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TIME: Almanac 1995
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TIME Almanac 1995.iso
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1995-02-23
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<text id=92TT1696>
<title>
July 27, 1992: Reviews:Short Takes
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
July 27, 1992 The Democrats' New Generation
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
REVIEWS, Page 73
SHORT TAKES
</hdr><body>
<p> MUSIC: A Giant Tribute, Bernstein's Way
</p>
<p> Conductor, composer, TV stalwart, Leonard Bernstein was a
prodigy whose musical accomplishments were blurred by his
seismic personality. He died in 1990 at 72, but his reputation,
instead of receding as the fame of so many artists does after
death, is going strong. The latest tribute is Sony's massive
LEONARD BERNSTEIN ROYAL EDITION, a repackaging of his Columbia
recordings from the 1950s to the 1970s. It consists of some 119
CDs, to be released over the next 2 1/2 years. The first 10
concentrate on Beethoven and Bartok, and the remastered sound
is excellent. But that's not all. The pretty packaging is
illustrated with watercolors by none other than Britain's Prince
Charles. Would the maestro have okayed the shared billing?
</p>
<p> BOOKS: Word Star
</p>
<p> Paul Brock, the hero of Avery Corman's THE BIG HYPE (Simon
& Schuster; $19), is a low-profile writer and family man
transformed by a Manhattan show-business promoter into a
national phenomenon. The money is swell, but Brock wants to
cling to his artistic integrity as if it were an old sports
jacket. Corman (Oh, God!) has a light comic touch that allows
Brock to have it both ways and remain an appealing character.
A bit of fantasy is also disarming. Corman works in guest
appearances by film and literary stars, including the reclusive
J.D. Salinger, who says, "Sometime when I'm in town, we'll have
lunch." Sure, and God is an aged vaudevillian with a prop cigar.
</p>
<p> THEATER: A Timeless War
</p>
<p> For some reason, most major American plays center on
conflict between fathers and sons. That terrain is revisited
touchingly if without revelations in UNFINISHED STORIES, which
retraces a classic immigrant generational cycle: from unyielding
tradition to relentless assimilation to fervent rediscovery of
old ways. Earnestly written by Sybille Pearson and meticulously
staged by artistic director Gordon Davidson for Los Angeles'
Mark Taper Forum, the show stars Joseph Wiseman, Hal Linden,
Christopher Collet and Fionnula Flanagan. The title refers to
interrupted anecdotes that are a metaphor for how families live
together yet alone. Alas, it is the sole hint of subtext amid
the unpondered grit of divorce, old age and death.
</p>
<p> CINEMA: Gefilte Fish Out of Water
</p>
<p> When hollywood moguls dine at Mortons, their favorite
entree is fish out of water. They love movies that reveal the
familiar through brand-new eyes. If detective Harrison Ford
could cozy up to the Amish in Witness, why couldn't detective
Melanie Griffith go undercover among Brooklyn's Hasidic Jews and
become one of the mishpocha? The reason why not is A STRANGER
AMONG US. This pill of a thriller, written by Robert Avrech,
manages to demean everyone involved, regardless of creed or
previous credits. The usually workmanlike Sidney Lumet directs
Griffith to be shrill and most of the Hasidim to be cute and
noble -- E.T.s with yarmulkes. Only Eric Thal, as a young
scholar, emerges with dignity intact and prospects bright.
</p>
<p> CINEMA: Dog Tired
</p>
<p> It's tough on a woman when the best man around is a
philandering dog trainer who had to change his name to avoid
creditors. MAN TROUBLE wants you to believe that it's less tough
on the woman (Ellen Barkin) when the man is Jack Nicholson. But
Jack is looking too creased and rusted to play a romantic lead.
And the story, about predatory men from all social strata
lurking in the cobwebbed corners of a modern woman's life, gets
neither the zest nor the sick thrill it could use. This is an
enervated, despondent entertainment -- especially if you start
meditating on what's befallen Nicholson, writer Carole Eastman
and director Bob Rafelson since 1970, when the trio made Five
Easy Pieces and the cinema world seemed full of promise and not
dead ends.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>