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- CRITICS' CHOICE, Page 13
-
-
- MUSIC
-
- ELVIS COSTELLO: SPIKE (Warner Bros.). God's Comic, Stalin
- Malone, Miss Macbeth: even the titles sting. The songs are like
- an acid bath; no quarter given or expected.
-
- ROY ORBISON: MYSTERY GIRL (Virgin). This was g-oing to be
- Orbison's first original solo album in ten years; it turned out
- to be his farewell. A little slick, but at least one tune, She's
- a Mystery to Me (produced by U2's Bono), is the perfect
- valedictory.
-
- THE AMHERST SAXOPHONE QUARTET: BACH ON SAX (MCA Classics).
- Purists, beware! Your prejudice against unorthodox
- instrumentation could be shattered by this surprising set of
- Bach adaptations that has nothing gimmicky about it but the
- concept.
-
- ANDRES SEGOVIA: FIVE CENTURIES OF THE SPANISH GUITAR (MCA
- Classics). The master as you have never before heard him: 26
- digitally reissued performances, from 1952 to 1968, drawn from
- the works of ten Spanish composers.
-
- RADIO
-
- THE BECKETT FESTIVAL OF RADIO PLAYS (NPR, debuting April
- 2). Radio drama, alas, has largely gone the way of the
- gramophone. But National Public Radio is doing its bit this
- month to revive it with the U.S. premiere of five plays written
- for the medium by Samuel Beckett. Billie Whitelaw and David
- Warrilow star in the opener, All That Fall, about an aging woman
- meeting her blind husband at a railroad station. Following it,
- on successive Sunday nights: Embers, Words and Music, Cascando
- and Rough for Radio II.
-
- MOVIES
-
- HIGH HOPES. A dotty old woman fights to keep her home amid
- the crush of gentrification. Working with a cast that has
- helped improvise its roles, British director Mike Leigh creates
- a group portrait of characters who live and breathe and squawk
- their wayward humanity on the margins of Margaret Thatcher's
- England.
-
- ADVENTURES OF BARON MUNCHAUSEN. Lovers waltz in midair, a
- servant (Eric Idle) outruns a speeding bullet and the King of
- the Moon (Robin Williams) literally loses his head in this
- wonder-filled fantasy from Terry Gilliam, late of Brazil.
-
- NEW YORK STORIES. In this trio of vignettes, Francis
- Coppola belly flops with his tale about New York City rich kids.
- But two out of three ain't bad: Martin Scorsese's crafty sketch
- of a downtown painter and Woody Allen's comedy about the
- ultimate Jewish mother.
-
- BOOKS
-
- THE JOY LUCK CLUB by Amy Tan (Putnam; $18.95). A bright,
- sharp-flavored first novel on growing up ethnic in the U.S. The
- topic sounds familiar, but the Chinese spice added to this old
- recipe is invigorating and refreshingly true.
-
- FIRE DOWN BELOW by William Golding (Farrar, Straus &
- Giroux; $17.95). The last leaf of a trilogy begun back in 1980.
- An arrogant, young 19th century Englishman survives seaborne
- hardships to arrive in Australia -- and at some condition of
- self-knowledge.
-
- SELF-CONSCIOUSNESS by John Updike (Knopf; $18.95). A wry,
- haunting memoir by an author who decided while young that the
- printed word would disguise his flaws, only to learn that
- success leaves one painfully exposed.
-
- THEATER
-
- CAFE CROWN. This revival is not much of a play, but Anne
- Jackson, Eli Wallach and Bob Dishy head a splendid cast that
- adroitly and affectionately recalls the Manhattan heyday of
- Jewish theater.
-
- THE HEIDI CHRONICLES. Joan Allen's poignant playing turns
- writer Wendy Wasserstein's feminist cliches into a touching
- glimpse of baby boomers grown older if not wiser.
-
- ART
-
- LIKE A ONE-EYED CAT: PHOTOGRAPHS BY LEE FRIEDLANDER
- 1956-1987, Seattle Art Museum. Surprising perspectives on
- everyday images -- street scenes, jazz musicians, empty motel
- rooms, public monuments -- by a modern American master. Through
- May 7.
-
- TREASURES FROM THE FITZWILLIAM MUSEUM, National Gallery of
- Art, Washington. Highlights of the collection built up by
- British connoisseurs over two centuries at Cambridge
- University's Fitzwilliam, including paintings by Titian, Rubens
- and Delacroix, manuscripts, ceramics, sculpture and decorative
- arts. Through June 18.
-
- GUIDO RENI, 1575-1642, Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth.
- Underappreciated in the modern era, Reni is restored in this
- choice, 50-painting show to the high rank earlier centuries
- accorded him as luminous colorist and elegant classical
- stylist. Through May 14.
-
- RICHARD DIEBENKORN: WORKS ON PAPER, Los Angeles County
- Museum of Art. Some 180 works -- more than one-third of them
- never before publicly exhibited -- by a contemporary master in
- his first comprehensive show of drawings. Through May 7.
-
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