home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- CRITICS' VOICES, Page 16
-
-
- Compiled by Andrea Sachs
-
-
- THEATER
-
- THE MERCHANT OF VENICE. Dustin Hoffman plays Shylock, warts
- and all, in a shimmering Broadway production transferred intact
- from a sold-out London run. A tough ticket worth every penny
- and every minute of the wait.
-
- CLOSER THAN EVER. This musical sampler from lyricist
- Richard Maltby Jr. and composer David Shire is an off-Broadway
- charmer deftly performed. Special joys: character songs that
- actors Brent Barrett and Sally Mayes render as richly nuanced
- as one-act plays.
-
- MYSTERY OF THE ROSE BOUQUET. Jane Alexander and Anne
- Bancroft play a nurse and a patient in a taut psychological
- study by Manuel Puig, author of The Kiss of the Spider Woman,
- at the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles.
-
- RADIO CITY MUSIC HALL CHRISTMAS SPECTACULAR. Like its
- Rockefeller Center neighbors -- a towering fir tree and a
- glistening ice rink that displays the endlessly watchable
- gyrations of amateur skaters -- this New York City
- bring-the-family pageant is one of the grandest holiday
- traditions in the U.S. Satisfyingly the same from year to year,
- yet spruced up just enough, the fast-moving script mingles
- Charles Dickens, Santa Claus and Tchaikovsky's Nutcracker with
- carols and hymns. The climactic Nativity scene features camels,
- donkeys and other live animals. This year's production serves
- up dazzling special effects and opulent costumes, as well as the
- show-stopping, high-kicking Rockettes. If at times the narration
- suggests the entire world is Christian, or should be, the
- overwhelming message is joy and goodwill.
-
- MUSIC
-
- LINDA RONSTADT: CRY LIKE A RAINSTORM, HOWL LIKE THE WIND
- (Elektra/Asylum). Ronstadt takes lessons learned from her three
- successful albums of pop standards and puts them to work on the
- kind of material she did so well in the '70s: confessional
- ballads and songs of love gone amiss. The cathedral-filling
- orchestral arrangements threaten the fragile structure of some
- songs, but Ronstadt's singing (superbly accompanied on four
- tracks by New Orleans soulster Aaron Neville) keeps everything
- on course.
-
- ART
-
- THE NEW VISION: PHOTOGRAPHY BETWEEN THE WORLD WARS, The
- Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City. This smartly
- conceived show, which introduces the Metropolitan's new Ford
- Motor Company Collection of 20th century photographs, highlights
- the camera's courtship of pure form. Through Dec. 31.
-
- THE INTIMATE WORLD OF ALEXANDER CALDER, Cooper-Hewitt
- Museum, New York City. A delightful demonstration that for
- family and friends the sculptor could make practically anything
- out of anything. Through March 11.
-
- MOVIES
-
- VALMONT. Maybe it's time to call it a day for film remakes
- of Les Liaisons Dangereuses, Pierre Choderlos de Laclos' novel
- of sexual gamesmanship among 18th century French aristocrats.
- Director Milos Forman and screenwriter Jean-Claude Carriere have
- not so much adapted this deliciously nasty tale as they have
- embalmed it.
-
- IMMEDIATE FAMILY. Glenn Close and James Woods desperately
- want a child; Mary Stuart Masterson is about to have one.
- Director Jonathan Kaplan's comedy-drama finds sympathetic
- laughter in everyone's burdens and opportunities. The tears come
- later.
-
- BOOKS
-
- THE PEOPLE AND UNCOLLECTED STORIES by Bernard Malamud
- (Farrar, Straus & Giroux; $18.95). This posthumous volume
- includes an unfinished novel and 16 short stories never before
- collected in book form. The novel is little more than a sketch
- of what might have been, but the stories -- grim and comical in
- equal measure -- offer poignant reminders of Malamud's gift and
- his stature as an American master.
-
- THE STORYTELLER by Mario Vargas Llosa (Farrar, Straus &
- Giroux; $17.95). A Peruvian narrator, who strongly resembles his
- creator, remembers a college classmate in Lima during the 1950s
- and ponders the possibility that his old friend has become a
- bard to an endangered Amazonian tribe. This ruminative novel
- about storytelling and its place in society shows a world-class
- author in splendid form.
-
- TELEVISION
-
- MACY'S THANKSGIVING DAY PARADE (NBC, Nov. 23, 9 a.m. EST).
- Might as well face it -- she's here to stay. Today show usurper
- Deborah Norville joins terminally jovial weatherman Willard
- Scott to narrate this year's float extravaganza.
-
- FIFTY YEARS OF TELEVISION: A GOLDEN CELEBRATION (CBS, Nov.
- 26, 9 p.m. EST). Stop us before we kill: yet another survey of
- "classic moments" from TV's past. Hosts include Walter Cronkite,
- Carl Reiner and Miss Piggy.
-
- THE AMERICAN EXPERIENCE (PBS, Tuesdays, 9 p.m. on most
- stations). What's this? A documentary series featuring
- real-life news footage rather than actors re-creating it? That
- is an admirably quaint notion that has spawned some fascinating
- programs. Former Harlem Congressman Adam Clayton Powell is
- profiled this week.
-
-