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TIME: Almanac 1995
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TIME Almanac 1995.iso
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1993-05-25
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<text id=93TT0079>
<title>
Oct 18, 1993: Reviews:Television
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Oct. 18, 1993 What in The World Are We Doing?
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
REVIEWS, Page 107
Television
In A Fearful Free Fall
</hdr>
<body>
<p>By WILLIAM A. HENRY III
</p>
<list> TITLE: A Life In The Theatre
TIME: OCT. 13, 14, 17, 19, TNT CABLE
</list>
<p> THE BOTTOM LINE: A play about a declining old actor and an ascending
young one is superbly rethought for the small screen.
</p>
<p> David Mamet and Jack Lemmon don't seem the likeliest combination:
Mamet writes about the hard shell of life, Lemmon enacts the
soft underbelly. Mamet, 45, celebrates ferocious winners, while
Lemmon, 68, sentimentalizes good-guy losers. Yet twice within
the past year, the two have teamed for poignant results, first
in the 1992 film adaptation of Mamet's Pulitzer Prize play,
Glengarry Glen Ross, and now in a surprisingly warm TV version
of his 1977 off-Broadway hit, A Life in the Theatre. Mamet's
austere, elliptic prose seems to bring out the best in Lemmon--his naked frustration as he fights for dignity--without
any of the fussy mannerisms and comedic cuteness that have marred
many of his portraits of men in fearful free fall.
</p>
<p> A Life in the Theatre remains, as it was on stage, a two-hander
between a veteran actor (Lemmon) who never quite made it and
a protege (Matthew Broderick) whose star is beginning to rise.
Mamet has opened up the work shrewdly, placing the two men among
backstage colleagues, on street corners, in neighborhood bars
and coffee shops, making their encounters more naturalistic
and believable. Yet he and director Gregory Mosher have retained
enough of the stylized original to bring off satiric fragments
of pseudo-plays--costume epics and drawing-room comedies that
are the antithesis of Mamet's blowtorch aesthetic.
</p>
<p> The tension between the actors, partly sexual in the original,
is all competitive now. The older man's brushes with self-destruction
and madness are rooted in his loss of ease during the only part
of the day that matters to him, the moments when the lights
come on. Whether by design or happenstance, he is all the more
touching because Lemmon's character comes across as vastly more
talented than Broderick's. Only unconquerable age can lower
him.
</p>
<p> This is the ninth stage play that the TNT cable network has
sensitively adapted since 1990, including Tennessee Williams'
lyrical Orpheus Descending, Jon Klein's rowdy T Bone 'n Weasel
and Mamet's own burst of cynicism, The Water Engine. Each has
been respected yet retooled to broaden its reach. While A Life
in the Theatre is steeped in particulars of the stage, it works
as a powerful metaphor for life in any career. Older people
are always feeling that tradition is being dishonored and their
accumulated lore and knowledge devalued. Younger people always
impatiently demand their turn.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>