The (fertility Center °f OREGON WOMEN HELPING WOMEN MAKE A DREAM COME TRUE. BECOME AN EGG DONOR. Since 1978, The Fertility Center of Oregon has helped many women become mothers. You can help us to continue to change lives by becoming an egg donor for infertile couples. Procedures are done in a local clinic over a six-week period, requiring 8 to ten visits. Donors are compensated $2,500 for their contribution. If you are a healthy woman aged 21-31 and want to help make a dream come true, call 683-1559 or visit our Web site at www. fertilitycenteroforegon.com. Friday Night Flicks Best of the 31 st Northwest Film & Video Festival The Best new work from filmmakers in Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Montana, Alaska, and BC Canada PLC 180, 7 pm, FREE the Films of Pedro Almodovar May IV Humidiflyers with Takimoto Seattle’s Humidiflyers are a funk folk rock explosion with hip hop flow and jazz precision. Agate Hall, h 808120 May 20-22 35 Annual Free Willamette Valley Folk Festival at EMU Folk, World Beat, R & B, Food, Crafts, and more! Festival program guide at www.eugeneweekly.com/wvff/ VOLUNTEERS NEEDED stage crew, info booth, and production assistants. Shifts available throughout the day May 20-22: Fun - Food - Free T’s. Sign-up at Cultural Forum office, EMU Suite #2 or call 346-4373 http://culturalforum.uoregon.edu The production leaves Kafka's stories of alienation for personal interpretation BY JOSH LINTEREUR PULSE REPORTER The 20th century broughtto us by Franz Kafka was one filled with the anxiety and alienation the Czech writer saw in an increasingly indecipherable world. Though the writer’s core the matic content has become synony mous with the term "Kafkaesque," his writing stands as some of literature's most abstruse works by eluding defini tive interpretation. Staying true to the enigmatic na ture of the influential author's work was the underlying approach to the University Theatre's "Kafka Para bles/' an original production derived from more than 30 of Kafka's short stories and diary excerpts. "We don't want people walking away thinking there's only one way to imagine these stories," director John Schmor said. "We'd be limiting our audience's ability to follow the story imaginatively." Opening Friday, the show is the collaborative effort of students and faculty who began meeting atthe beginning of winter term to assem ble a selection of the author's writ ings around visual images, music and movement. Underthe guidance of choreogra pher Walter Kennedy, an assistant professor of dance atthe University, the production emphasizes bodies, space and the collective presence of the actors on stage, an aesthetic more often found in dance. "You don’t want to classify it," Kennedy said of the show, which avoidsthe recognizable devices of a play. "We've had to deal with things in a very different way than you would with an existing script." Instead, the show weaves together a series of Kafka's stories, with sparse dialogue taken nearly verba tim from his texts. Kennedy choreo graphed scenes that bookend each of Lauren Wimer | Senior photographer From left: Sergio Martinez, Teresa Koberstein, Katie McEntee, Kyle Warren and Alexander Dupre star in the University Theatre original production of "Kafka Parables." the shows two acts. Though Kafka's short stories pro vide the backbone of the production, Schmor said calling the show a series of vignettes would be misleading. "It's a series of overlapping images and texts that begin to tell a larger story," he said. "The first act is really about life in a city, and in particular, modern alienation in a city. In the sec ond act you see what happens to that city: A kind of police state emerges, people are being arrested for no rea son, you can'tfind lawyers, a lot of people are in prison, and the next thing that happens is war." Though Kafka's writings were about anxiety and alienation after the turn ofthe 19th century, those themes can carry even greater weight with contemporary audiences. "If anything, postmodern urban life is even more alienating," Schmor said. "Back in Kafka's day, people still took walks. There weren’t cell phones, e-mails and all of these other distancing devices." Despite these overtthemes, "Kafka Parables" remains constructed in the tradition of German playwright Bertolt Brecht, whose techniques chal lenged audiences to experiencethe aterin a different way. "Brecht's aesthetic is that you don't give audiences full-blown allu sions because then they stop tmnKing, bcnmorsaia. usiiKeine way children can immediately and imaginatively fill in the gaps by the sparest kind of performance. And they interact with the performance more imaginatively." As a devised work hinging on the collective efforts of the cast and pro duction crew, audiences will only get one chance to experience this original production. "It has never been seen and it will never be seen again," Schmor said. The University Theatre's produc tion of "Kafka Parables" will be per formed at the Robinson Theatre on May 13-14,19-22, and 27-28. From May 19-22, audience members can donate to the fund assisting the reha bilitation efforts of former University student Noah Smith, who was se verely injured in a car accident more than two years ago and is making progress toward walking again. Tickets are $5 for University stu dents, $12 for general admission, $9 for senior citizens, University faculty and non-University students, and $7 for youth. Tickets are available atthe EMU and atthe University Theatre Box Office in the Robinson Theatre on the night of the performances. Free parking is available in the Uni versity lot atthe corner of East 11th Avenue and Kincaid Street. joshlintereur@dailyemerald.com I 1097 Willamette St. Eugene, OR 541-345-6465 you didn’t go to ^