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- CRITICS' CHOICE, Page 12
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- TELEVISION
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- MISS UNIVERSE PAGEANT (CBS, April 15, 9 p.m. EDT). Dick
- Clark and Leeza Gibbons are this year's hosts, and new onscreen
- technology will show viewers up-to-the-minute scores as the
- contestants are winnowed. What is this, a beauty pageant or a
- game show?
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- PROFIT THE EARTH (PBS, April 16, 8 p.m. on most stations).
- Public TV launches a yearlong campaign of environmental
- programming with this hour-long special that examines
- free-enterprise solutions to the pollution problem.
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- THE OUTSIDERS (SUNDAYS, 7 p.m. EDT, FOX). TV has discovered
- a new genre: working-class romanticism. First came Elvis, with
- its nostalgic retelling of the King's early rise from
- blue-collar boredom to Top 40 stardom. Now Francis Coppola has
- turned his 1983 movie about Oklahoma teenagers (based on the
- S.E. Hinton novel) into a lyrical, lovingly crafted TV series.
- Class conflict is the theme: the three Curtis brothers,
- scraping along together after the death of their parents, are
- part of a wrong-side-of-the-tracks crowd known as the Greasers.
- Their snooty, letter-sweatered antagonists are called the Socs
- (that's So-shes). The show pushes its James Dean angst a bit
- hard ("What do I got? Nothin'! Just another greaser goin'
- nowhere"). But the milieu is sharply etched, and rarely have
- the disaffected been so affecting. The best drama series yet
- from TV's hottest network, Fox.
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- BOOKS
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- DECEPTION by Philip Roth (Simon & Schuster; $18.95). The
- master deceiver again teases his fans with a fictive fan dance
- about a writer named Philip who may or may not be having an
- affair with a married woman who may or may not be a character
- in a novel in prog ress. The woman he lives with doesn't buy
- it, but readers who appreciate first-rate talent will be
- thoroughly taken in.
-
- OH, THE PLACES YOU'LL GO! by Dr. Seuss (Random House;
- $12.95). Eighty-six-year-old Dr. Seuss continues to rhyme with
- reason in book No. 43, an illustrated philosophy lesson about
- bouncing back that contains the sage advice, "Be sure when you
- step./ Step with care and great tact/ and remember that Life's/
- a Great Balancing Act."
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- THEATER
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- GET ANY GUY THRU PSYCHIC MIND CONTROL OR YOUR MONEY BACK.
- The title may promise the impossible, but it captures the
- playful tone in this tale of Southern sisters who dream about
- Nashville stardom and of the men who derail them. At Act I
- Arena Theater in Framingham, Mass.
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- PRELUDE TO A KISS. The best play yet in response to AIDS
- never mentions the word but asks whether love is really forever
- when the young, beautiful person you married is suddenly a
- dying old man. Writer Craig Lucas and director Norman Rene have
- an off-Broadway winner, on its way to Broadway, and Mary-Louise
- Parker is the most fetching dizball leading lady since Judy
- Holliday.
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- OTHER PEOPLE'S MONEY. The robust, raunchily funny depiction
- of a hostile corporate takeover drew the limo-and-luxury
- investment bankers off-Broadway and is now on tour, currently
- in Chicago. If, in the changed economy, this is no longer a
- bulletin from the front, it's at least an instructive look back
- in anger.
-
- FEAST OF FOOLS. Clowning through the centuries, British-born
- Geoff Hoyle is by turns a medieval jester, a fly-eating
- Arlecchino and two dueling waiters. Imaginative and skillful
- physically, if a bit labored verbally, Hoyle peaks in an
- inspired bit of off-Broadway lunacy proving that, when it comes
- to dancing, three legs are better than two.
-
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- MOVIES
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- THE HANDMAID'S TALE. Set in a political and sexual
- dictatorship of the near future, this anti-fundamentalist fable
- carries a heady pedigree: screenplay by Harold Pinter from the
- Margaret Atwood novel. But a fine cast is zombified under
- Volker Schlondorff's drab direction.
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- HENRY: PORTRAIT OF A SERIAL KILLER. Running into Henry is
- like winning a satanic lottery; you die, at random. John
- McNaughton's icy essay in depravity, made for peanuts in
- Chicago four years ago, forces the moviegoer to stare into the
- face of evil.
-
- PRETTY WOMAN. Pretty ugly. 'Nuff said.
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- MUSIC
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- COWBOY JUNKIES: THE CAUTION HORSES (RCA). The Junkies are
- still laying down their special blend of Thorazine country --
- slow, dreamy and spiritual -- but the novelty's worn dime-thin.
- Not so fresh as last year's exemplary debut, but the band still
- has mystique to burn and mystery to spare. Wait till next year.
-
- THE NOTTING HILLBILLIES: MISSING . . . PRESUMED HAVING A
- GOOD TIME (Warner Bros.). Mark Knopfler, of Dire Straits, and
- three mates of similar musical inclination cook up a relaxed
- set of old-time guitar music and dusty folk. A sort of
- after-hours version of the Traveling Wilburys, with a solid
- Knopfler original (Your Own Sweet Way) nestled among the
- well-roasted chestnuts.
-
- JAZZ PIANO (Smithsonian Collection). A four-CD (six-LP)
- compendium of outstanding keyboard artists recorded between
- 1924 and 1978. Virtually every American jazz pianist of note
- -- 42 in all, ranging from Jelly Roll Morton to Keith Jarret
- -- is represented in these 68 solo tracks. As if a gold mine
- of great music were not enough, the scholarly notes by Dick
- Katz, Martin Williams and Francis Davis make this a must-have
- for serious jazz aficionados.
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- Compiled by Andrea Sachs.
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