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- REVIEWS, Page 69SHORT TAKES
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- MUSIC: A Battalion-Size Musical Force
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- They have lifted their voices in sacred and secular song
- ever since their wagon trains pulled up to the Great Salt Lake
- in the summer of 1847. That once small choir soon became one of
- the world's finest battalion-size forces (325 singers), reason
- enough for Sony Music to reissue some of the MORMON TABERNACLE
- CHOIR'S top hits. The five-CD set includes hymns, Civil War
- songs and American standards. The choir's ringing harmonies and
- bright tones are perfectly suited to chorales (Sheep May Safely
- Graze, with its heavenly shifting of voices) or patriotic
- marches (The Caissons Go Rolling Along, sung with a suitable
- military fervor). Some show tunes, though, are overly
- orchestrated and could do without the distracting backup.
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- TELEVISION: Beach-Front Bauble
-
- A dead body turns up on the beach near Lisa Hartman's
- ritzy house at 2000 MALIBU ROAD, and one of her new roommates
- complains, "I thought you said this was a safe neighborhood."
- Not so safe, maybe, but trashy enough for the pilot of this CBS
- series to place first in last week's Nielsens. Hartman plays a
- former hooker who shares her pad with a lawyer (Jennifer Beals
- -- remember Flashdance?), an actress (Drew Barrymore -- remember
- E.T.?) and the actress's scheming sister (Tuesday Knight --
- remember silly stage names?). Director Joel Schumacher launched
- the series with a lot of dumb style; it's just the sort of
- flashy bauble that could bring prime-time soaps back into
- fashion.
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- BOOKS: Big Apple Comics
-
- Animated only begins to describe Tama Janowitz's style, as
- readers of Slaves of New York and A Cannibal in Manhattan have
- already discovered. THE MALE CROSS-DRESSER SUPPORT GROUP (Crown;
- $20) continues the author's carom through the Big Apple. This
- time it's a send-up of bizarre life-styles as seen through the
- hungry eye of Pamela Trowel, advertising director of Hunter's
- World magazine. Pam is miscast not only in her career but also
- as a sex object and surrogate mom of Abdhul, a stray who looks
- like a child but talks like a grownup. The plot? Forget about
- it. The characters? Instantly forgettable. It's Janowitz's
- hyper-real prose servicing a cartoon vision that still marks her
- as a talent in search of an adequate subject.
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- CINEMA: Serious Fun In the Swamp
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- Venue (Louisiana) and history (a corrupt past) evoke the
- Long family; sexual carelessness mixed with liberal idealism
- recalls the Kennedys. Together these touches give the tale of
- the Fowler clan of STORYVILLE a certain vibrancy. The story line
- -- in which the family scion (a well-cast James Spader) runs for
- Congress, investigates a murder in which he could be implicated
- and sorts out the circumstances surrounding his father's suicide
- -- is twisty and full of colorful characters and weird behavior.
- Director Mark Frost, co-creator of Twin Peaks, has made a
- good-looking movie, combining intellectual ambition with darkly
- glamorous conflicts between private demons and public trust.
- Storyville is good, serious fun.
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- CINEMA: Goryville
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- The David Lynch circus is back. While Mark Frost is happy
- to leave the town he helped make a prime-time legend, his
- ex-partner is still living there, with all the warped
- ingenuousness of a rural kid who tells his friends, "Let's put
- the freak show on right here! Again!" TWIN PEAKS FIRE WALK WITH
- ME, Lynch's way-too-late prequel to the 1990 TV series, relates
- the last days of teen queen Laura Palmer (Sheryl Lee). After an
- agonizing first half-hour designed to empty the theater, Lynch
- unleashes his patented perfervid style, puts the familiar dwarfs
- and feebs on display and elicits a nicely horrifying turn from
- Lee. But the magic has died: nothing seems older than a
- two-year-old fad on the comeback trail. How ya gonna keep 'em
- down in Twin Peaks after the Zeitgeist's gone?
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