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The Ottawa Journal from Ottawa, Ontario, Canada • Page 29

Location:
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Issue Date:
Page:
29
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I CffilJJJ United Artittj 32 WEEK AT: Capitol Square. Plac de Vtlle Cinema, Elgin, RkJmu A Nelson Theatres I JODIE FOSTER FOXES I starring SCOTT BAI0 SALLY KELLERMAfo RANDY QUA10 FEATURE DAILY AT: 1:30 3:25 5:20 7:25 9:30 Mm (The comedy thai come oul of the closet) mail 3:25 7:20 A 8:23 mbi mown MWTUl MTt MM HUB NIGHTLY AT: 7:15 9:1 ADDED ATTRACTION DRIVE IN ONLY "MIES FRO THE MYW" KI40 1ARUNGAVI IN I WARNING: SOME SCENES MAY NOT BE MU SUITABLE FOR J1 PRE-TEENAGERS. T.B.O. WEEK! NIGHTLY AT: 7:20 9:20 PARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESENTS A SIDNEY Brrau) "SERtAl" MUSIC BY LA10 SCHIERIN LYRICS BY NORMAN GIMBEL I 50 3:43 5:40 7:40 9:43 DAILY ATI 1 1SO 3:20 5:1 5 7:1 5 9:1 0 -SECOND FEATURE DRIVE IN ONLY "CALIFORNIA DREAMING" MDEAU AT OALHOUSIE 2J42II1 JAMES CAAN ssg Based On A True Story ION CARUNG AVE. 821 2112 NIGHTLY AT: There's nothing funnier than Peter Sellers 32S RIDEAU AT NELSON 237-4M8 7t30 930 r.

'I mm ii im4 I AMI traiAMWinJ wi Britannia A NI0HTLY ATi mm LLk THE CUTIICS MO PUBUC AGREE, I "Rp There" OPF I IE -o (90) HATUR6 DAILY ATi 3 MOMTLTATl I I MONDAY. MAY 5. 1980 OTTAWA JOURNAL PAGE 29 WW 9 Pi Pianist scores top honors By Jean Southworth JOURNAL REPORTER University of Ottawa students and members of the Ottawa Youth Orchestra came in for most of the honors at the final session of the 1980 Ottawa Music Festival at 1920 1980 CELEBRATING 60 YEARS OF ENTERTAINING CANADIANS For Mother's Day GIVE ENTERTAINMENT! Books of GIFT CERTIFICATES ACCEPTED AT FACE VALUE TOWARDS THE PURCHASE OF ADMISSION TICKETS CONFECTION ITEMS AT FAMOUS PLAYERS 20th CENTURY THEATRES NOW ON SALE- Ridgemont High School Saturday night. Nineteen-year-old Lorl Piitz, a first-year of 0 student, wound up a successful week by winning two important piano competitions. 'Awarding her the Ottawa Music Club Trophy for her performance of Mendelssohn's Variations Serieuses in a play-off in which the winners of three solo classes competed, adjudicator Peter Smith said she had displayed "a really distinguished standard of artistry and technical Compete in finals She won the right-to compete in the provincial finals of the National Competitive Festival of Music when she gave a repeat performance of the first movement of Mozart's Concerto No.

26 in major, K. 537, the work she had played at the beginning of the week in the Nepean Symphony Orchestra piano concerto class. The runner-up in the National Festival piano class was Judy Ginsburg, who played Beethoven's Sonata In major, Op. 109. Earlier in the evening Judy had teamed with Susan Elias to win the Janet Mooney Memorial Trophy, an award which applies to senior and open piano duet and duo classes.

The two third-year University of Ottawa students gave a repeat performance of Dolly, a set of pieces by Faure, after finishing in a first-place tie with the sister team of and Yasmine Malinowski in the open duet class. The latter pair did not return for the play-off. The winner of the National Festival class for strings was Jeremy McCoy, the Ottawa Youth Orchestra's 16-year-old double bass player, who performed a sonata by Henry Eccles. The runner-up was Angela Rudden, a 20-year-old violist from Cornwall who attends Queen's University. She played Max Reger's Solo Suite No.

Op. 131d. The National Festival ensembles class was won by three members of the OYO who played two movements of Brahms' Horn Trio, Op. 40. The trio was composed of VAlENTWA! I i I I Mll.llkttif, OLOVE MATES fi ACADEMY ift AWARDS tnckxHna BEST PICTURE BEST ACTOR occt ruPFTTOe IIV RFST SUPPORTING 1 B3 EVEi 6:40 9:10 'BEIWQ THERE' EVEi 6:50 9:10 "BLACK STALLION" EVE' 7:00 0:18 illiMllfillKMHte 9tt ADDED FEATURE DRIVE IN INDIAN ft RAID.

INDIAN THE VIRGIN WIFE! MADE! 4TH MONTH! CXJST1N rfOFFMAN "KRAMER VS. KRAMER" ADWT WTIIIAINMINf HIUnil.T HIUWim mn WtlLINGION 1 PAHHOALI 700AND9i1S mini BILL MURRAY PETER BOYLE NIGHTLY SHOWINGS AT: 7:20 AND 9:19 Mb 034. UUtthSAAV AT SI LAURtNl OPEN NATIONAL moniriai rd ouiinswat i BRITANNIA NIGHTLY AT. 1 3090 CAIING 4Wt 27l2l I 7:28 AND 0:40 ODEON 11 NIGHTLY ATi 7:05 AND 9:00 cm OUt INS AT $1 lAURtNT 74S 0)41 7 SOMERSET NIGHTLY ATI 7:30 AND 9:20 SOMERSEI AT BANl 236 9628 ADDED FEATURE DRIVE IN nEGECl "RUST NEVER SLEEPS" mmmmjmimlltammj "RUST NEVER SLEEPS' D.L OPENS 8:00 P.M, BANK ST CITY LIMITS S2I 7M4 4 ORIYMHS BRITANNIA 1 TWO GREAT SHOWS "MAD MAX1 AOOtO ATTRACTION "CALIFORNIA DREAMING" BRITANNIA 11 "KILL OR BE KILLED" GREATEST MARTIAL ARTS FILM MADE ADDED ATTRACTION "TALES FROM TUB CRYPT" J-x-l OPENS 6(00 SHOW AT DUSK Robert Henderson, horn, Marie Savard, violin, and Christopher Burton, piano. The runner-up group was the Hull Conservatory Brass Quintet, which played a set of pieces by Ludwig Wilhelm Maurer.

The players were Gaetan Chenier and Alain Pontiroli, trumpets, Norman Depoe and David Martin, trombones, and Peter Sametz, horn. Finally the Ottawa Youth Orchestra performed Brahms' Academic Festival Overture under Brian Law's direction. "This was a beautiful ending to the festival," adjudicator Marta Hidy commented as she awarded the orchestra a mark of 95. At the afternoon session at Rideau High School, Tracey Ann Finn, a 15-year-old violinist, received the Edythe Young Brown Memorial Trophy for the highest mark in-senior string classes: She scored 92 in the violin sonata class, in which the test piece was Mozart's Sonata No. 15, K.454.

David Roseman was the winner of the RCMT Ottawa Chapter, Trophy for the top mark in piano sight reading classes. RIOEAU HIGH SCHOOL Ckm $10 Violin sola Both. Intermediate: Tobv Lermer, It: Charles Jul. 75. Class SI1 Violin solo, Boch, senior: Wlchoel Soroule, 91; Dovld Brooks.

88. Ctass S21 Violin solo, sonata. Intermediate: Karl Ralner, 89; Oenise Onvsko, 85. Class 522 Violin solo, sonata, senior: Trocev Ann Finn, 92; David Brooks, 90. Class CH2 Chamber music, duet, Intermediate: Michael Sproule and Graham Ravner, 89; MIcheHe Boyle and Patrick McGrath, 74.

Class Sill Concerto tor-viola, senior: Scott Pomer, 87. Ctass sm Viola solo, Boch, senior: Maura Elizabeth Keolev, 90. Class CHJ Chamber music, duet, senior: Chantale and Ellse Benolt, 93; Marline Jolv and Use Betterldoe, 89. RIDGEMONT HIGH SCHOOL Class P87 Piano solo. Canadian, 16 and under: Alan Dixon, 80.

Class P8t Plono solo, Conodlon, 18 and under: Maureen Malls, 85. Closs P215 Piano duet. 16 and under: Robin Mitchell and Trocv Elliot. 88; Noella St. Pierre and Llse De Schryver, 83.

Clou P2M Piano duet, 18 and under: Clndv Korvcon and Suzanne Scheun-eman, 84; Sarah Martin and Jone Meodus, 82. Class nvt Plono duel, wen: Henlo and Yasmine Mallnoswkl, 89; Susan Elios ana Judy GlnsDura. 89; Laurence Guav and vera Akers, 85. Class PI0O Ottawa Music Club Trophy class: Lorl Plltr. winner.

Class NF2 Notional Festival piano class: Lorl Piitz, winner; Judy Ginsburg, runner-up. Class NF3 National Festival strings class: Jeremy McCoy, Angela Rudden, runner -up. Closs NF6 National Festival ensembles class: Morle Savard, Robert-Henderson and Christopher Burton, winner; Hut) Conservatory Brass Ouintet, runner-up. Class Ell Youth orchestras, open: Ottawa Youth Orchestro, 95. in 11 in rnn urn imi ORGAN SERVICEl 826-4770 ril II III III JH II IM III ID 1 1.1.1 I 1 i I I 1 aTal I Ull I I AIM CINEMAS S.

"THE CHANGUNQ" 1 A WtTSttAWWWWtj I EVE: 7:20 8:40 "UTTLI I EVE: 7:00 0:20 "NORMA RAE" AWtl IWW1A Hi Wit BVEl 7:00 9:25 "ALL THAT JAZZ' IMMEDIATE DWVK-4MI AIMMT 1 SERVICE TO ALL MAKES iululjuu.llJil ilia um.il.ii.li in LVM.n:i.v,'H:.:.iira;.i 1 TTTff.Tl:lW.I:.l:Ili:i:ij: "EVERY WHICH WAY BUT LOOSE" CHtrl BflEEtWOOtt ADDED ATTRACTION- "HOOPER" Burt RrnoM. -AIRPORTS "ALL THAT JAZZ" 4 ACADEMY AWARDS ADDED ATTRACTION -AIRPORT 3- "DON'T ANSWER THE PHONE" ADOED ATTRACTION "ASYLUM OF SATAN" OPr'sHOWATDUSK Father of sci-fi films dead at 72 BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (UPI) Film producer and director George Pal, a winner of eight Academy Awards and considered by many to the father of the contemporary science fiction film, has died of an apparent heart attack at his Beverly Hills home. He was 72. Pal was regarded as the first film maker to embrace the supersonic, atomic science of today and the future.

Destination Moon was considered the first science fiction film to be based on truly scientific speculation. Pal was born in Hungary to parents who were prominent on the European stage. He entered the Academy of Arts in Budapest where he was graduated with a degree in architecture. Because the construction industry was at a standstill at that time. Pal turned to cartooning.

His work in animation turned his interest to a third dimension and he developed the Puppetoons," the first animated puppets on the screen. His Oscar-winning films Included Destination Moon, WTien Worlds Collide, War of the Worlds, Tom Thumb, The Time Machine, The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm and The Seven Faces of Dr. Lao. Atienza plays lead in Loot Compired by Jean Southworth Edward Atienza, an actor noted for his versatility, will play tne leading role of McLeavy In Joe Orton's Loot, which opens tonight In the Studio of the National Arts Centre, while continuing to appear in Shakespeare's Henry Five and Brecht's Mother Courage, which will return to the Theatre next week. As a result, the performances of Loot will start at 8:30 and 2:30 p.m., a half-hour later than usual.

That will enable Atienza to deliver the prologue In Henry Five before making his first entry in Loot, At the conclusion of the Orton play he will make another quick costume change and return to the Theatre to appear as the Duke of Burgundy in the final scene of Henry Five. Loot won't be presented on the nights when Mother Courage is on stage. Douglas Campbell has the role of Inspector Truscott in Loot His son Benedict is cast as Hal and his niece, Jane Casson, as Fay. Ottawa actor James O'Regan will play the role of Meadows and John Peters that of Dennis. John Nelson, music director of the Indianapolis Symphony, will make his first appearance with the NAC Orchestra at the final concert in its Connoisseur series lomorrow night.

Vancouver pianist Robert Silverman will return as soloist. The program will be repeated Wednesday night. Gilles Provost, artistic director of Hull's Theatre de rile. will play the leading role of Amolphe in a professional production of Moliere's L'Ecole des femmes which opens there Wednesday. Sylvie Houle will appear as Agnes, Robert Cote as Horace, Bernard Assiniwi as Chrysalde, Jean-Louis Fujs as Alain, Lisette St-Gelais as Georgette, Daniel Richer as Enrique, and Lucien Crustin as Oronte and a notary.

Raphael Albani is directing the production. Aldo Marleau designed the set and Gaetan Tyler has designed and -executed the costumes. Kanata Theatre's final offering of the season is Two and Two Make Sex a comedy by Richard Harris and Leslie Darbon. It opens Wednesday for a run. of four nights.

The central character, George Williams, will be portrayed by Stephen Jones. Rosemary Scott is cast as his wife Clare, Jenny Haynes as Jane, Brooke Keneford as Nick, Dorothy Beak as Ruth and Chris Robinson as Jack. Ron Maslin is the director. Monday: Loot opens THEATRE The National Arts Centre Theatre Company's production ot Loot, a wickedly witty farce by the late Joe Orton, opens in the NAC Studio at 8:30 p.m. It will play nightly until May 10 and (here will be further evening performances May 1 2, 1 5, 1 6, 20, 21 24, -26, 29 and 30 and June 3, 4 and 7.

Matinees are slated for May 10, 17 and 31 at 2:30 p.m. Noire Perte Ville the French version of Thornton Wilder' Our Town, continues in the NAC Theatre at 8 p.m. Performances nightly until May -10. Tuesday: Celtic music MUSIC The final concert In the NAC Orchestra's Connoisseur series will be given in the NAG Opera at 8:30 p.m., with John Nelson as guest conductor and pianist Robert Silverman as soloist. The.

program: Overture to King Stephen, Beethoven: Concerto in flat (Dumbarton Oaks), Stravinsky: Piano Concerto No. 3, Bartok; Le Bpurgeois gentilhomme, Richard Strauss. Further performance Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. VARIETY A variety program Including Celtic singing, highland dancing and piping will be presented in the basement of St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church at 8:30 p.m.

as a benefit for the chair in -Celtic studies which is lo be established at the University of Ottawa. THEATRE Un monde en noeut. a production created at a children's theatre workshop, opens at Imagier, 9 Front Aylmer, al 8 p.m. Performances nightly until May 10. FILMS The National Film Theatre's Cinema Ouebecois series continues In fhe National Library auditorium at 7:30 p.m.

with Seat, a 1975 production by Andre Blanchard. A Very Moral (Vgfif will be shown at 9 p.m. in the NFT's series of recent Hungarian films. Wednesday: Intermezzo MUSIC Cellist Susan Miller and pianist Joan Milliken will appear In the series of Intermezzo concerts al St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church at 1 2:30 p.m.

The half-hour program will consist of works by Bach and Ravel. A student recital will be held in the Untversite du Quebec auditorium, 281 Tache Hull, at 8 p.m. by Le Conservatoire de Musique de I'Outaouais. The artists will be violinist Luc Prefontaine, pianist Marc Hyndman, and Alain Pontiroli, trumpet. Admission free.

THEATRE A professional production of Moliere's comedy L'Ecole des femmes opens at Le Theatre de rile. 1 Wellington Hull. Performances Wednesday to Friday at 8:30, Saturday at 7 and 1 0 p.m., and Sunday at 7:30 p.m., until May 31 Two and Two Make Sex a comedy by Richard Harris and Leslie Darbon, will be presented by Kanata Theatre In Earl of March Secondary School, Kanata, at 8 p.m. Performances nightly until Saturday. From Saigon lo Sudbury, a play about the arrival of the Indochinese refugees In Canada staged by Theatre Lifeline, a professional Toronto company, will be presented at the Jewish Community Centre, 151 Chapel at 7:30 p.m., under auspices of Protect 4000.

There will be a further performance Thursday at St. Luke's Anglican Church. Flowers for Algernon, a play by David Rogers based on the novel by Daniel Keyes, will be presented by the Merlvale Drama Guild at Merivale High School at 8 p.m. Further performances Thursday, Friday and Saturday. The Ariel Theatre Company's cabaret show entitled 1981: A Thirties Musfcafcontinues at Fernando's Restaurant, 332 Somerset St.

W. Performances Wednesday to Saturday at 8:30 p.m. and Sundays at 7:30, until May 25. Gharges-against singer dropped WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) Prosecutors dropped rape charges against Canadian rock singer David Clayton-Thomas when his accuser failed to appear before the Palm Beach County grand jury.

Clayton-Thomas's lawyer said the episode cost the Toronto singer about $100,000 in cancelled contracts and appearance fees. The unidentified 20-year-old Stuart, woman also did not appear in court in December when the grand jury first investigated the charge against the lead singer of Blood, Sweat and Tears. A judge ordered her arrested, but she is reported to have, moved to Georgia. "Without personal testimony of the accuser, the grand jury feels there was not sufficient evidence to justify" an indictment, the fsreman of the jury wrote in Its report "So, there Is no charge," State Attorney David Blud-worth said Friday. The woman said she was attacked by the singer In October, The group now is on tout" In Europe and has released a new album.

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Pages Available:
843,608
Years Available:
1885-1980