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- REVIEWS, Page 73SHORT TAKES
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- MUSIC: A Giant Tribute, Bernstein's Way
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- 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?
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- BOOKS: Word Star
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- 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.
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- THEATER: A Timeless War
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- 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.
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- CINEMA: Gefilte Fish Out of Water
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- 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.
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- CINEMA: Dog Tired
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- 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.
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