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- CRITICS' VOICES, Page 18
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- TELEVISION
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- AFTER THE WARMING (PBS, Nov. 21, 8 p.m. on most stations).
- Environmental documentaries continue to pour forth like acid
- rain. This one is sparked by a lucid, witty host, James Burke
- (Connections), who "looks back" from the year 2050 to see what
- disasters global warming has wrought.
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- BROKEN BADGES (CBS, debuting Nov. 24, 8 p.m. EST). Stephen
- Cannell, creator of The A-Team, concocted this series about a
- crime-fighting team of cops with emotional problems, among them
- a kleptomaniac and an excitable ventriloquist. And they still
- manage to get in car chases.
-
- ART
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- TITIAN: PRINCE OF PAINTERS, National Gallery of Art,
- Washington. A partial but still magnificent sampling of the
- work of the 16th century's unrivaled topographer of male power
- and female beauty -- a portraitist who brought the projection
- of character to new heights. Through Jan. 27.
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- THE ROMANTIC VISION OF CASPAR DAVID FRIEDRICH: PAINTINGS AND
- DRAWINGS FROM THE U.S.S.R., the Art Institute of Chicago. The
- flood of treasures from Russian collections continues, here
- with a trove of haunting, otherworldly works by the great
- German mystic Friedrich (1774-1840), loaned by the Hermitage
- and Pushkin museums. Through Jan. 6.
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- MUSIC
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- BOBBY KING AND TERRY EVANS: RHYTHM, BLUES, SOUL & GROOVES
- (Rounder). Give these guys top marks in all those categories.
- This is neo-traditional music done the hard way: sublimely.
- Some superlative backup too from guitarist Ry Cooder and
- keyboard player Spooner Oldham.
-
- DVORAK: SYMPHONY NO. 9 (Telarc). Could Andre Previn conduct
- electricity with both feet in a bucket of water? Probably not.
- Still a fine jazz pianist, Previn remains a resolutely
- unimaginative conductor whose performances are habitually
- marked by a dull rhythmic sense and colorless orchestral
- playing. Here, the Los Angeles Philharmonic sleepwalks through
- Dvorak's symphonic masterpiece.
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- JELLY ROLL MORTON: THE JELLY ROLL MORTON CENTENNIAL -- HIS
- COMPLETE VICTOR RECORDINGS (Bluebird/RCA). This jaunty, saucy
- pianist with a diamond-studded tooth and an ego as big as Mount
- Rushmore claimed to have invented jazz. He didn't quite do
- that. But he did compose, arrange and perform some of the
- greatest jazz ever played, as this digitally remastered 5-CD
- set, spanning the years 1926-39, amply demonstrates.
-
- THEATER
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- SIX DEGREES OF SEPARATION. John Guare's cocktail of a comedy
- -- part Manhattan, part Molotov -- skewers countless foibles
- while musing on the chief irony of urban life: how closely
- related people are, yet how distant they feel. Stockard
- Channing stars in this transfer, from off-Broadway to on, as
- a moneyed matron stirred by vague (and then graphic)
- discontents.
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- LIFE DURING WARTIME. Keith Reddin's mordant comedy at
- California's Berkeley Rep depicts war outside the front door:
- burglars, muggers and other paranoia inducers who make
- homeowners yearn for security, and alarm salesmen who prey on
- their fears.
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- BOOKS
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- POSSESSION: A ROMANCE by A.S. Byatt (Random House; $22.95).
- Two young British scholars, one male, one female, investigate
- a possible affair between two long-gone Victorian poets. This
- novel, which has already won two major international fiction
- prizes, proves that a serious, intricate book can also be a
- page turner.
-
- CASEY by Joseph E. Persico (Viking; $24.95). It has been
- said that CIA director William Casey "believed in the American
- flag, the Catholic Church, and nothing else." This hard-eyed
- biography suggests that history might have been altered for the
- better if the man behind Iranscam had also had faith in the
- Constitution.
-
- MOVIES
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- DANCES WITH WOLVES. If there must be a New Age western, let
- the Indians be the good guys. Let it be full of horizons
- unvexed by civilization. And let it star Kevin Costner, the
- '90s' avatar of Gary Cooper. Let Costner direct it too; he
- won't let a good old genre down.
-
- MARKED FOR DEATH. He can't act -- don't ask him -- but
- Steven Seagal is the new Brahmin of brawn. His latest essay in
- mindless movie mayhem, in which our sullen hunk of a hero
- breaks the will (also the fingers and spines) of some Jamaican
- drug dealers, is one of the season's big hits. See it and
- wonder: Why?
-
- BAXTER. A vicious bull terrier (who growls the narration)
- finally finds an owner meaner than he is. Jerome Boivin's
- minimalist French thriller is no carnival of canine violence.
- It rarely goes for the jugular, yet it drains the viewer
- bloodless.
-
- ETCETERA
-
- BIG APPLE CIRCUS. A one-ring circus that is both
- breathtaking and witty. The traditional panoply of acrobats,
- elephants and high-wire artists is presented with a
- sophisticated theatrical flair -- to the delight of kids and
- adults alike. In Manhattan through Jan. 6.
-
- GREAT GRAPPA
-
- Back in the days when you went to a joint with checkered
- tablecloths and candles stuck in straw-covered Chianti bottles
- to order spaghetti with red sauce, grappa was the
- throat-searing firewater that il padrone sometimes served with
- espresso if he was in a very good mood. Just as pasta has gone
- upscale and pricey, so has this Italian peasant brandy, usually
- colorless, that is distilled from grape husks and skins after
- the juice has been pressed to make wine. These days, many of
- Italy's top vintners are aging and refining grappa and infusing
- it with herb and fruit flavors so that its raw edge has a
- satiny finish. At fashionable American trattorias it has become
- an acceptable alternative to Delamain or 12-year-old Macallan
- as a postprandial sip. Many top-of-the-line grappas are sold
- in designer decanters that add to their, alas, considerable
- price. Expect to pay anywhere from $25 for Ceretto's grappa
- (even in a plain bottle) to $90 or more for Nonino's best. Some
- California wineries, including Santa Cruz's Bonny Doon, make
- a plausible domestic version.
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- By TIME's Reviewers. Compiled by Andrea Sachs.
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