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- <text id=91TT2913>
- <title>
- Dec. 30, 1991: Critics' Voices
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Dec. 30, 1991 The Search For Mary
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CRITICS' VOICES, Page 12
- </hdr><body>
- <p> MOVIES
- </p>
- <p> HOOK. In this bloated fantasy, a middle-aged Peter Pan
- (Robin Williams) regains his youth battling a drawling Captain
- Hook (Dustin Hoffman). Steven Spielberg's zillionth reworking
- of his lost-children theme is a Spruce Goose of a movie: so
- big, so long, so pretty...it just can't fly.
- </p>
- <p> STAR TREK VI: THE UNDISCOVERED COUNTRY. The unseen star of
- this instant smash is Mikhail Gorbachev: his overtures to peace
- some years back inspired a parable of detente involving the
- Enterprise guys and the evil Klingon empire. Though William
- Shatner & Co. claim that this is the saga's last chapter, we'll
- bet they keep going until Willard Scott is wishing them all
- happy birthday. That would be about 1994.
- </p>
- <p> MY FATHER IS COMING. A middle-aged German (Alfred Edel)
- visits his renegade daughter in New York City and falls in with
- a liberated stripper (Annie Sprinkle, the porn star and
- performance artist). Monika Treut's rambling comedy could use
- more of the city's notorious juice and danger; her Manhattan is
- as drab as a Third World amusement park.
- </p>
- <p> TELEVISION
- </p>
- <p> ENTERTAINERS '91: THE TOP 20 OF THE YEAR (ABC, Dec. 26, 8
- p.m. EST). Those old rivals, the broadcast networks and cable,
- seem to be getting pretty cozy. This year-end special, with
- host Dennis Miller, has been produced for ABC by E!
- Entertainment Television. If you can't beat 'em...
- </p>
- <p> THE KENNEDY CENTER HONORS (CBS, Dec. 26, 9 p.m. EST).
- Washington's black-tie crowd pays tribute to another passel of
- show-business greats. This year's honorees are Gregory Peck, Roy
- Acuff, Broadway and film veterans Betty Comden and Adolph Green,
- the dancing Nicholas Brothers and choral director Robert Shaw.
- </p>
- <p> ASPEN (PBS, Dec. 30, 9 p.m. on most stations). Frederick
- Wiseman, the no-frills documentarian who has explored everything
- from hospitals to animal laboratories, gets a rare dose of
- fresh air in this 2 1/2-hr. look at the trendy Colorado retreat.
- </p>
- <p> MUSIC
- </p>
- <p> THE CHIEFTAINS: THE BELLS OF DUBLIN (RCA Victor). Is it
- too late for season's greetings? Not when they're as
- enterprising and altogether buoyant as this collection of
- Christmas songs by the great Irish traditional band, who augment
- their fiddles, harpsichord and Uilleann Pipes with vocal
- accompaniment by such diverse characters as Elvis Costello,
- Rickie Lee Jones and Marianne Faithfull. A real Christmas treat!
- </p>
- <p> ENYA: SHEPHERD MOONS (Reprise). Gaelic music of a
- different sort. Enya sounds like Sinead O'Connor after an
- overdose of chill pills; her songs seem, at first hearing, like
- the ideal background for stores that sell granola and wind
- chimes. But hang in. Enya mixes New Age with space age and Irish
- mysticism, and there is supple witchery here.
- </p>
- <p> STRIKE UP THE BAND (Nonesuch/Elektra). This Gershwin
- pseudo-operetta folded in tryouts in 1927 despite such standards
- as The Man I Love and the title song. Radically reconceived in
- 1930, it then featured I've Got a Crush on You and still funny
- satirical ditties. Neither book is good enough to hold the stage
- these days, but both scores are meticulously sung in a new
- recording, invaluable to musical buffs. A high spot: tap numbers
- that capture the clatter and swish of each individual shoe.
- </p>
- <p> THEATER
- </p>
- <p> PETER PAN. Critics scoffed when ex-gymnast Cathy Rigby
- dared to take on Mary Martin's showcase role, but she has proved
- herself a worthy successor--on national tour and, for two
- holiday seasons, on Broadway. The special effects will never
- compare with Hook, but the storytelling is sweeter and more fun.
- </p>
- <p> TWO SHAKESPEAREAN ACTORS. London loved U.S. writer Richard
- Nelson's semitrue story about rival Macbeths who sparked an 1849
- New York City riot. For the Broadway staging, now in previews,
- Brian Bedford and Victor Garber play the duo, one British and
- one American, one declamatory and the other psychological in
- style.
- </p>
- <p> BOOKS
- </p>
- <p> WOMEN ON TOP by Nancy Friday (Simon & Schuster; $22). In
- reviewing the responses to her latest questionnaire, Friday
- discovered that women are undergoing another sexual revolution.
- She notes that at the time of her 1973 tome, My Secret Garden,
- women fantasized about submission and about being victims of
- rape and other sexual offenses. Now they dream of being
- aggressors, and are "on top" in sexual posture and every other
- way.
- </p>
- <p> COMPLETELY MAD by Maria Reidelbach (Little, Brown;
- $39.95). For almost 40 years, American adolescence has been
- incomplete without a case of acne or a subscription to Mad
- magazine. This bright chronicle explains why the latter, at
- least, is true. While Alfred E. ("What--Me Worry?") Neuman has
- watched two generations age, the sophomoric magazine has made
- the best of what its creator considered "a corrupt society."
- </p>
- <p> FALSE GLORY: THE STEVE COURSON STORY by Steve Courson and
- Lee R. Schreiber (Longmeadow Press; $19.95). The former
- Steelers offensive lineman teams up with a brilliant rookie
- biographer for an expose of the unforgiving world of
- professional football and the body-bulking steroids that helped
- Courson get to the top of the heap before side effects left him
- in desperate need of a heart transplant.
- </p>
- <p> BELLES OF THE BLUES
- </p>
- <p> Those ubiquitous CD box sets are not only a wildly
- successful marketing tool, they can also be a true boon to music
- lovers--provided the artist is worthy of such enshrinement.
- Consider the recent compilations of two of the century's most
- formative singers. BESSIE SMITH: THE COMPLETE RECORDINGS VOL.
- 2 (Columbia/Legacy) showcases this humongous godmamma of the
- blues in full cry, scorching the earth with New Gulf Coast Blues
- and Dixie Flyer Blues, marvelously backed by the likes of Louis
- Armstrong and Fletcher Henderson. BILLIE HOLIDAY: THE LEGACY
- (1933-1958) (Columbia) is a shrewdly chosen 70-cut package from
- her fecund Columbia years, bound to urge anyone with ears on to
- the complete--and completely indispensable--Columbia
- recordings (available on nine separate CDs). BILLIE HOLIDAY: THE
- COMPLETE DECCA RECORDINGS (GRP) includes 50 performances from
- 1944 to 1950 that push Lady Day toward pop but still keep her
- sensuality and edge of danger.
- </p>
- <p>BY TIME'S REVIEWERS/Compiled by Linda Williams.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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