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- REVIEWS, Page 79SHORT TAKES
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- TELEVISION: Terror in Studio B
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- Get ready for some irreverent, down-and-dirty TV satire,
- promises the new ABC sitcom THE JACKIE THOMAS SHOW. Created by
- TV's terror couple, Roseanne and Tom Arnold, the show revolves
- around the egotistical star (Tom Arnold) of a network sitcom.
- But it is surprisingly conventional and toothless. Staffers
- quake at the mere thought of a meeting with Jackie, but he turns
- out to be an easily manipulated dunce. The inside-TV humor is
- too familiar, as are the supporting players (Martin Mull, Alison
- LaPlaca). Even Arnold's performance has the whiff of a recycled
- Dave Thomas character from SCTV. Still, the show has a fiendish
- glint in its eye, and with its surefire time slot (following
- Roseanne on Tuesdays), it may be around long enough to forge a
- fresh path.
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- MUSIC: Worthy Vessel
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- Why hasn't John Adams' opera The Death of Klinghoffer made
- the same sort of splash as the composer's earlier Nixon in
- China? The controversial subject matter -- the murder of an
- American Jew by Palestinian terrorists -- may be one reason, and
- Peter Sellars' murky staging at the premiere last year in
- Brussels another. But the new Nonesuch original-cast CD (which
- coincides with an updated production in San Francisco) reveals
- the real explanation: Adams' lush score is fundamentally an
- oratorio, lacking Nixon's sharp characterization and big set
- pieces. This, however, is good news for the recording, for
- Klinghoffer's reflective soliloquies and choruses make the work
- better suited to home listening than to the stage.
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- BOOKS: The Examined Life
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- For anyone who cares to meet a journalist who has been
- happy in his work, THE SWAMP ROOT CHRONICLE (Norton; $24.95) is
- heartily recommended. In this peppy memoir, Robert Manning
- traces his career through the wire services, TIME and John
- Kennedy's State Department, plus 16 years as editor in chief of
- the Atlantic until he was sandbagged -- there seems no better
- word for it -- by the magazine's present owner, Mort Zuckerman.
- It's hard to avoid smugness when recounting one's triumphs, and
- the author does not always succeed. Manning got his start at the
- Binghamton (N.Y.) Press, which had been founded by the maker of
- an alcoholic elixir called Swamp Root. Interesting factoid, but
- it's a bit of a reach for a cutesy-poo title.
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- CINEMA: Everyone Points A Loaded Gun
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- They are a strange quartet: the sensitive IRA gunman
- (Stephen Rea) and his brutal blond colleague (Miranda
- Richardson); the gentle English soldier they take hostage
- (Forest Whitaker) and the love he left behind (comely newcomer
- Jaye Davidson). In THE CRYING GAME, Irish writer-director Neil
- Jordan spins his had-I-but-known plot twists from Belfast to
- London. By the end of this devious thriller, just about everyone
- has had to point a loaded gun at just about anyone else he or
- she might have cared for. In a style of agitated naturalism,
- Jordan (Mona Lisa) examines poignant matters of life and death,
- sex and friendship, duty and loyalty, freedom and bondage,
- manhood and womanhood and all the ambiguous areas in between.
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- CINEMA: Rehab Time
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- Spike Lee may have the big movie on Malcolm X, but
- director Steve Anderson (who is white) got into theaters first
- with SOUTH CENTRAL. This earnest, low-budget melodrama places
- a similar fall-and-rise fable -- from street tough to jailbird
- conversion to patriarchal role model -- in the smoldering ghetto
- of South Central Los Angeles. The film's first half is an
- ethnographic survey of hell on earth: poverty, ignorance,
- testosterone and crime. The second half is rehab time: our
- antihero finds the spiritual strength to try to persuade his
- young son and a gang rival to renounce vendetta. In this uneasy
- mix of gritty and pretty, Anderson's achievement is to make the
- sermon almost convincing.
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