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- CRITICS' VOICES, Page 24
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- THEATER
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- THE PLAYBOY OF THE WESTERN WORLD. How near in time, and how
- far in world view, is the village life portrayed in J.M.
- Synge's masterpiece about ignorant peasants and their perverse
- notions of heroism, all of it a sly satire on the yearning of
- oppressed colonies to break free. The finest Irish drama of the
- 20th century, it is discerningly performed by the Abbey Theater
- of Dublin, at Washington's Kennedy Center through Oct. 21, then
- in St. Louis, Tucson and Ann Arbor, Mich.
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- BUDDY. The London hit, based on the ordinary life and
- surefire songs of short-lived rock genius Buddy Holly, plays
- at San Francisco's Golden Gate Theater through Oct. 14, prior
- to Broadway, with an American, Paul Hipp, reprising his West
- End title role.
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- ENDANGERED SPECIES. In The Garden of Earthly Delights and
- subsequent pieces, Martha Clarke has proved herself the most
- original and visually imaginative director working the fertile
- border between dance and drama. Her new work, inspired by the
- environmental debate, debuts at the Brooklyn Academy of Music.
- Through Nov. 4.
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- ART
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- AN UNCERTAIN GRACE: THE PHOTOGRAPHS OF SEBASTIAO SALGADO,
- San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. The first U.S. exhibition
- for the Brazilian-born Salgado, a onetime economist who took
- up photography to document life in developing nations. Whether
- in a Peruvian village, an open-pit gold mine in Brazil or a
- refugee camp in Ethiopia, Salgado sees not just hardship,
- though he sees a great deal of that, but also the immemorial
- underpinnings of life -- tradition, community and work -- that
- give suffering a meaning. Through Dec 2.
-
- CHILDE HASSAM: AN ISLAND GARDEN REVISITED, National Museum
- of American Art, Washington. The islands are the Isles of
- Shoals, off the New Hampshire coast, and the garden was the
- notable cultivation of journalist-poet Celia Thaxter. Both are
- memorably captured here by Hassam (1859-1935), America's
- foremost impressionist. Through Jan. 6.
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- TELEVISION
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- NIXON (PBS, Oct. 15, 8 p.m. on most stations). A rich
- selection of old news clips, plus fresh comments from such
- former aides as John Ehrlichman and Charles Colson, make this
- three-hour American Experience documentary on the
- ex-President's life worth an evening.
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- VOICE OF THE PLANET (TBS, Oct. 15-19, 8:05 p.m. EDT).
- William Shatner plays an author who talks with the spirit of
- Earth (the voice of Faye Dunaway) about the planet's ecological
- problems. Ted Turner's environmental passion takes an odd
- mystical turn in this week-long series.
-
- DANIELLE STEEL'S KALEIDOSCOPE; DANIELLE STEEL'S FINE THINGS
- (NBC, Oct. 15, 16). NBC's alternative to post-season baseball:
- a double dose of glossy trash.
-
- BOOKS
-
- SPY SINKER by Len Deighton (HarperCollins; $21.95). The
- master plotter winds up his six-volume espionage saga about
- British agent Bernard Samson and his spying wife Fiona, whose
- defection to East Germany is finally explained.
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- PLEDGING ALLEGIANCE by Sidney Blumenthal (HarperCollins;
- $22.95); ROAD SHOW by Roger Simon (Farrar, Straus & Giroux;
- $19.95); SEE HOW THEY RUN by Paul Taylor (Knopf; $22.95). Three
- observers of the '88 presidential campaign agree that
- Republicans win the big ones because they manipulate voters'
- emotions and juggle images better than Democrats.
-
- MOVIES
-
- AVALON. If gemutlichkeit were a Yiddish word, it would
- describe the tone that writer-director Barry Levinson aims for
- in this bustling memoir of his immigrant grandparents in
- Baltimore. But the family portrait is too soft-focus, and the
- residue is schmaltz.
-
- THE KRAYS. In the 1950s and '60s, these Cockney twins ruled
- the London underworld with silken sadism. Peter Medak's brisk
- docudrama understands the mom-obsessed brutality of the Krays.
- The sun set on the British Empire, and the vermin came out to
- play.
-
- ETCETERA
-
- COMING OUT OF THEIR SHELLS. There is more to the Teenage
- Mutant Ninja Turtles than movies, TV, comics, toys, candy and
- juice drinks. Now they have their own concert tour, destined
- for 40 cities through 1991 (this week: Milwaukee, Oct. 10-14;
- next stop: Detroit, Oct. 17-21). The 90-min.
- audience-participation show features many live-action
- characters familiar to turtle fans, including the metal-cloaked
- villain Shredder. With humor aimed at parents as well, this
- could be a perfect first concert for kids. Ready for
- pre-schoolers dancing in the aisles?
-
- WOUNDED KNEE: LEST WE FORGET, Buffalo Bill Historical
- Center, Cody, Wyo. One hundred years after the army massacred
- more than 145 Sioux at Wounded Knee, S. Dak., an exhibit of
- photo murals, weaponry and Ghost Dance garments illuminates the
- tribe's life and religion in the late 19th century and the
- reasons behind the killings. Through Nov. 30.
-
- STIRRING UP THE BORSCHT
-
- JACKIE MASON: BRAND NEW. Well, not really. The Brillo-haired
- rabbi turned comic has been doing the same basic Borscht Belt
- act for decades, but he seems to have a tireless capacity for
- self-resuscitation. A year after a sitcom flop on ABC, a much
- publicized racial slight of New York City Mayor David Dinkins,
- and an embarrassing paternity suit, Mason is on the comeback
- trail, windmilling in three directions. His latest book, How
- to Talk Jewish, is to be published in January. His weekly talk
- show debuts on cable in December with a novel solution to the
- perennial problem of finding good guests: there won't be any,
- just Mason schmoozing for half an hour. And this week Mason
- returns to Broadway with an all-new monologue that is bound to
- revisit such accustomed topics as sex, politics and Mason's all
- but patented specialty, the undeclared cultural clash between
- Christians and Jews. All in all, Mason seems to be enacting a
- phrase from the subtitle of his book: How to Get Everything You
- Ever Wanted Through Pure Chutzpah.
-
-
- By TIME's Reviewers. Compiled by Andrea Sachs.
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