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TIME: Almanac 1993
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TIME Almanac 1993.iso
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1993-04-08
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FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 4
When senior writer Richard Corliss began reviewing movies
for TIME in 1980, the bulk of his working hours were spent in
a clutch of screening rooms in mid-Manhattan. To be sure, he
paid occasional business visits to Hollywood studios and, each
year, to the Cannes Film Festival. But the time that mattered
most to Corliss's work for the magazine was largely spent in
the dark.
In the succeeding years, though, the line between popular
entertainment -- personified by and in the movies -- and
everyday life began to blur, and the cross-cultural loops grew
ever more intricate and confusing. Fortunately, his polymathic
interests and peripatetic instincts made him an ideal explorer
of this new electronic landscape.
A passionate baseball fan -- and devotee of the Oakland
A's -- Corliss has for years carefully observed the
transformation of a sport into a commercial marketing
juggernaut; one result of this absorption was his story in last
week's TIME on the practice of municipalities' building
ballparks to attract restless team owners. He has also written
on a dizzying array of other entertainment-related topics,
including theme parks (in both the U.S. and Europe), pop music
(from Whitney Houston to Waylon Jennings) and the new rawness
in films, rock and books (a cover story on "Dirty Words").
But Corliss has not abandoned films, as his regular
reviews and his cover stories on Kevin Costner, Tom Cruise and
Jodie Foster attest. "I still love writing about movies. But
there's no disputing that nowadays everything from a
presidential campaign to a heavyweight fighter's rape trial is
show business -- infotainment. That's my beat too."
So when the ugly headlines about Woody Allen and Mia
Farrow exploded last week, Corliss was ready to interpret this
example of life imitating art imitating life. "As a professional
voyeur, I prefer to think of movie people as glamorous fictions
up on the screen -- the way the Mia Farrow character did in
Woody Allen's The Purple Rose of Cairo. But frequently now,
these characters step out of the klieg lights and onto our front
page. They become smaller, more vulnerable, contemptible or
pitiable. And so, perhaps, do we who watch them."
As Corliss's original subject has expanded, so has his
work load, a development he welcomes: "I like it best around
here when they keep me busy. If I'm not in the magazine each
week, I get to feeling logy and unloved." Given the current
cultural hyperactivity and crossbreeding, he is not likely to
feel either anytime soon.
Elizabeth P. Valk