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- REVIEWS, Page 75Short Takes
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- MUSIC
- Look Who Lightened Up
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- For those who have found the lyrics of INDIGO GIRLS too
- overwrought, good news: in their new album, Rites of Passage,
- they have injected a little humor into their songs. Amy Ray and
- Emily Saliers provide, as usual, sharp, expressive guitar
- playing and seamless harmonizing. But in addition, they have
- turned down the melodrama and fine-tuned their writing. The
- playful Airplane offers an amusing take on the fear of flying,
- as a passenger barters with God to land her plane safely.
- Galileo, with its reincarnation theme, pokes at Shirley
- MacLaine. And the throaty Ray belts out a recklessly romantic
- and downright sexy solo rendition of Dire Straits' Romeo and
- Juliet that grounds the album with a hard-strumming rock edge.
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- THEATER
- Pygmalion, Part 99
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- Andrew, a professor, is engaged to preppy, Lydia. But he
- has the hots for Georgie, a low-life woman upstairs whom he is
- tutoring as a yuppie. To avert infidelity, he "gives" her to his
- buddy Edward, a criminal lawyer of no known scruples -- until
- Georgie displays more street-corner savvy than either of them.
- The setup smacks of formula, but Theresa Rebeck's SPIKE HEELS,
- which opened last week off-Broadway, is full of tart wit,
- feminist insight and quirky detours of plot. In a marquee cast
- -- Saundra Santiago of Miami Vice, Tony Goldwyn of Ghost -- the
- standout is film veteran Kevin Bacon as Edward, blending
- ribaldry, rudeness, rapscallion reprehensibility and believable
- redemption.
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- CINEMA
- Hot Stuff
-
- Return with us now to the thrilling days of yesteryear --
- specifically the 1950s -- when the phrase "art film" whispered
- an erotic promise that U.S. movies, gagged by censorship, choked
- on. These imports generally offered about three minutes of hot
- stuff and an hour and a half of lugubrious regrets. Vicente
- Aranda maintains the classic balance in LOVERS. Set in '50s
- Spain, it tells the story of a sulky ne'er-do-well (Jorge Sanz)
- who is betrothed to a virginal housemaid (Maribel Verdu) but
- smitten by his kinky landlady (Victoria Abril). Older moviegoers
- may be nostalgically warmed by Aranda's sober replay of youth's
- sweet cheats; younger ones will have further evidence that Mom
- and Dad must have been really weird.
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- TELEVISION
- Fundamentalist Festival
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- The term Fundamentalist is usually applied, dismissively,
- to U.S. Christians with overly firm convictions. But the
- documentary series THE GLORY AND THE POWER, on PBS the next
- three Mondays, uses it to describe zealots in all faiths
- worldwide. The series, based upon the University of Chicago's
- long-range Fundamentalism Project, is flawed but refreshingly
- free of hysteria. The first program portrays hard-shell
- Protestants at America's Bob Jones University; the second,
- Israel's Gush Emunim settlers in the West Bank; and the third,
- militant Muslims, mostly in Egypt. The Muslims get the most
- sophisticated treatment -- fittingly, since they seem the only
- one of these groups destined to win political control someday.
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- POLITICS
- Sound Bites
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- It's a good thing Bill Clinton has a job -- he'd never
- make a living with his tenor sax. Sure, it took guts to play on
- The Arsenio Hall Show, and sure, he looked cool in those
- shades. As a musician, however, he was in way over his head. Of
- the two numbers he played, Clinton seemed more at home on
- Heartbreak Hotel; his growly sound suited the rhythm-and-blues
- genre, though his attacks were sloppy. Billie Holiday's ballad
- God Bless the Child was a mess. Clinton's phrasing was unsure,
- his tone thin, his melodic lines disintegrated into meaningless
- trills. But the audience loved it -- and maybe they were right.
- In a campaign dominated by sound bites, it is refreshing to hear
- a candidate come out with something really important like jazz.
- Just don't buy the album.
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