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- <text id=92TT1121>
- <title>
- May 18, 1992: Short Takes
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- May 18, 1992 Roger Keith Coleman:Due to Die
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- REVIEWS, Page 81
- Short Takes
- </hdr><body>
- <p>TELEVISION Angst in the Parking Lot
- </p>
- <p> You keep rooting for American Playhouse. The PBS series is
- television's only regular outlet for serious, original works of
- American drama. Too often, however, what you get is windy
- trifles like Mrs. Cage. Adapted from a one-act play by Nancy
- Barr, it stars Anne Bancroft as a housewife who, without
- apparent reason, shoots a woman in a supermarket parking lot
- following a violent robbery, then confesses the crime to a
- police lieutenant, played by Hector Elizondo. The drama consists
- almost entirely of a long, rambling, needlessly elusive dialogue
- in which the woman's motive is gradually revealed. Suffice it
- to say it has something to do with middle-aged married angst and
- the theme song from Rawhide.
- </p>
- <p>BOOKS Predictable Jabs
- </p>
- <p> Publishers sometimes rush a book into print to capitalize
- on a commercially hot author. Sometimes the tactic backfires.
- This is what happened to P.J. O'Rourke, whose last book,
- Parliament of Whores, a sidesplitting broadside at Congress, was
- a best seller last year. GIVE WAR A CHANCE (Atlantic Monthly
- Press; $20.95), a compendium of columns and random thoughts, has
- all the wise-guy wit we've come to expect from the fiercely
- traditional Rolling Stone columnist, but it feels old.
- O'Rourke's shots at American antiwar protesters, jabs at Arab
- sheiks and some predictable jokes about poorly stocked shelves
- in what was the Soviet Union give you the feeling you've read
- it all before. You have.
- </p>
- <p>MUSIC Reopening a Horn of Plenty
- </p>
- <p> For much of the past two decades, jazz singer SHIRLEY HORN
- abandoned the recording studio in favor of domesticity. But
- since signing with Verve in 1988, Horn, 58, has been making up
- for lost time, collaborating with her favorite musicians and
- recording her best work yet. Her latest release, Here's to Life,
- fulfills a lifelong ambition to record with composer-arranger
- Johnny Mandel. Elegantly orchestrated with strings and winds,
- plus Horn's delicate piano, the album features ballads, like
- the title track and Isn't It a Pity?, in which Horn's velvety
- voice virtually coos in the listener's ear. On other tracks,
- like the jaunty How Am I to Know?, a flirtatious Horn evokes
- glamorous couples swirling in imaginary stardust ballrooms.
- </p>
- <p>DANCE Rudy's New Gig
- </p>
- <p> The American Ballet Theater's production (Romeo and
- Juliet) was lovely, the music (Prokofiev) splendid, and the
- principal dancers (Laurent Hilaire and Sylvie Guillem)
- enchanting. But the roiling applause at Manhattan's Metropolitan
- Opera House went mainly to the man who was making his U.S. debut
- in the orchestra pit, RUDOLF NUREYEV. Now 54, the century's most
- celebrated male dancer has got a leg up on a new career as a
- conductor. Admirers who feared that he could not achieve so
- radical a transition without embarrassment may rest easy.
- Nureyev, who started conducting both ballet and stage
- performances with considerable success in Europe last year,
- demonstrated that he has all the right musical moves.
- </p>
- <p>CINEMA Ward Games
- </p>
- <p> Life in the paraplegic ward hasn't changed much since
- Marlon Brando and friends first showed us around in The Men 42
- years ago. The guys are still alternately bitter and brave, and
- they ultimately learn to bond with one another. Sex remains for
- them, of course, a scary and tragic issue. But if THE WATERDANCE
- has nothing new to say about its subject, at least it speaks in
- an engaging voice: soft, literate, modest. Probably because Neal
- Jimenez, its writer (and co-director with Michael Steinberg), is
- writing autobiographically, he is less concerned with
- melodramatic invention than he is with anecdotal truthfulness.
- The movie chooses irony over sentiment for its basic tonality,
- and is the better for that uncommercial choice.
- </p>
- </body></article>
- </text>
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