UNIVERSITY SPECIAL ALL YOU CAN EAT BURRITOS *4.95 All the bean and cheese burritos you can eat. We fill a flour tor tilla full of beans and shredded monterey jack cheese, then roll it burrito style and cover it with sauce and melted cheese. It's gar nished with onion, lettuce and tomato. Served with rice, beans, chips and salsa (ONE PERSON PER ALL YOG CAN EAT) 610 EAST BROADWAY ORDERS TO GO ADD 50’ Call 686-TACO PRESENTING — just one of the cards from our fantastic collection of Christmas Cards! RfiKfflflTH 37 N. Mam Ashland Ph 482-9501 410 E. Main Medford Ph. 7.72-9504 211 S.W G" St. Grants Pass Ph 479-5932 160 E Broadway Eugene Ph 344-4487 Coupons in the Emerald save you money. I Check every page, every day. It pays. Paft* ♦. Wfttei B Graphic by Paul Ollswang Samurai drama by the sword Fight director Chris Villa hones 'Rashomon' "Rashomon," a Samurai play of lust, truth, and the sword, opened at the Hult Center's Soreng Theatre last night. It plays through the weekend, and again, November 18-19 at 8:30 p.m. Much of the play's vitality owes itself to the drama which builds through precise, intense sword fighting scenes that recall the rape of a Samurai woman and the subsequent murder of her husband from four divergent viewpoints of the main characters. The man behind much of this precision is choreographer Christopher Villa. Villa, who pres ently makes his home in Ashland, has had much ex perience in choreographing combat sequences, hav ing to his credit several seasons with the Shakespearean Festival in Ashland and experience working with some of the premier fight directors in the world. His role in "Rashomon" has been one of combining martial arts with combat techniques, prin cipally the arts of parry and attack, and footwork. Villa notes that "the play is not often done, being difficult technically because the actors have rather heavy fights, and demands are placed upon them re quiring discipline and training." The actors learned to be Samurai, which, according to Villa, involves "very graceful and controlled movement.” It also in volves certain safety factors, most notably avoiding eye-contact and fencing out of hitting distance. Thus, says Villa, "moment by moment they (the actors) must know exactly what's happening." To ac complish this. Villa's rehearsals have been, by his own admission, "exhausting.” Assisting Villa has been Dana Fredsti, a karate student whom Villa met by chance at a Renaissance Fair in I960. Fredsti, a Brown Belt in the discipline, has gone through rigorous training sequences with the actors in preparation for the combat scenes. Villa said these rehearsals have been responsible for pro moting camaraderie between the actors, a factor he believes is important to his work. He sees the impor tance of "everyone supporting everyone else to be the best they can be." Thoughout the consuming rehearsal schedule, Villa viewed himself as a teacher, digressing into many areas. Through his efforts, Japanese history, philosophy, and self-therapy (that is, keeping emo tions under control) have been taught. His primary job, he said, is to "evoke emotions in the audience." The actors are his "tools" in this process. With all Villa's intense direction and the actors' arduous fine-tuning, the audience should be able to enjoy the results of the weeks of discipline, concen tration, and mutual support. Jill Homan :v • •• • • • • • t •* ••»,••• 96 cQ ' Aa't • • • * k°* ** AO 9 .to • • •• 4 • # • . •*•*•!••»** «*> V. r.0^c\o^x %>je\ ‘O 00 c°v'o>°( ^ * t.n^ Co' **•••• • • • « • « • • cw^o"- , a,*t y<°' f,U*p SC' o*s Friday, November 11, 1983 • • • •