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- CRITICS' VOICES, Page 24
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- MOVIES
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- THE SEARCH FOR SIGNS OF INTELLIGENT LIFE IN THE UNIVERSE.
- As a play starring monologist Lily Tomlin, this was a solo
- dazzle and a terrific human comedy. Through a dozen or so
- characters, it provided a panoramic 20-year history of American
- womanhood. Her film version displays volcanic emotions,
- precisely explored.
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- BARTON FINK. The work of two gifted brothers, Joel and
- Ethan Coen (Raising Arizona, Miller's Crossing), this was the
- first film ever to accomplish the hat trick at the Cannes
- festival -- Best Picture, Best Director and Best Actor. The
- Coens revise the legend of innocent talent corrupted by
- Hollywood.
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- ART
-
- HOMECOMING: WILLIAM H. JOHNSON AND AFRO-AMERICA,
- 1938-1946. National Museum of American Art, Smithsonian
- Institution, Washington. These 80 paintings showcase one of
- America's most important but neglected painters. His works
- portray black experience, from the cotton patches to dance halls
- to city streets, in a primitive, folk-inspired style. Through
- March 1. A splendidly illustrated companion book, Homecoming:
- The Art and Life of William H. Johnson (Rizzoli; $45), provides
- a comprehensive look at his life and work.
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- BOOKS
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- HARLOT'S GHOST by Norman Mailer (Random House; $30). This
- huge (1,300-plus pages) novel starts off briskly with some
- Mailerian melodrama and metaphysics and then bogs down in a
- recapitulation of one man's life in the CIA from the middle
- 1950s to the early '60s. It ends with the three most ominous
- words in recent American literature: "TO BE CONTINUED."
-
- SCARLETT by Alexandra Ripley (Warner Books; $24.95). This
- gilding-the-cornflower sequel to Margaret Mitchell's Gone With
- the Wind is at last in the bookstores, amid megabucks of hype.
- And frankly, my dear, it's not worth a damn.
-
-
- TELEVISION
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- CHILDHOOD (PBS, debuting Oct. 14, 8 p.m. on most
- stations). This seven-week series takes a broad cross-cultural
- look at the process of growing up. If the psychological insights
- don't win you over, the cute babies will.
-
- THE WORLD SERIES (CBS, starting Oct. 19, 8 p.m. EDT). CBS
- has thus far taken a beanball in the ratings with its expensive
- baseball package. But a seven-game Series would go a long way
- toward making the network feel better.
-
- DYNASTY: THE REUNION (ABC, Oct. 20 and 22, 9 p.m. EDT).
- And while the Series unfolds, ABC and NBC are
- counterprogramming with a slew of female-oriented movies and
- mini-series. Here, the Carringtons and Colbys return for a fresh
- segment of Lifestyles of the Rich and Once-Famous.
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- MUSIC
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- SOUTHSIDE JOHNNY AND THE ASBURY JUKES: BETTER DAYS
- (Impact). Juke-joint Nirvana, with Southside smoking his way
- through 11 smash tunes, mostly written by Little Steven Van
- Zandt, and holding his own with some heavy company, including
- Jon Bon Jovi and Bruce Springsteen. When Springsteen joins
- Johnny and Little Steven to sing It's Been a Long Time, you can
- hear friendship recalled and solidified -- and a touch of
- history being made.
-
- THE ALLEN TOUSSAINT COLLECTION (Reprise). The king of New
- Orleans R. and B. -- one of the great all-time musical figures,
- in fact, in a town where legends come around as regularly as
- lunchtime. This is a package of 16 solid sides, including From
- a Whisper to a Scream and What Do You Want the Girl to Do?,
- culled from his middle-period, major-label work. The very
- definition of funk; if you don't know Toussaint, your ears have
- never been baptized.
-
- MISA FLAMENCA (Nimbus). Guitarist Paco Pena has adapted
- the texts of the Roman Catholic liturgy and set them to the
- extroverted melodic and rhythmic emotions of flamenco to compose
- this earthy, passionate Mass. His musicians and singers
- charismatically express love of freedom, resignation under
- oppression and an unconquerable faith that soars from an
- anguished soul.
-
-
- THEATER
-
- INHERIT THE WIND. What better way to celebrate the Bill of
- Rights' 200th anniversary than to revive this drama about the
- clash between freedom of speech and freedom of religion in
- Tennessee's 1925 "monkey trial" about evolution? Staged five
- times a weekend through Dec. 15 in an actual courtroom of
- Philadelphia City Hall, it features Malachy McCourt as William
- Jennings Bryan, and Jason Miller, Pulitzer-prizewinning author
- of That Championship Season, as his adversary, Clarence Darrow.
-
- OUR LADY OF THE TORTILLA. When he's not winning Emmys for
- writing Sesame Street, Luis Santeiro is a shrewd satirist of
- fellow Cuban Americans, as in this off-Broadway piece about a
- woman's religious vision arising from scorch marks on her
- dinner.
-
-
- ETCETERA
-
- SPACESHIP EARTH (Worldlink). Tales of deforestation and
- ozone depletion set to the music of Sting, the B-52s and Ziggy
- Marley. This superb TV primer on the threats to planet Earth,
- now available on home video, is simple enough for children to
- understand and compelling enough to make their parents pay
- attention as well.
-
-
- RETURN TO THE FORBIDDEN PLANET
-
- Maybe the college professors think Shakespeare produced
- only 37 plays, but this off-Broadway lark is the Bard's
- long-lost science-fiction rock musical. Small of scale and free
- of spirit, it features the obligatory mad monster, fair maiden,
- evil scientist and heroic space pilot. Sci-fi junkies will
- recognize the plot from the 1956 MGM flick Forbidden Planet,
- which the more literary-minded in turn saw as an amalgam of
- Shakespeare's The Tempest and dime-store Freud. (The killer
- demons were escapees from the id of a man who, like most sci-fi
- antiheroes, tried to play God.) Writer-director Bob Carlton
- blended that cult-movie narrative with snippets of dialogue,
- some in blank verse (and occasionally in blank mind), and a
- stompfest of '50s and '60s rock standards (Shake, Rattle and
- Roll; Great Balls of Fire; Born to Be Wild). London bestowed on
- it the Olivier award, passing over Miss Saigon and Andrew Lloyd
- Webber's Aspects of Love. Now the song and story are back where
- they were born, in the U.S.A., and it all makes for a
- delightfully silly evening.
-
-
- By TIME'S Reviewers. Compiled by Andrea Sachs.
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