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- REVIEWS, Page 73SHORT TAKES
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- VIDEO: Celebrity Breakdown
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- In the last years of his life (he died of cancer in 1984),
- comedian Andy Kaufman developed an inexplicable obsession with
- professional wrestling. First he satirized the macho sport by
- wrestling women, crowning himself the Intergender Champion. Then
- he launched a feud with Memphis, Tennessee, wrestler Jerry
- Lawler, and things began to get out of hand. He was seriously
- injured more than once, goaded the "hick" Memphis fans with
- increasing venom and began to worry even his closest friends.
- ANDY KAUFMAN: I'M FROM HOLLYWOOD (Shanachie Home Video), an
- extraordinary account of Kaufman's ring exploits, chronicles
- what was either the shrewdest put-on in comedy history or a
- brilliant performer's mental breakdown. Your call.
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- MUSIC: Bow vs. Baton
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- Where did Mstislav Rostropovich go wrong? The retiring
- music director of Washington's National Symphony was one of
- America's cold war trophies, but his baton work has only rarely
- matched his peerless way with the cello. Consider a new
- Italian-issued CD (Intaglio) with Gennady Rozhdestvensky and the
- London Symphony, recorded in Carnegie Hall in 1967. Rostropovich
- sails through Tchaikovsky's Pezzo Capriccioso and digs into
- Prokofiev's Concertino, written for the cellist and completed
- by him after Prokofiev's death in 1953. But the glory of the
- recording is a magisterial reading of Elgar's Cello Concerto;
- Rostropovich's probing musical mind goes to the heart of this
- sorrowful masterpiece and brings balm to its unquiet soul.
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- MUSIC: Backwoods Beau
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- He has the sort of voice you might hear wafting pure and
- plaintive from the holding tank in a county jail. With the face
- of an orphaned angel, STACY DEAN CAMPBELL offers no fuss, no
- frills, just righteous white-boy blues ("Would you run away from
- me/ If I came crawlin' back to you"). His debut album, Lonesome
- Wins Again, is 10 sticks of slow-fused Nashville dynamite from
- his own pen and those of top country songsmiths Don Schlitz and
- Jamie O'Hara. The best tunes, including Baby Don't You Know and
- I Won't, take you two-stepping back to 1957 -- rockabilly prime
- time -- when Marty Robbins, the Everly Brothers and Don Gibson
- were teaching city kids how country sounds: like a murmur from
- the echo chamber of a broken heart.
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- BOOKS: Defense Slash, Shabby Secrets
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- THE GENERAL'S DAUGHTER, by Nelson DeMille (Warner Books;
- $21.95), a gaudy, cinematic thriller, is two or three levels
- better than routine, partly because the author's sentences march
- well. That never hurts. The setting is a dormant military base
- in Georgia just after the Gulf War. Officers worried about their
- careers are trying to look busy. Paul Brenner, a criminal
- investigator for the Army, is there to sort out the bizarre sex
- murder of Captain Ann Campbell, daughter of the base's
- commanding general and, not coincidentally, lover of virtually
- every man on the general's staff. Brenner, digging out secrets
- that are brutal, sexist and shabby, carries out his duties with
- a "bleep you, sir" style that onetime soldiers will cherish.
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- THEATER: Dream Mythology
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- Nothing makes an opera more classical than a mythological
- subject, and nothing makes it more modern than psychology.
- Playwright Craig Lucas (Prelude to a Kiss) and composer Gerald
- Busby fuse the two in ORPHEUS IN LOVE, an off-Broadway retelling
- of the Orpheus legend -- mingling hints of Oedipus -- in which
- the characters are music teachers or pupils and hell is inter
- woven with high school. The sound, too, (by a string quartet,
- piano and two bassoons) hovers between melodic-traditional and
- staccato-modern. Kirsten Sanderson's witty staging deftly evokes
- dreams -- their fleeting lyricism, transposed logic, sexual
- ambiguity and poignant blend of chagrin and nostalgia.
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