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- REVIEWS, Page 69SHORT TAKES
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- TELEVISION: And Now, Heeere's . . . Larry?
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- The line between real life and TV life gets smudged
- further in HBO's new comedy series, The Larry Sanders Show.
- GARRY SHANDLING, a former Tonight guest host, plays the host of
- a Tonight-style talk show. Each episode begins with Larry's
- opening monologue, which sounds just like Garry's real
- monologues, and brings on real-world guests like Carol Burnett.
- The twist is that we get to peek behind the scenes, where all
- is phoniness and petty bickering. It's show-biz satire of the
- dryest, most in-jokish sort but undeniably funny. Shandling and
- a guest try to schmooze as the closing credits roll. "Just
- pretend like you're talking to me," he tells her. Fine, Garry,
- and we'll pretend TV comedy isn't running into a
- self-referential dead end.
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- CINEMA: A Novel Seduction
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- The premise is almost high concept. A young writer
- (Fabrice Luchini) has just been jilted. A friend proposes that,
- as a delicious act of revenge on all women, the fellow should
- choose a prospect (Judith Henry), seduce her, then leave her and
- write a best seller about his experience. But Christian
- Vincent's LA DISCRETE is no frivolous American sex comedy; it
- is French, in the best sense of the word. With breathless poise,
- the script by Vincent and Jean-Pierre Ronssin juggles cruelty
- and gaiety, revealing modern man as a ruthless appraiser
- auditioning women for his imaginary harem. Hollywood wouldn't
- know what to do with a film so airy, so grave. Poetry is what
- gets lost in transatlantic remakes.
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- BOOKS: Angst and Insights
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- It is 1882 in Vienna, and the fog is nearly as thick as
- Schlag on the strudels. Friedrich Nietzsche and Dr. Joseph
- Breuer, an early associate of Freud's, are striking an odd
- bargain. The physician will try to cure his patient's migraine
- attacks; the philosopher will treat the doctor's deep-rooted
- angst. Soon their roles reverse: healer becomes sufferer and,
- voila!, the psychoanalytic revolution begins. In WHEN NIETZSCHE
- WEPT (Basic Books; $20), psychiatrist Irvin D. Yalom imagines
- an encounter between two real people who never met. The novel
- is strewn with italic sentences to highlight his characters'
- head-smacking insights. Still, their relationship carries a
- certain poignancy as they discover their common roots: delusion
- and loneliness.
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- MUSIC: Playing It Straight With Carmen
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- CARMEN is quintessential opera that virtually performs
- itself. So irresistible are its melodies, so forceful is the
- drama, so primal the emotions, that it's hard for even an inept
- production to miss. Over the years, Bizet's masterpiece has been
- adapted, updated, mutilated, so it is refreshing that the New
- York City Opera has a new version (performances till November)
- that plays it straight. It helps to have a Carmen who dominates
- the stage, and Sharon Graham, a young American, scores high.
- With a fluid, supple mezzo, she revels in the gypsy girl's fatal
- craving for freedom and her dance toward death, but she avoids
- phony flourish. More will be heard from Graham, starting with
- a PBS broadcast of Cavalleria Rusticana on Sept. 30.
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- MUSIC: Doesn't He Shine?
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- "I ain't California pretty,/ I can't survive the Great
- White Way," sings WAYLON JENNINGS in Too Dumb for New York City,
- Too Ugly for L.A., the title cut from his potent new album of
- barroom sermons. Yet the Last Outlaw of country music will get
- along somehow. His voice, after four decades of late nights and
- one-nights, has the moral authority of a man who's found mellow
- wisdom on hard roads. He tells us, in The Hank Williams Syndrome
- Is Dead, that it's better to trust an artist's songs than to
- imitate his misspent life. In Didn't We Shine? he administers
- balm to all lost loves: "But I've long ago forgiven you/ For
- what you did or didn't do." With these witty, poignant songs,
- Jennings proves that the country heart is equidistant from the
- brain and the gut. Keep on Waylon, old man.
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