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- CRITICS' VOICES, Page 10
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- MOVIES
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- KING RALPH. John Goodman is the Ralph Kramden of the '90s
- -- but he enjoys being a slob. Have fun watching him raise a
- royal ruckus as a Las Vegas lounge singer who unaccountably
- becomes King of England. Writer-director David Ward sustains
- this merry, guileless fable with near perfect pitch.
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- THE HARD WAY. It's not just cars that collide in John
- Badham's exhilarating action comedy. It's fantasy vs. reality,
- laid-back movie actor vs. angry cop, the easy readings of
- Michael J. Fox vs. the bust-a-blood-vessel intensity of James
- Woods -- in short, it's L.A. vs. N.Y.
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- TELEVISION
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- TWIN PEAKS (ABC, returning March 28, 9 p.m. EST). From
- breakthrough hit to waning cult phenomenon in barely a year.
- David Lynch's chronicle of life in the mysterious northwest
- returns for what may be its final six-episode run.
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- HOUSE OF CARDS (PBS, debuting March 31, 9 p.m. on most
- stations). A Tory insider (Ian Richardson) plots to eliminate
- his rivals in a post-Thatcher government. This four-part
- Masterpiece Theater import, based on a novel written before
- Maggie's demise, is the savviest political drama since A Very
- British Coup.
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- CTV: THE COMEDY NETWORK (starting April 1). Two struggling
- cable channels -- the Comedy Channel and HA! -- pool their
- laughs and launch a new network. Happily, they've salvaged
- Mystery Science Theater 3000.
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- MUSIC
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- MARY CHAPIN-CARPENTER: SHOOTING STRAIGHT IN THE DARK
- (Columbia). In this exceptional country-and-western debut,
- Carpenter sounds almost too fragile for the genre; but her
- lyrics have a poignancy that's positively resilient, and her
- tunes are gossamer.
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- CHARLES ROSEN PLAYS CHOPIN (Globe). Rosen has been the
- victim of his own encyclopedic brilliance. Because he's so
- gifted a musicologist, linguist and aesthetician, critics
- invariably dismiss his piano playing as too "cerebral." Yet the
- warmth, elasticity and insight he brings to these 24 mazurkas,
- the richest expression of Chopin's genius, should put such
- nonsense to rest.
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- THEATER
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- A ROOM OF ONE'S OWN. Virginia Woolf's feminist manifesto
- breathes life, and fire, in Eileen Atkins' superb one-woman
- show off-Broadway.
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- FORGIVING TYPHOID MARY. Oscar winner Estelle Parsons stars
- in a thoughtful drama-cum-history-lesson at the George Street
- Playhouse in New Brunswick, N.J.
-
- BOOKS
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- SCUM by Isaac Bashevis Singer (Farrar, Straus & Giroux;
- $19.95). The Nobel laureate turns in a typically rollicking,
- hectic tale about a man who returns to his native Poland in
- 1906 looking for affectionate women. He finds plenty, or
- perhaps they find him.
-
- WAR FEVER by J.G. Ballard (Farrar, Straus & Giroux; $18.95).
- These 14 odd, unsettling tales again prove that Ballard, widely
- known as a writer of science fiction, is really a surrealist.
- Once viewed through his prose, the world seems a strangely
- different place.
-
- ART
-
- THE WEST AS AMERICA: REINTERPRETING IMAGES OF THE FRONTIER,
- 1820-1920, National Museum of American Art, Washington. For
- Manifest Destiny, the positive perception of the American
- frontier was the greatest advertisement for going West. This
- exhibition of 164 paintings, sculptures, graphics and
- photographs explores the effect such imagery had and the
- misconceptions it spread. Through July 7.
-
- BRITISH PHOTOGRAPHY FROM THE THATCHER YEARS, Museum of
- Modern Art, New York City. Mean pictures of a mean place, taken
- by five photographers whose cameras were loaded with acid. A
- blistering portrait of years during which the haves had it all,
- the have-nots did not, and parts of England's green and lovely
- land were as bleak as tar pits. Through April 28.
-
- ETCETERA
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- NEW ORLEANS JAZZ AND HERITAGE FESTIVAL. More than 3,000
- artists gather in the Crescent City for one of the world's
- greatest celebrations of jazz, blues, R. and B., Zydeco and
- gospel music, headlined by Miles Davis, B.B. King, John Lee
- Hooker, Wynton Marsalis, Harry Connick Jr. and the Neville
- Brothers. April 26 through May 5.
-
- DANCE THEATER OF HARLEM. After a six-month layoff, this
- splendid troupe is back at Washington's Kennedy Center. The
- dancers are on an Alberto Ginastera kick, with two premieres
- set to the Argentine composer's scores, one by Billy Wilson,
- the other by Glen Tetley. March 26 through April 7.
-
- KOSHER VINTAGES
-
- YOU DON'T HAVE TO BE JEWISH -- to paraphrase a once popular
- rye-bread ad -- to enjoy kosher wines these days. Yes, those
- heavy, sweet, cut-it-with-a-knife concoctions made from Concord
- grapes are still around, but they now share shelf space with
- a growing array of dry, sophisticated table wines, from Sonoma
- County Chardonnays to Italian Chiantis, that may be certified
- kosher for Passover but are eminently drinkable all year.
- Kosher wines must be made by Sabbath-observant Jews under
- rabbinical supervision to ensure that nothing forbidden by
- dietary laws contaminates the process. The best can match their
- nonkosher counterparts in competitions. The March 31 issue of
- the Wine Spectator, surveying 54 kosher wines, notes that
- California Cabernet Sauvignons by Hagafen and Gan Eden scored
- 91 and 90 (out of 100) in blind tastings. The Herzog-label
- California and European varietals are usually reliable. A
- newcomer to watch is Teal Lake Cellars: its 1990 Mendocino
- Pinot Noir has the youthful brightness of a Beaujolais.
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- By TIME'S REVIEWERS/Compiled by William Tynan.
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