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<text id=89TT2992>
<title>
Nov. 13, 1989: Critics' Voices
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
Nov. 13, 1989 Arsenio Hall
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
CRITICS' VOICES, Page 27
</hdr><body>
<p>THEATER
</p>
<p> BESIDE HERSELF. If you were an off-Broadway producer who
had hired movie star William Hurt, would you cast him as a
crude, subliterate UPS deliveryman who has little to do, and
less to say, in a fantasy piece centered on a pathetic and
prematurely old widow? If so, you would disappoint audiences as
keenly as New York City's Circle Repertory is doing.
</p>
<p> AUGUST SNOW. Novelist Reynolds Price proves a born
playwright in a poignant trilogy (the other plays: Night Dance,
Better Days) about thwarted hopes in a small North Carolina
town; superbly staged by the Cleveland Playhouse.
</p>
<p> MASTERGATE. The President dozes away his afternoons. A
paranoid National Security Adviser travels by Stealth bomber.
The true head of Government is a secretive CIA director who also
happens to be dead. Larry Gelbart's fiercely funny Broadway
satire lampoons events that made the evening news the sharpest
comedy on TV. Joseph Daly is a dead-on George Bush, and the
dialogue is an S.J. Perelmanesque stream -- debased, obfuscatory
and unconsciously self-condemning. Samples: "I wonder if I might
ask the Senator to stop raking over dead horses"; "What did the
President know, and does he have any idea that he knew it?" The
lesson of recent scandals is both less and more alarming. If the
bums are not thrown out, it is because an overly forgiving, or
morally inert, American people allows them to stay.
</p>
<p>MOVIES
</p>
<p> MY LEFT FOOT. Christy Brown was a poor lad who battled
cerebral palsy to become a painter and author. Daniel Day-Lewis'
triumph is nearly as spectacular: to play Christy with a streak
of fierce, black-Irish humor -- and without a drop of TV-movie
treacle.
</p>
<p> THE BEAR. When it comes to technique, this wondrous movie
is to other nature films what Star Wars was to science fiction:
a redefinition of the state of the art. Even the most
sophisticated filmgoers will be enchanted by this ursine tale,
told from a bear's point of view.
</p>
<p>MUSIC
</p>
<p> DANIEL LANOIS: ACADIE (Opal/Warner Bros.). Record
producers, even those as skillful as Lanois (U2, Dylan), usually
come up with eccentric gewgaws when they perform on their own.
But here is an exception: Lanois' music is minimal, mystical,
folklike but decidedly unfolksy. No wonder he runs with the big
boys.
</p>
<p> MICHAEL BOLTON: SOUL PROVIDER (Columbia). Singer-songwriter
Bolton, a white rhythm-and-bluesman from New Haven, Conn.,
finally hits his stride here. High point: Georgia on My Mind,
on which his uncanny four-octave range and gut-wrenching
phrasing give Ray Charles a serious run for the money.
</p>
<p> MILES DAVIS: AURA (Columbia). Miles used to play jazz -- a
melody with a beat. Now he's into music whose electronically
enhanced formlessness resembles nothing so much as the sound
track of a space movie. That would be great if only we had the
flick to go along with it.
</p>
<p>ART
</p>
<p> FRANCIS BACON, Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden,
Washington. Haunting emblems of the Age of Anxiety in the
eminent British painter's distorted, isolated, sometimes
silently screaming figures. Through Jan. 7.
</p>
<p> MAKING THEIR MARK: WOMEN ARTISTS MOVE INTO THE MAINSTREAM
1970-85, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia.
These 87 artists have made their mark, but doesn't categorizing
them in such a show only perpetuate their separateness? Through
Dec. 31.
</p>
<p>BOOKS
</p>
<p> FOUCAULT'S PENDULUM by Umberto Eco (Harcourt Brace
Jovanovich; $22.95). Eco has woven together a novel that is even
more intricate and absorbing than his international best seller
The Name of the Rose. Beneath its endlessly diverting surface,
this book constitutes a litmus test for ways of looking at
history and the world.
</p>
<p> THE TIMES ATLAS OF WORLD HISTORY (Hammond; $85). This
classic reference book, in its third edition, chronicles the
history of mankind through striking visuals and concise
narratives. The new version contains more than 600 handsome
maps, as well as updated sections on both antiquity and modern
times. A must for history buffs!
</p>
<p>TELEVISION
</p>
<p> MOYERS: THE PUBLIC MIND (PBS, debuting Nov. 8, 9 p.m. on
most stations). Public TV's resident big-think man is back with
a four-part series on the role of image in modern life,
especially as revealed through the media.
</p>
<p> POLLY (NBC, Nov. 12, 7 p.m. EST). Will a batch of new songs
and The Cosby Show's Keshia Knight Pulliam be able to improve
on the old Disney film about an orphan with a cheery outlook?
Don't be a Pollyanna!
</p>
<p> SMALL SACRIFICES (ABC, Nov. 12, 14, 9 p.m. EST). Farrah
Fawcett, whose Charlie's Angels days are an ever fading memory,
plays an Oregon mother accused of shooting her own children in
another ripped-from-the-headlines mini-series.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>