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- REVIEWS, Page 89SHORT TAKES
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- TELEVISION: Orwell Meets the Marx Brothers
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- When Larry Gelbart's Broadway comedy MASTERGATE opened
- three years ago, it was deemed a parody of the Iran-contra
- hearings. With the passage of time -- and a sharp TV adaptation
- for Showtime -- it seems bigger than that: a definitive satire
- of the obfuscating language of government and the media. The
- setting is a congressional hearing investigating a CIA diversion
- of funds, but the details are drowned in dialogue that sounds
- like a cross between Orwell and the Marx Brothers. "My
- involvement was strictly limited to the extent of my
- participation," huffs one official. A TV anchorman anticipates
- a witness by "waiting for the arrival of his appearance.''
- Richard Kiley, Ed Begley Jr. and Tim Reid are standouts in a
- superb cast.
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- MUSIC: Kicking Back
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- Keith Richards, that old devil Stone, has for so long been
- rock's paradigm of advanced dissipation that it comes as a
- surprise to hear him here, on his second solo album, in a mood
- that veers dangerously close to relaxed. Kind of a nice surprise
- at that. Main Offender (Virgin) offers 10 jaunty cuts. Richards
- does a pretty good job on a ballad -- yes, a ballad -- called
- Eileen. There is also a spiffy, slow-tempo reggae number, Words
- of Wonder, and a neat one-two punch of reflections on
- compromised love, Hate It When You Leave and Runnin' Too Deep.
- Some folks, as they say, go to hell in a hand basket. If
- Richards is there already, then, to judge by this album, he's
- swinging in a hammock.
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- MUSIC: Voice Out of Russia
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- Of all the composers to emerge from the collapse of the
- Soviet Union, the most significant is ALFRED SCHNITTKE. Long a
- word-of-mouth favorite of emigre artists like violinist Gidon
- Kremer, Schnittke, 58, has a firm grasp of structure, a masterly
- hand with orchestration and, most important, a distinctive,
- expressive voice. A new London/Decca recording of Schnittke's
- Concerti Grossi Nos. 3 and 4 displays his gifts in full flower.
- The Third (1985) harks back to Bach in a tour de force of
- stylistic synthesis, while the 1988 Fourth (which, confusingly,
- the composer also calls his Symphony No. 5) takes an unfinished
- work by Mahler as its launching pad. Riccardo Chailly and the
- Amsterdam Concertgebouw achieve lift-off and soar in both.
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- CINEMA: A Beastie Brings Fear Times Five
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- Who can make your heart stop?
- Pull it from your chest?
- Scarify your best friend
- And scare off all the rest?
- The CANDYMAN can.
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- Sammy Davis Jr.'s singsong CANDYMAN was a genial guy. The
- '90s version, from the fetid, fertile brain of horror bard
- Clive Barker, is a malefic beastie who preys on those foolhardy
- enough to say his name five times. Now he's lusting to make a
- curious grad student (Virginia Madsen) his charnel bride.
- Borrowing from Stephen King and Freddy Krueger (while paving the
- way for a batch of Candyman sequels), director Bernard Rose
- deftly juggles sense and slaughter. This is clever, spooky
- stuff, with a lingering autumn chill.
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- BOOKS: Bitter Harmonies
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- Racism in this country is talked about primarily as a
- problem for its victims. But Bebe Moore Campbell knows better.
- Her remarkable first novel, YOUR BLUES AIN'T LIKE MINE (Putnam;
- $22.95), begins with a fictionalized account of the murder of
- Emmett Till, the 14-year-old black boy who was lynched in 1955
- for speaking to a white woman in a rural Mississippi town. As
- in real life, the murderer is acquitted by an all-white jury,
- but over the next 30 years the murderer's family, unable to
- adapt to the new ways brought on by the civil rights movement,
- falls into poverty. The victim's family seeks solace in the
- North but falls prey to the evils of the inner city. In clean,
- elegant prose, Campbell offers a powerful reminder that racism
- is a crime for which everyone pays.
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