Roof” Hale Center Theater in Orem is presenting “Fiddler on the Roof” at 8 every night except bea arrwsigrist ‘There will be mati- P-ra. last two Saturdays of the play's run. Tickets are $6 Mondays, $7 Tuesdays-Thursdays and +12 ase $6. For more information and to pur-chase tickets, call the box office at 226-8600. Comedy Club 2 Johnny B's Comedy Club presents hypno- ‘tist Biscuit the Magnificem this Friday and Saturday. Show times for these special shows yare 7 p.m.,9 pum. and 1} p.m. Johnny B’s is located at 177 W. 300 S. in Provo. Doors approximately 8000 years. will then travel to several other Utah museums. The exhibit is a Utah Centenni- al Project and features photographs of Utah's rock art. The exhibit notes that Utah’s rock art sites numberin the thousand’s and include some ofthe finest rock art paneis in the worid. Navajo. The next style, Hisatsenom, covers a period from 1000 B.C. to 1300 A.D. The Hisatsenom are the basketweavers that many people tecognize as the Anasazi, however the Hopi descendants of these people prefer to call them Hisatsenom. The Fremontstyle is dated from 400 A.D. to about 1300 A.D. By David Susec, the exhibit’s open a half-howr before show time. Tickets curator, noted im 2 lecture Thursday 700 A.D. the Fremont people covered most of what is now the state are $5.50. night that Utah’s rock art is “world of Utah,and it is generally thought class prehistoric art” and the “rock writing” communicates across the boundaries of culture and time. The exhibit features art from four major rock art styles that span Little Mermaid” May 18, and June | and 8 at 11 am. Tickets for “The Little Mermaid” are $3.50 for children and $4 for aduits. If a child comes to the Children’s Theater production during his/her birthday month, the birthday child receives free admission with a group of five or more. Chauntenetie The Chaunteneite Women’s Chorus. will perform at Mountain View High School, 645 W. Center, Orem at 7:30 p.m. The theme is “Holiday Fun” and there is no charge tion: Outstanding performances Salt Lake City. Leslie Kelen was the project director. The exhibit was made possible by the George S. and Delores Doré Eccles Foundation, the Ruth Eleanor and John Ernest Bamberger Foundation, the Herbert I. and Elsa B. Michael Foundation, the Utah Statehood Centennial Commission, First Security Bank, Utah Power, the Salt Lake County Centennial Committee, Nike and private donors. The exhibit includes a plea for the public to take interest in preserving the rock art, much of which is unp-vtected and at the mercy ofthe elements and vandals. Choral concert tonight in Salt Lake Members of Spanish Fork Com- from the Merry Widow by Franz atre are combining talents this week for a special spring concert. They are performing excerpts are Heidi Slagle, soprano; Robin munity Choir, Payson Civic Choral and Salt Lake Opera The- from Verdi's Requiem, Wagner's Women’s Chorus that they left with the Hopi at about 1300 A.D. The last style, the Ute, covers 1600 A.D. to 1930 A.D. It was done by the Ute people and fea- Walther's Preislied — Die Meistersinger, the final death scene form Puccini's Sour Angelica, the sixth movement from Sariabin’s Symphony No. 1 and Viljaz Song Lehar. Soloists from the Salt Lake area Murphy, mezzo soprano; Ken Shelley, tenor and Don Watts, bass. They will be performing works by Puccini, including Madame Butterfly, Turandot, and Yours is My Heart Alone byLehar. The concert will be held at the St. Ambrose Church at 23rd E. vides an ample vehicle for ee ie (Continued from Page D6) tures drawings of herses, and in The oldest style is the Barrier tae paintings, European style A new exhibit estitied “Sacred Canyon style dated from some- houses and trains. The were done by where between 6750 and 5500 Images: A Vision of Native American Rock Art” opened Thursday at B.C.and extending up through 500 four Western photographers: Craig the Brigham Young Ueiveniy A.D. The Barrier Canyon styie was Law, John Telford, Tom Till and Museum of Art. The exhibit will painted by a people that pom Philip Hyde. The project was done be at the MOA through Oct. 19 and the people called Anasazi by the with the Oral History Institute in 20th South, Salt Lake tonight at 7:30 p.m. The evening is under the direction of Bob Zabriskie and includes full orchestra. Heis the director of the Salt Lake Opera Theatre. Spanish Fork Community Choir is underthe direction of Clark Swenson and Payson Civic Choral is directed by David Dahlquist Admissionisfree. Dolph Lundgrenis out save the pentathalon and strong direction push this grit ty and depressing film intocritical praise. A love story between a chronic drunk and a prostitute, the film reflects the inverse (and, at first glance, unlikely) relationship between a person’s moral exis tence and their need for emotional connections. Rated R, explicitness. sex and language MARYREILLY, | 1/2 stars Grim,bleak and forbidding, “Mary Reilly” should have been a star turn for Julia Roberts and John Malkovich. Instead it merely turns the stomach. Rated R; violence and gore MR. HOLLAND’S OPUS,3 1/2 stars: The brilliance of Richard Dreyfuss’ portrayal of a wouid-be cmposer whosettles for teaching high school music elevates a preocak4 inot a superb movie. Rated MRS. WINTERBOURNE, stars: Bring out the aspirin. “Mrs. Winterbourne”is a movie so sticky sweet, it should give everyone who sees it a major sugar buzz. Rated PG-13 MULHOLLAND FALLS, 2 stars for contents, 3 stars for presentation: An all-star cast features prominently in this richly atmospheric crime-drama taking place in the late forties. Obvious plot holes and recurring nudity limit the intelligence/accessibility of this story about a beautiful woman's death which is somehow linked to the stewards ofthe newly fashioned atomic bomb. Rated R THE PALLBEARER, | 1/2 Sy LUKE CYPHERS New York Daily News Woody Harrelson wants to save the trees. Jane Fonda wanted to save the Viet Cong. Any number of Hollywood types have tried to save the whales. Now, it may be up to action hero Dolph Lundgren to save ... ithe moder pentathlon. “Tt wouldn't go that far,” said Lundgren, who will go to Atlanta as the team leader — an official posi- tion that’s sort of a cross between a manager and an assistant coach — for the U.S. Olympic Modern Pentathlon team this summer. “I'll do what I can. The thing that would help most would be a medal.” You may remember Lundgren, who lives most of the year in New York, from several lower-middlebrow adventure flicks, including “Masters of the Universe,” Punisher,” and most recently, “Johnny Mnemonic.” More likely, you remember him as Ivan Drago, the robotic Russian who kills Apollo Creed, then gets his comeuppance in “Rocky IV. You may not remember the modern pentathlon, which is why the sport is in a fix. Originated by the founder of the modern Olympic Games, Baron de Coubertin, the sport requires competitors to perform five skills a soldier would need to deliver a message: riding a horse, fencing, pistolshooting, swimming and distance running. Like wrestling. the sport's govering body was in dire enough straits in recent years to take money from accused millionaire murderer John du Pont After Atlanta, the International Olympic Committee is considering canceling the event due to lack of interest, Enter He-Man. Through his mere presence, Lundgren is giving the sport a needed dose of publicity. But why, and how? Two years ago, Lundgres produced and starred in a movie, “Pentathlon.” He met and trained for the role with U.S. pentathletes Rob Stull and'Mike Gostigian, and became close friends. p in his native Sweden,he fell in love with the sport. He slowly became more involved with the sport’s governing body, ang Ws asked if he'd like to help. team leader spot was open. It’s not a glamorous job, but someone’s gét to do it. Lundgren’s duties will include insuring the athletes makeit to eachofthe five venues on time, coordinating drugtesting and general trouble-shoot- ing. “It’s a lot of logistics, a lot of responsibility forlittle details,” he said. stars: “The Pallbearer™ is appalling at times as David Schwimmer proves that the slack-jawed, doeeyed sincerity that works well for him on T.V.’s Friends ts no substitute for real acting. Rated PG-13; sexuality, language and adult themes. THE QUEST,2 stars: JeanClaude Van Dammetakes over the directorial reins in this mildly colorful, but generic story about a man competing in 1925 at an international contest for title of “World's Best Fighter.” Rated PG-13; for violence. RUMBLE IN THE BRONX, 3 stars: a roaring good time for action fans. The simple story pro- Chan to display an inc pouring of fighting, ac choreography and light fae Rated R; violence and occasional language SENSE AND SENSIBIL! TY, 4 stars: A sumptuous mavie going experience awaits audi ences who see the screen version of Jane Austen's “Sense and Sensibility.” As adapted, by Emma Thompson, who als plays Austen's spinsterly Elinor Dashwood, the movie is a lush and lovely look at upper middle class manners in early 19th cer tury England. Rated PG; adul theme SGT. BILKO, 2 1/2 star Steve Martin and Phil Hartm: add deft comic touches to “Sg Bilko.” a film that otherwise slides into the realm of pre dictable pastiche. Rated PG; mil thematic elements and some lan guage SUNSETPARK, stars: A for mulaic after school special witt cuss-words, Sunset Park doesnt have much going for it except Rhea Perimanas the inexperienced coach of a varsity basketball tear Rated R. language and sexual re erences, THE TRUTH ABOUI CATS AND DOGS,3 stars Mostly good, clean fun asa pla jane radio host substitutes bh: knock-out neighbor when Zar interested suiter comes calling Soon, all is confusion as he forced to sort out the truth aber love, beauty and animal hus bandry. Janeane Garofalo, Uma Thurmin and Ben Chaplin mak up the talented and funny cast Rated PG-13 : TOY STORY. 3 1/2 si Amazing computer-generated ag: mation supports a clever and or? inal story as a young boy's toys take ona life of their own. Full pf humor. memories and magic, Thy film is an absolute delight for's ages. 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