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TIME: Almanac 1990
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1990 Time Magazine Compact Almanac, The (1991)(Time).iso
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time
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112789
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11278900.057
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1990-09-19
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CRITICS' VOICES, Page 16Compiled by Andrea Sachs
THEATER
THE MERCHANT OF VENICE. Dustin Hoffman plays Shylock, warts
and all, in a shimmering Broadway production transferred intact
from a sold-out London run. A tough ticket worth every penny and
every minute of the wait.
CLOSER THAN EVER. This musical sampler from lyricist Richard
Maltby Jr. and composer David Shire is an off-Broadway charmer
deftly performed. Special joys: character songs that actors Brent
Barrett and Sally Mayes render as richly nuanced as one-act plays.
MYSTERY OF THE ROSE BOUQUET. Jane Alexander and Anne Bancroft
play a nurse and a patient in a taut psychological study by Manuel
Puig, author of The Kiss of the Spider Woman, at the Mark Taper
Forum in Los Angeles.
RADIO CITY MUSIC HALL CHRISTMAS SPECTACULAR. Like its
Rockefeller Center neighbors -- a towering fir tree and a
glistening ice rink that displays the endlessly watchable gyrations
of amateur skaters -- this New York City bring-the-family pageant
is one of the grandest holiday traditions in the U.S. Satisfyingly
the same from year to year, yet spruced up just enough, the
fast-moving script mingles Charles Dickens, Santa Claus and
Tchaikovsky's Nutcracker with carols and hymns. The climactic
Nativity scene features camels, donkeys and other live animals.
This year's production serves up dazzling special effects and
opulent costumes, as well as the show-stopping, high-kicking
Rockettes. If at times the narration suggests the entire world is
Christian, or should be, the overwhelming message is joy and
goodwill.
MUSIC
LINDA RONSTADT: CRY LIKE A RAINSTORM, HOWL LIKE THE WIND
(Elektra/Asylum). Ronstadt takes lessons learned from her three
successful albums of pop standards and puts them to work on the
kind of material she did so well in the '70s: confessional ballads
and songs of love gone amiss. The cathedral-filling orchestral
arrangements threaten the fragile structure of some songs, but
Ronstadt's singing (superbly accompanied on four tracks by New
Orleans soulster Aaron Neville) keeps everything on course.
ART
THE NEW VISION: PHOTOGRAPHY BETWEEN THE WORLD WARS, The
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City. This smartly conceived
show, which introduces the Metropolitan's new Ford Motor Company
Collection of 20th century photographs, highlights the camera's
courtship of pure form. Through Dec. 31.
THE INTIMATE WORLD OF ALEXANDER CALDER, Cooper-Hewitt Museum,
New York City. A delightful demonstration that for family and
friends the sculptor could make practically anything out of
anything. Through March 11.
MOVIES
VALMONT. Maybe it's time to call it a day for film remakes of
Les Liaisons Dangereuses, Pierre Choderlos de Laclos' novel of
sexual gamesmanship among 18th century French aristocrats. Director
Milos Forman and screenwriter Jean-Claude Carriere have not so much
adapted this deliciously nasty tale as they have embalmed it.
IMMEDIATE FAMILY. Glenn Close and James Woods desperately want
a child; Mary Stuart Masterson is about to have one. Director
Jonathan Kaplan's comedy-drama finds sympathetic laughter in
everyone's burdens and opportunities. The tears come later.
BOOKS
THE PEOPLE AND UNCOLLECTED STORIES by Bernard Malamud (Farrar,
Straus & Giroux; $18.95). This posthumous volume includes an
unfinished novel and 16 short stories never before collected in
book form. The novel is little more than a sketch of what might
have been, but the stories -- grim and comical in equal measure --
offer poignant reminders of Malamud's gift and his stature as an
American master.
THE STORYTELLER by Mario Vargas Llosa (Farrar, Straus & Giroux;
$17.95). A Peruvian narrator, who strongly resembles his creator,
remembers a college classmate in Lima during the 1950s and ponders
the possibility that his old friend has become a bard to an
endangered Amazonian tribe. This ruminative novel about
storytelling and its place in society shows a world-class author
in splendid form.
TELEVISION
MACY'S THANKSGIVING DAY PARADE (NBC, Nov. 23, 9 a.m. EST).
Might as well face it -- she's here to stay. Today show usurper
Deborah Norville joins terminally jovial weatherman Willard Scott
to narrate this year's float extravaganza.
FIFTY YEARS OF TELEVISION: A GOLDEN CELEBRATION (CBS, Nov. 26,
9 p.m. EST). Stop us before we kill: yet another survey of "classic
moments" from TV's past. Hosts include Walter Cronkite, Carl Reiner
and Miss Piggy.
THE AMERICAN EXPERIENCE (PBS, Tuesdays, 9 p.m. on most
stations). What's this? A documentary series featuring real-life
news footage rather than actors re-creating it? That is an
admirably quaint notion that has spawned some fascinating programs.
Former Harlem Congressman Adam Clayton Powell is profiled this
week.