home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- CRITICS' VOICES, Page 13
-
-
- MUSIC
-
- ENO/CALE: WRONG WAY UP (Opal/Warner Bros.). Of course it's
- weird: 10 tunes that are part madman mumblings, part hip
- mantras. The music is spooky and melodic, however, and
- everything that seems strange at first starts very quickly to
- sound almost everyday -- if every day is like a dream.
-
- SHIRLEY HORN: YOU WON'T FORGET ME (Verve). Her voice is
- sultry, voluptuous, plaintive; her piano work both driving and
- delicate. Combine them with brilliant backing by the likes of
- Miles Davis and Wynton Marsalis (separate tracks, please), and
- you get one of the most exciting performances by a jazz singer
- since the heyday of the late Sarah Vaughan.
-
- HOWARD HANSON: SYMPHONIES NO. 3 & NO. 6 (Delos). Gerard
- Schwarz, one of America's most lucid and least hackneyed
- conductors, leads the Seattle Symphony and the New York Chamber
- Symphony in galvanizing interpretations of these ruggedly
- intense, expansive and unapologetically romantic compositions
- that bare Hanson's musical debt to Sibelius and Grieg.
-
- MOVIES
-
- THE GRIFTERS. Cold and merciless as an assassin's blade,
- this adaptation of Jim Thompson's 1963 novel traces the slug
- tracks of three con artists who play their deadliest tricks on
- one another. Anjelica Huston and Annette Bening make two
- splendid carnivores; John Cusack, as the man trying to tame
- them, naturally gets devoured.
-
- COME SEE THE PARADISE. Director Alan Parker may have
- intended this story -- about Japanese Americans interned during
- World War II -- as atonement for his factitious Mississippi
- Burning. The subject is compelling, but this time Parker left
- out the drama.
-
- GREEN CARD. In his first big Hollywood film, French
- superstar Gerard Depardieu cheerfully goes slumming with sex,
- lies, and videotape's Andie MacDowell. Peter Weir's comedy
- offers a little charm, less story and virtually no movie.
-
- TELEVISION
-
- THE COLORED MUSEUM (PBS, Feb. 1, 9 p.m. on most stations).
- George C. Wolfe's off-Broadway satire of black racial
- stereotypes makes its TV debut in a Great Performances
- production starring Danitra Vance and Loretta Devine.
-
- SUNDAY BEST (NBC, debuting Feb. 3, 7 p.m. EST). Better (or,
- at least, cheaper) programming through recycling: Carl Reiner
- is host of a weekly variety show that will feature, among other
- comedy segments, highlights from last week's NBC shows.
-
- SARAH, PLAIN AND TALL (CBS, Feb. 3, 9 p.m. EST). Glenn Close
- plays a mail-order mother, circa 1910, who moves West to help
- a widowed farmer (Christopher Walken) take care of his two
- children. Another huggably homespun Hallmark Hall of Fame
- drama, enhanced by two sincere performances.
-
- THEATER
-
- ABSENT FRIENDS. Mary-Louise Parker, who made last year's
- most stunning Broadway debut as a seductively slow-spoken
- ingenue in Prelude to a Kiss, heads the off-Broadway cast of
- Alan Ayckbourn's dark comedy about suicide and fatal illness.
-
- THE WHITE ROSE. Hitler and the Nazi era continue to
- fascinate playwrights as a metaphor for evil, both in witless
- flops like off-Broadway's A Bright Room Called Day and in
- poignant efforts like this world premiere at San Diego's Old
- Globe.
-
- GUV: THE MUSICAL. If you've been missing Evan Mecham,
- Arizona's malaprop Governor who alienated practically everybody
- until his impeachment in 1988, you can savor again those Archie
- Bunkeresque remarks about gays, "pickaninnies" and Martin
- Luther King Jr. in this musical satire by Tempe's Mill Avenue
- Theater.
-
- ART
-
- HENRY OSSAWA TANNER, Philadelphia Museum of Art. The first
- major U.S. show devoted to Tanner (1859-1937), a pioneering
- black artist who fled American racial prejudice to live in
- Paris, where he won renown for his deeply human depictions of
- biblical scenes. Through April 14.
-
- PICASSO, BRAQUE, GRIS, LEGER: DOUGLAS COOPER COLLECTING
- CUBISM, Los Angeles County Museum of Art. More than 80
- representative works acquired by a friend of the artists,
- ranging from Picasso's Three Figures Under a Tree (1907-08) to
- Fernand Leger's 1936 painting Composition. Jan. 31 to April 28.
-
- BOOKS
-
- PATRIMONY by Philip Roth (Simon & Schuster; $19.95). The
- trick of this account of how the author cared for his dying
- father is that there is no trick, only a masterly demonstration
- of narrative control and emotional clarity that can evoke
- laughter and tears -- sometimes simultaneously.
-
- DICKENS by Peter Ackroyd (HarperCollins; $35). An
- old-fashioned narrative biography that attempts to understand
- the great 19th century writer, both as an interpreter of his
- times and as one of the most unlikely literary geniuses of any
- time.
-
- RED BLUES
-
- A grouchy cabdriver and a dissolute Jewish saxophonist
- strike up an uneasy friendship, with the cabby doggedly trying
- to reform the jazzman. TAXI BLUES doesn't sound like anything
- new, does it? The movie takes its story from Bertrand
- Tavernier's 1986 Round Midnight and its urgent, improvisatory
- spirit from a dozen John Cassavetes pictures. But Pavel
- Lounguine's drama is remarkable as the first (and perhaps
- last?) post-glasnost film from the Soviet Union. Lounguine
- proudly airs Russia's dirty laundry: the pervasive alcoholism,
- the anti-Semitism, the suspicion and self-destruction. Rock
- star Piotr Mamonov has a snaky charisma as the musician, and
- American tenor-sax legend Hal Singer blesses the project with
- his presence. At last May's Cannes Film Festival, Taxi Blues
- won the best-director prize. Today it has both news and
- nostalgic value. We can hear it wail, in a minor key, from the
- sweet and recent past: the early days of Soviet freedom, which
- seem only a prelude to the birth of the blues.
-
-
- By TIME's Reviewers. Compiled by Linda Williams.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-