home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- CRITICS' VOICES, Page 12
-
-
- TELEVISION
-
- THE JOSEPHINE BAKER STORY (HBO, Mar. 16, 18). The first of
- two planned TV movies about the legendary chanteuse, who faced
- raced prejudice in America while winning acclaim in France.
- Star Lynn Whitfield flashes her bare breasts but provides few
- other clues to Baker's stage appeal.
-
- A SEASON OF GIANTS (TNT, Mar. 17, 18, 8 p.m. EST). The life
- and times of Michelangelo (British newcomer Mark Frankel) are
- the subject of this lush-looking, silly-sounding four-hour
- mini-series, which also gives us the skinny on the "eccentric"
- Leonardo (John Glover -- who else?), Pope Julius II (F. Murray
- Abraham), Raphael and Savonarola. In short, your basic Italian
- Renaissance docudrams.
-
- MOVIES
-
- THE DOORS. Jim Morrison, the satanic seraph of psychedelic
- rock, lighted his share of libidinal fires before his death in
- 1971, but is his story worth $40 million of somebody's money
- and 77 min. of your time? Not the way Oliver Stone's tells it,
- as a display of pop fame's wretched excess. That was evident
- back in the '60s; 1991 is no time to wallow in the mire.
-
- SLEEPING WITH THE ENEMY. A suave beast (Patrick Bergin)
- tracks down his abused wife (Julia Roberts) after she has faked
- her death and escaped his clutches. A good idea for a feminist
- thriller soon degenerates, under Joseph Ruben's direction, into
- a wheezy lady-in-distress melodrama. Paging Barbara Stanwyck.
-
- AY, CARMELA! Pan-European charmer Carmen Maura (Women on the
- Verge of a Nervous Breakdown) is a cabaret artiste caught in
- the crossfire of the Spanish Civil War. Director Carlos Saura
- makes all the obvious points, but Maura makes them shine like
- new truths.
-
- MUSIC
-
- STING: THE SOUL CAGES (A&M). Oh shut up. Maundering,
- egocentric speculations on spiritual anomie, all in polite
- tempos. There are occasional signs of life: the hit single All
- This Time shows Sting can still shake loose when he likes. He
- should make a habit of it.
-
- DION: BRONX BLUES: THE COLUMBIA RECORDINGS (1962-1965)
- (Columbia/Legacy). One of the greatest rock voices of any
- complexion, caught here, in transition, changing from the king
- of romantic, street-savvy doo-wop to being a kind of gentle
- bard of urban blues.
-
- VITAMIN L: EVERYONE'S INVITED (Lancaster
- Productions/Emeryville, Calif.) Are your kids too old for
- Sesame Street, but too young for Madonna? Give them a dose of
- Vitamin L, a wholesome pop-rock group of three teens and three
- grownups led by songwriter Jan Nigro. Their new album covers
- such serious matters as playground putdowns and pollution, but
- still has enough rhythm and soul to appeal to today's hip
- youngsters.
-
- THEATER
-
- MULE BONE. Famed among scholars of black literature as an
- intriguing might-have-been, this 1930 collaboration between
- Harlem poet Langston Hughes and fiction writer Zora Neale
- Hurston needed 61 years, and further tinkering, to make it to
- Broadway. The result, a fable set in a small Florida town, is
- vibrantly acted and full of charm, its dialectal richness
- enhanced by twangy Taj Mahal songs.
-
- THE SNOW BALL. Wasp laureate A.R. Gurney (The Cocktail Hour,
- Love Letters) is a shrewd chronicler of social class customs
- and conflicts in this Hartford Stage mounting (also to appear
- at San Diego's Old Globe) of a new play with music and dance
- adapted from his poignant novel. It shows the seductive folly
- of revisiting past pleasures -- for a generation that revives
- its youthful midwinter gala and for a pair of former partners,
- perfect on the dance floor but not off, reunited in a last
- bittersweet waltz.
-
- AND THE WORLD GOES ROUND. This cocktail of an off Broadway
- review tastes cynical, then sweetly sentimental, in classic Tin
- Pan Alley style. It honors a stellar team: composer John Kander
- and lyricist Fred Ebb (Cabaret, Chicago, The Rink, Kiss of the
- Spider Woman).
-
- ART
-
- COROT TO MONET: THE RISE OF LANDSCAPE PAINTING IN FRANCE,
- The Currier Gallery of Art, Manchester, NH. The lush greens and
- pastoral beauty of rural France are explored through the works
- of over 100 19th century Barbizon painters, including such as
- Daubigny, Millet and Pissarro. Through April 28.
-
- ISLAMIC ART AND PATRONAGE: TREASURES FROM KUWAIT, Kimbell
- Art Museum, Fort Worth, Tx. This show's 107 items --
- illuminated manuscripts, glazed pottery and jewel-encrusted
- metal work -- are a poignant reminder of the artistic heritage
- of one of the world's most turbulent regions. March 16 through
- May 12.
-
- ETCETERA
-
- PARSIFAL. On paper at least, it sings. Wagner's perennial
- Lenten draw is a specialty of James Levine, music director of
- the Metropolitan Opera, and for this year's cast, he has united
- the great Jessye Norman as Kundry and supertenor Placido
- Domingo in the title role of this new production. Performances
- through April 6.
-
- ROYAL BALLET. Though generally timid about touring,
- Britain's premiere troupe is venturing to Washington D.C. with
- Swan Lake, two Frederick Ashton classics and the company's 1989
- hit, The Prince of the Pagodas. March 12-24.
-
- SMEAR CAMPAIGN
-
- Here is the pseudo event not everyone has been waiting for:
- the publication of Bret Easton Ellis' controversial American
- Psycho (Vintage; $11), the sophomoric, overwritten satire of
- the yuppie '80s that contains the most gratuitous descriptions
- of sadistic murder and mayhem ever contained in a general trade
- novel. Simon & Schuster decided to surrender a $300,000 advance
- to Ellis and not publish his book after staff protests and
- press stories threatened risks greater than anticipated
- rewards. Snapped up at a bargain price by Random House for its
- Vintage division, the manuscript has undergone the editorial
- equivalent of liposuction. It is now leaner, meaner but not
- better. In fact, it is worse because the disgusting parts are
- easier to find. No plot or characterization has been inserted
- to mar the originality of the work's hostile infantilism.
- American Psycho still poses the challenging question: How much
- feces can a young writer smear on the wall before Mommy and
- Daddy really get angry?
-
-
- By TIME'S REVIEWERS. Compiled by William Tynan.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-