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- CRITICS' VOICES, Page 1
-
- MUSIC
-
- HECTOR BERLIOZ: SYMPHONIE FANTASTIQUE (Angel/EMI). Lean, brisk
- and idiomatic: Roger Norrington leads the London Classical Players
- in Berlioz's virtuoso ear grabber.
-
- CLINT BLACK: KILLIN' TIME (RCA). Real nice, unassuming,
- go-to-meeting country music by a new Nashville hotshot. Black
- sounds like Randy Travis with a few more years of book learning and
- a cozy way with a melody.
-
- BOB DYLAN: OH MERCY (Columbia). He started the decade with a
- great album (1981's Shot of Love), and closes it with another. The
- record is structured like an intimate revival meeting between Dylan
- and listener: there are messages of devotion and political sermons;
- parables of the spirit and love songs; and, in Shooting Star, a
- luminous benediction. Dylan continues to make heavy demands --
- these ten songs are the most intensely introspective work anyone
- has done in rock this year -- but asks only what he brings from
- himself: some reckless imagination, a sense of playful mystery and
- a full measure of passion.
-
- BOOKS
-
- JERUSALEM: CITY OF MIRRORS by Amos Elon (Little, Brown;
- $19.95). "Where there is so much destructive memory, a little
- forgetfulness may be in order," concludes one of Israel's
- best-known writers in this anecdotal history chronicling 4,000
- years of trouble in his hometown.
-
- AMONG SCHOOLCHILDREN by Tracy Kidder (Houghton Mifflin;
- $19.95). In this close-up view of a typical fifth-grade class, the
- Pulitzer-prizewinning author portrays living, breathing children,
- often overwhelmed by homegrown problems, and an outstanding teacher
- who scores an A for dedication.
-
- LORD BYRON'S DOCTOR by Paul West (Doubleday; $19.95). A tour
- de force about the cruelty of genius, starring Lord Byron, Percy
- Bysshe Shelley, his wife Mary (author of Frankenstein) and the
- narrator, an indiscreet physician.
-
- TELEVISION
-
- SATURDAY NIGHT WITH CONNIE CHUNG (CBS, Sept. 23, 10 p.m. EDT).
- CBS's long-struggling magazine show, West 57th, has re-emerged with
- a new name and a new star as host and chief correspondent. One
- added element certain to cause a stir: dramatized re-creations of
- news events.
-
- THE PREPPIE MURDER (ABC, Sept. 24, 9 p.m. EDT). The tabloid
- shows had a field day with it. Now the case of Jennifer Levin --
- the New York City teenager killed during a session of "rough sex"
- in Central Park -- is rehashed as a TV movie.
-
- SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE: 15TH ANNIVERSARY (NBC, Sept. 24, 9 p.m.
- EDT). Still crazy -- or at least trying to be -- after all these
- years, the once groundbreaking comedy show waxes nostalgic in a
- prime-time special.
-
- ART
-
- PICASSO AND BRAQUE: PIONEERING CUBISM, Museum of Modern Art,
- New York City. The title tells all: two giants, and the origins of
- a style that shook -- and shaped -- the rest of the century.
- Through Jan. 16.
-
- CROSSROADS OF CONTINENTS: CULTURES OF SIBERIA AND ALASKA,
- Seattle Center Pavilion. Art and artifacts by native peoples on
- both sides of the Bering Strait, assembled jointly by the U.S. and
- the Soviet Union. Through Oct. 15.
-
- MOVIES
-
- A DRY WHITE SEASON. A white liberal turns radical after
- confronting the brutality of South African racism. Hard-edged drama
- that couples the pulse of popular fiction with the jolt of moral
- outrage.
-
- THE ADVENTURES OF MILO AND OTIS. Milo is a barnyard kitten and
- Otis his dogged friend in this live-action children's film narrated
- by Dudley Moore. If cute were still a word of approval, Masanori
- Hata's charming parable would earn it.
-
- WIRED. The saddest thing about John Belushi's death might be
- this grotesque requiem.
-
- THEATER
-
- THE COCKTAIL HOUR. Nancy Marchand's sozzled, sardonic portrayal
- of a grande dame enriches A.R. Gurney's Wasp family tale at
- Washington's Kennedy Center.
-
- SWEENEY TODD. Stephen Sondheim's unlikeliest musical, a
- sympathetic look at a murderous barber and the woman who recycles
- his victims as meat pies, returns to Broadway in a shrewdly staged
- chamber version.
-
- THE LADY IN QUESTION. Just what is the pleasure of a drag show?
- If the leading "lady" is unconvincing, it's gross. If he's too
- convincing, there's no coy guessing game. And if he's just campy
- enough, the joke is over in five minutes. Alas, this off-Broadway
- farce lasts two hours.
-
- THE GEOGRAPHY OF LUCK. The drifters and hustlers in Marlane
- Meyer's desert panorama mingle the doomed banality of Sam Shepard
- characters with the quixotic blessings of William Saroyan's The
- Time of Your Life. At the Los Angeles Theater Center.