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- CRITICS' VOICES, Page 12
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- TELEVISION
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- BLIND FAITH (NBC, Feb. 11, 13, 9 p.m. EST). A man whose wife
- has been shot in their automobile later becomes the chief
- suspect in her murder. Any resemblance between this two-part
- docudrama, based on Joe McGinniss's book, and the Boston Stuart
- case is coincidental -- and lucky timing for NBC.
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- CITY (CBS, Mondays, 8:30 p.m. EST). Valerie Harper's new
- series is a pleasant surprise: a savvy comedy about a municipal
- troubleshooter fighting city hall from the inside.
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- THE LOVE BOAT: A VALENTINE VOYAGE (CBS, Feb. 12, 9 p.m.
- EST). The show that once defined TV fluff sails again in a
- two-hour movie. No copies of Proust on board.
-
- MOVIES
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- TREMORS. Kevin Bacon fights off an attack of 30-ft.-long
- earthworms in this crowd-pleasing sci-fi flick. Shrewdly
- written, energetically directed and played with high comic
- conviction, Tremors is bound to become a cult classic.
-
- STORY OF WOMEN. In 1943 the Vichy government of France
- condemned Marie-Louise Giraud to the guillotine for the crime
- of performing abortions. In this eloquent work, Marie (Isabelle
- Huppert) is neither a monster nor a savior, but a microcosm of
- her amoral country.
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- BOOKS
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- VINELAND by Thomas Pynchon (Little, Brown; $19.95). In his
- first novel since Gravity's Rainbow (1973), a major writer
- turns his attention to all manner of American zaniness and
- produces a soaring, comic and visionary tale.
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- THE QUINCUNX by Charles Palliser (Ballantine; $25). At 788
- pages, this first novel seems designed for a more leisurely
- age. It was. The author's faithful pastiche of Victorian
- fiction -- with its careful plotting and moral punctiliousness
- -- miraculously springs to life.
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- MUSIC
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- UB40: LABOUR OF LOVE II (Virgin). Ten sweet covers of reggae
- classics by a formidable British band whose respect for solid
- island soul is surpassed only by its unique skill in
- recapturing the magic of the originals.
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- THE INNOCENCE MISSION: THE INNOCENCE MISSION (A&M).
- Pleasing, slightly spacey sounds that are tinged with '60s folk
- rock and psychedelia, then spruced up with shades of Joni
- Mitchell ("I showed him my notebook/ The underside of my soul")
- and a little jolt of feminism. Overwrought -- but promising.
-
- BUNK JOHNSON: THE KING OF THE BLUES (American Music). For
- New Orleans jazz purists, this may be the most eagerly awaited
- reissue of the past three decades. These classic 1944 sides --
- first recorded on acetate and now available on compact disc --
- capture the remarkable tone and timing of the man who was Louis
- Armstrong's early idol and whose comeback in the '40s helped
- launch a traditional-jazz revival.
-
- KENNY DAVERN: I'LL SEE YOU IN MY DREAMS (Musicmasters). If
- tone, swing and dexterity are the prime criteria for jazz
- clarinet playing, color Kenny Davern a virtuoso. Hot (Royal
- Garden Blues) or cool (My Melancholy Baby), Davern gives a
- dazzling performance that shows why he's such a standout among
- the post-Goodman generation.
-
- THEATER
-
- KING LEAR. Anglo-Irish wunderkind Kenneth Branagh, acclaimed
- for his demythologizing film of Henry V, makes his U.S. stage
- debut as director and co-star of a similarly populist Lear, at
- Los Angeles' Mark Taper Forum.
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- UNCLE VANYA. San Diego's Old Globe Theater finds all the
- humor and all the pain in a superb staging of Chekhov.
-
- THE ART OF SUCCESS. British playwright Nick Dear and a
- top-notch off-Broadway cast find echoes of everything from
- Thatcherism to the Mapplethorpe photo flap in a roistering
- portrait of satirical 18th century artist William Hogarth.
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- ART
-
- THE ART OF THOMAS ROWLANDSON, Frick Collection, New York
- City. Imagine an 18th century English comic novel come to life,
- and you have Rowlandson's watercolors and caricatures: rakish,
- bemused, sharply wrought. Through April 8.
-
- MONET IN THE '90S: THE SERIES PAINTINGS, Museum of Fine
- Arts, Boston. The impressionist's meditations on such emblems
- of French landscape and culture as poplars, the cliffs at
- Dieppe and Rouen Cathedral. Through April 29.
-
- THE AGE OF NAPOLEON. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
- City. This extravagant effort, covering the period from 1789
- until Napoleon's final defeat in 1815, is the best show the
- Costume Institute has mounted in years. There are garlands of
- lovely frocks, especially in high-waisted "Empire" style, but
- the real fascination lies in the men's gear. The rude outfits
- of the sans-culottes lasted only briefly. Soon the legendary
- textile factories of Lyons disgorged the finest velvets and
- silks to burnish triumphant commanders. Embroidered golden bees
- turn upon practically everything -- including stockings. But
- the man responsible for all this luxe, the Emperor, had
- relatively simple tastes. His famous plain gray overcoat, the
- black bicorne (which he wore sideways, instead of front to
- back) and even his field tent are on display. They are the
- great draws of the exhibition. Until April 15.
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- Compiled by Andrea Sachs.
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