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- <text id=92TT1417>
- <title>
- June 22, 1992: Short Takes
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- June 22, 1992 Allergies
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- REVIEWS, Page 79
- Short Takes
- </hdr><body>
- <p> TELEVISION
- Putting a Scandal In Perspective
- </p>
- <p> Twenty years later, much about the exhaustively
- investigated Watergate affair remains a mystery. In a two-hour
- CBS documentary, WATERGATE: THE SECRET STORY, to be aired this
- Wednesday, Mike Wallace puts the scandal in perspective and
- elicits new facts from participants. Howard Hunt says a goal was
- to uncover illegal foreign funds going to the Democrats. Wallace
- reveals a memo from Nixon speechwriter Pat Buchanan urging use
- of "a sharp stick" to destroy Democrat Edmund Muskie, and Donald
- Segretti describes the "dirty tricks" used to accomplish that
- goal. Bob Woodward adds a few tiny details about "Deep Throat,"
- and the show concludes with the parlor game of guessing just who
- he might be.
- </p>
- <p> CINEMA
- Table Talk
- </p>
- <p> It's not that Spalding Gray didn't want to work on his
- novel, the MONSTER IN A BOX of this well-filmed monologue. It's
- that he can't resist interruption. So he totes the manuscript
- with him to Los Angeles (surviving earthquakes and agents), on
- a fact-finding mission to Nicaragua (seeing one of his party go
- mad) and to Moscow (enduring an unaccountable vodka shortage).
- He also deals with aids anxiety and other distractions. Ironic
- and self-deprecating (his own description), he's neither wildly
- comic nor deeply dramatic. He's more like a good dinner-table
- talker, an agreeable anecdotalist with a nice sense of the
- ridiculous. Oh, yes, somehow he finished the book. It's in the
- stores now.
- </p>
- <p> MUSIC
- Punkish Hunk
- </p>
- <p> The punkish hairdo, nose-tackle musculature and down-home
- insolence give BILLY RAY CYRUS the look of one of those
- roadhouse dudes Thelma and Louise ought to blast into the next
- county. But when this rockabilly baritone swivels out of his
- shirt while performing his sing-along smash, Achy Breaky Heart,
- the ladies wilt. In three months Cyrus, 30, has rocketed from
- nowhere (or the nearest thing: Flatwoods, Ky.) to No. 1 on the
- pop charts. Is this Elvis? Bruce? Actually, neither. Aside from
- Achy Breaky, Cyrus has only one memorable song -- the
- sour-grapes rouser Could've Been Me -- on his Some Gave All
- debut album. And even now he could use a charisma injection.
- But, hell, let Billy Ray enjoy his nine-days'-wonder status.
- It's nine days more than most people get.
- </p>
- <p> THEATER
- Embers of Resentment
- </p>
- <p> In seemingly every family, one adult child takes on an
- undue share of care giving for aged parents while another
- accepts only token responsibility lest it get in the way of his
- or her dreams. Although the moral issues involved might seem
- straightforward, Arthur Miller made them rich and intriguingly
- complex in THE PRICE, his 1968 tale of two brothers dividing the
- petty sticks of furniture that constitute their father's estate.
- The play returned to Broadway last week in an impeccable
- staging, with film veteran Hector Elizondo (Pretty Woman) giving
- the performance of his career as the resentful, duty-bound
- brother and Eli Wallach wringing every imaginable laugh from a
- tragicomic turn as an 89-year-old immigrant furniture dealer.
- </p>
- <p> BOOKS
- Little Lost Me
- </p>
- <p> There ought to be a shelf of books on Frances Lear's lurid
- life. Adopted by a vindictive mother and molested repeatedly by
- a stepfather, she later had three marriages (one to TV producer
- Norman Lear), countless affairs, numerous addictions and bouts
- of therapy. Yet she managed to climb the garment-industry
- ladder and found Lear's magazine. So why does THE SECOND
- SEDUCTION (Knopf; $19) seem so enervating at a mere 190 sparsely
- printed pages? For one thing, she never describes the horrors
- of drugs or the excitement of creating a magazine. For all her
- vaunted feminism, she is too absorbed in self-pity to make her
- story real or dramatic to others. Or the answer may be simpler
- and sadder: the eloquence needed to share a complex life was
- far beyond her capacity to write.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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