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Show Wednesday, June 19, COALITION 1974 Page? swwwwwwww?wwwwwwwwwwww 4 VI V I , i yO (I K Four numbers, with a strong emphasis on the stage, will mark the tree Park City Summer Series 1974. All programs will be held on Sunday evenings at the Park a? 2 City Resort Center. Launching the series on June 23rd will be Dr. Henry A? I , 1 V N I Lv of the University of Utah Graduate School. Dr. Eyring will talk on Aspects of S Aging, Including Cancer. While the topic sounds grim, Dr. Eyring actually has entertained many audiences 1 with his insight and wit. Recognized as one of Americas keenest minds and liveliest lecturers, Dr. Eyring is Distinguished Professor of Chemistry and Metallurgy at the University. He holds honorary doctorates from more than a dozen major institutions here and abroad. He has been awarded the National Medal of Science and the Linus Pauling Medal among an almost endless string of professional academic awards. The Salt Lake Mime Troupe, a company of four mimes and two musicians, will perform on July i4th. Combining realism and fantasy, the company givps wide expression to visual movement for the UniverRecently named of Division sitys Continuing Education, the mime has troupe performed and taught widely in this oldest of 23 2 theatrical art forms. Robert Peterson, who has revitalized the Pioneer a Memorial Theatre, will perform on July 2ftth . An alumnus of the University of Utah and Juilliard Ajj School of Music, he has performed at many universities, a? on Broadway, with the Metropolitan Opera Studio and 2 with the national touring company of Cam dot. a? His first major break came when he understudied Robert Goulet in the Lancelot role of this show. On tour, he alternated the roles of Lancelot and King Arthur. He a? has since starred in PMT productions of The Man ofLa The Music Man, Camelot, Mancha, My Fair ;g will and Lady many more. He sing some of his favorite of his from musical list roles. songs long Closing out the series will be Stan and Allien Russon, who will read a Broadway comedy on Aug. 4th. Identified and involved with dramatics for many years, the Russons have performed in the old University Theatre, PMT, Lagoon, on radio and television, church vaudeville work. In productions, and in some late-da- y of private life, they are the parents Shirty Ririe, codirector of the Dance Company which also has some deep roots in Park City. The series is sponsored by the Park City Institute for the Arts and Sciences and the University of Utah Division of Continuing Education in cooperation with the Greater Park City Company the Park City Chamber of Commerce. Eyring, -- ariists-in-residen- ce Ririe-Woodbu- ry GO CLASSIFIED with v vvvv US yrww Isiatmmi MiH jJark Anemic. Jark iLity tflnsc tu the trki Ajca 5fiir ftcscriiatiiins daft lelil-ill- ! till Tilt Most Elegant DELICATESSEN and LIQUOR STORE CONTINENTAL CUISINE LIQl'Olt 11 X Wyi'KT l Open Momla -- Sutunlu) SPECIALIZING IN Imported & American Delicacies INKSTOUKON 1MIKM1.SKS KKCKITION F VCII.ITII S Eery .m. HOURS 12:00 am to 10:00pm 7 days a week Day Siimla 2 p.m.-l- Ilnur lutiitii: Ali anil jJcnnit'iT ittantculii O p.m I Dy Quicksilver Dean-Emerit- us , nrv PARK CITY FLICKS PHONE 649-895- 7 436 MAIN STREET PARK CITY, UTAH sHs Opera house fare for the next week features two animated films of surprising contrast, Heavy Traffic and Alice in Wonderland. Heavy Traffic is from the same people who brought you Fritz the Cat, so you can expect a technically excellent film The subject is the fantasized love afand fair between a Jewish-Italia- n a Black barmaid. It is not a childrens flick about the L.A. freeway. Alice in Wonderland is the Disney classic based on the Lewis Carroll book of the same name. Carroll wrote the book to be read on two levels. One was as the childrens fairy tale and the other was as a satire against the ways of the Queens court. Disney always' tries to make his children flicks on two levels, too, so that Ma and Pa are not bored stiff when they take the kids. If you only want to see one animated film this week, dont rule out Alice in Wonderland just because it is a kiddie flick. Remember, Carroll was an opium addict, and Walt Disney . . The Way We Were was"oneof the more pleasant surprises of the past year. The pairing of Red-for- d and Streisand is a perfect beginning of a bit of sentimental schmaltz, but it didnt happen that way. This film might be a bit too sentimental and not very hard hitting, but it is enjoyable. The story concerns a bright, handsome, young writer who meets a radical young campus activist of the opposite sex while completing his higher education. Of course, they fall in love. They get married (common in those days) and move to Hollywood. We watch as his literary talents get traded for those of a hack, and the president of the Young Communists becomes a contented housewife. The story might have stopped right there except for a man named Joe McCarthy. Streisand had the meatier part in the film since Redfords part asked him to play a handsome young coward who puts comfort ahead of ideals. The stars actually made a good team that had just the right balance to pull off what could have been superschmaltz 193. |