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- <text id=92TT0077>
- <title>
- Jan. 13, 1992: Critics' Voices
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Jan. 13, 1992 The Recession:How Bad Is It?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CRITICS' VOICES, Page 7
- </hdr><body>
- <p>MOVIES
- </p>
- <p> FATHER OF THE BRIDE. In 1992 the middle class deserves a
- good cry over something besides the recession, so why not a
- wedding? Well, because this soppy comedy is pretty lame, despite
- the efforts of Steve Martin (Dad) and the easy charm of Diane
- Keaton (Mom).
- </p>
- <p> AT PLAY IN THE FIELDS OF THE LORD. In these politically
- correct days, most epic journeys into exotic lands are guilt
- trips, pinning blame for the world's woes on the evil white
- male. Director Hector Babenco's turgid trek into the Brazilian
- rain forest accomplishes this and more: it makes the viewer feel
- guilty for wasting three hours and seven bucks.
- </p>
- <p> GRAND CANYON. The season's Nice Try Award goes to Lawrence
- Kasdan. As director and co-writer of this rambling comedy-drama,
- he tackles big issues (race relations, infidelity, mid-life
- malaise, crime) with some soaring ingenuity and the help of an
- attractive cast (Kevin Kline, Danny Glover, Mary-Louise Parker).
- Grand Canyon goes all weird and wussy at the end, but for the
- first hour or so it addresses real issues and feelings--the
- preoccupations of most people who work outside Hollywood.
- </p>
- <p>TELEVISION
- </p>
- <p> DAYS OF OUR LIVES: ONE STORMY NIGHT (NBC, Jan. 10, 8 p.m.
- EST). Just before presenting the annual Soap Opera Digest
- awards, NBC tries something new: a special prime-time episode
- of its popular daytime serial. Hold your breath: if it scores
- well in the ratings, nighttime may soon be awash in soapsuds.
- </p>
- <p> LAST WISH (ABC, Jan. 12, 9 p.m. EST). Maureen Stapleton is
- a woman suffering from cancer, and Patty Duke is the daughter
- who must decide whether to help her die, in this unflinching TV
- movie based on Betty Rollin's book.
- </p>
- <p> FONDA ON FONDA (TNT, Jan. 13, 8 p.m. EST). Now that she's
- part of the family, Jane has to do something to earn her keep.
- In this Turner network special, she narrates a moving,
- well-assembled tribute to her dad's movie career.
- </p>
- <p>MUSIC
- </p>
- <p> FRANK SINATRA: A TOUR DE FORCE (Bravura). A live bootleg
- recording of a 1959 concert in Melbourne, Australia, with the
- Red Norvo Quintet. It's not only Sinatra's generic greatness
- that makes this one a must. He seldom worked with small groups,
- and the agility of Norvo and friends really gives the Chairman
- room to move. And when Sinatra moves, the earth does too.
- </p>
- <p> THE BEACH BOYS: GOOD VIBRATIONS/SMILE (Sphinx). A
- reconstruction on CD of rock's most famous aborted masterpiece,
- Brian Wilson's extravaganza of California karma, surf culture
- and the infinite head trip.
- </p>
- <p>THEATER
- </p>
- <p> TWELFTH NIGHT. Gender bending is at the center of the
- Bard's richest comedy, so director Neil Bartlett takes the idea
- to a wry extreme at Chicago's Goodman Theater, casting a man as
- the cross-dressing woman and women in most of the parts meant
- for men.
- </p>
- <p> THREE SISTERS. Edward Herrmann and Linda Hunt head an
- all-star cast that Broadway producers would envy in Chekhov's
- tragedy of a family thwarted, but the staging is way
- off-Broadway--50 miles off--at Princeton's McCarter Theater.
- </p>
- <p> THE PHILANTHROPIST. Two decades ago, Christopher Hampton
- was proclaimed a budding genius for this drawing-room
- tragicomedy about a man who accomplishes only evil in trying to
- do good. Apart from Les Liaisons Dangereuses, Hampton's promise
- remains unfulfilled. New Haven's Long Wharf Theater revisits his
- breakthrough text.
- </p>
- <p>BOOKS
- </p>
- <p> THE TRIUMPH & TRAGEDY OF LYNDON JOHNSON: THE WHITE HOUSE
- YEARS by Joseph A. Califano Jr. (Simon & Schuster; $25).
- L.B.J.'s closest aide on domestic policy during the mid-'60s
- delivers a hard, pure nugget of the 36th President. Califano
- provides graphic reports of the bullying and lying that
- ultimately consumed the Texan, but also shows the larger purpose--the civil rights campaign, the legislative battles on health,
- education and housing--that struggled within the tortured man.
- </p>
- <p> WOMEN ON TOP by Nancy Friday (Simon & Schuster; $22). In
- her latest attempt to capture America's sexual zeitgeist,
- Friday maintains that women's erotic fantasies spurn comfortable
- settings, clean sheets and non-felons in favor of German
- shepherds, enemas and shackles. The author may have intended to
- provide an aphrodisiac with her pseudoscientific survey, but it
- comes off with all the zing of an affidavit--and one that
- lacks the ring of truth.
- </p>
- <p>ETCETERA
- </p>
- <p> TURANDOT. Puccini's grandest, chilliest opera gets a new
- production at the Lyric Opera of Chicago that ought to warm the
- pageantry up considerably. Sets are by artist David Hockney, who
- usually finds the animation and wit in any project he
- undertakes. Performances Jan. 11 through Feb. 2.
- </p>
- <p> I BELIEVE: EVANGELICALISM IN SOUTHERN URBAN CULTURE, the
- Valentine Museum, Richmond. An exploration of the roots and
- influences of Evangelicalism in politics, culture and mores
- south of the Mason-Dixon Line. Through Sept. 7.
- </p>
- <p> MAHLER REDUX. Gustav Mahler was a peripheral figure until the early
- 1960s, when Leonard Bernstein combined his directorship of the
- New York Philharmonic with a CBS recording contract and his own
- magnetism to translate a deep personal identification into an
- enduring Mahler revival. In 1985 Bernstein undertook to
- re-record the nine symphonies, plus the Adagio from the
- unfinished 10th, live for Deutsche Grammophon, using three
- virtuoso orchestras: the New York Philharmonic, the Vienna
- Philharmonic and Amsterdam's Concertgebouw. Result: this
- definitive 13-disc boxed set. Bernstein finds the universal in
- Mahler's exquisite, often tortured, self-consciousness; the
- metaphysical beneath the moody, vivid surfaces. In struggling to
- understand fate, Mahler found despair, strength, ineffable loss
- and radiant affirmation. Yet it is ultimately in the music's
- unpredictable juxtapositions, its intensifications and easings,
- its shifts in perspective, its encompassing grasp of powerful
- and disparate emotions, that we find Mahler--and ourselves.
- </p>
- <p>By TIME'S Reviewers/Compiled by Linda Williams.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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