Terry Teachout's Blog, page 250

March 11, 2011

TT: Tremors

tennesseeguy.wordpressblog.jpgI know all about natural disasters—up to a point. The New Madrid fault runs through the small Missouri town where I grew up, and I spent many a nervous evening in the basement of our house when I was a boy, listening to tornado warnings on a transistor radio. Still, it's been my good fortune never to be physically present when the sky fell or the earth shook.

Perhaps for this reason, I always feel a special kinship with those whose luck has run out. I was, for instance, transfixed by Hurricane Katrina, so much so that Our Girl and I temporarily turned this blog into a clearinghouse of links to Web-wide blog-based reports about the hurricane and its aftermath. Our improvised "stormblog" was one of the first such ventures to be undertaken in the youthful days of blogging, and it astonished us to be told after the fact that we'd written ourselves into the history of a new medium.

Now that the Web has grown up, of course, such homespun efforts have become quaint. Like the rest of the world, I'm using Twitter to keep up with breaking news from Japan, Hawaii, and the West Coast. But as I read the latest reports of the growing devastation, I thought of the only earthquake I've ever experienced. It took place early on a summer morning some twenty years ago, back when I was living in a hilltop apartment in Bronxville, a suburb not far north of New York City. I didn't have an air conditioner, so the windows were flung wide to the breeze. I was awakened by a slight jerk and a strange noise that I suppose in retrospect must have been the creaking of the building's skeleton. It was over in a moment. I jumped out of bed, looked around, and heard a second, even stranger noise: the leaves on the trees that surrounded the building were all fluttering at once. I still remember with the utmost vividness the thought that flashed through my mind: It's a car bomb.

It says something ugly and revealing about the world in which we live today that a man born a stone's throw from the New Madrid fault should have jumped reflexively to such a conclusion about a tremor in the earth. And it makes me wonder whether there might possibly be some utility in being reminded from time to time that nature needs no help from humankind to wreak havoc in the blinking of an eye.

Things are in the saddle,/And run mankind, Ralph Waldo Emerson famously claimed , but that which runs things also runs us, and eventually it runs us into the ground. "Sooner or later you're either going to be a caregiver or a caregetter," a friend of mine told me last night over a glass of wine. That is a sobering thought, reassuring only in the unforgiving way that hard truths give cold consolation. But there is comfort in it nonetheless, just as there is comfort—if only of a bleak and chilly sort—in the undeniable fact that while bombs are made by fools like us, only Mother Nature can make an earthquake. May it always be so.

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A Seventies TV commercial for Chiffon margarine:
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Published on March 11, 2011 15:58

March 10, 2011

TT: Almanac

"Musicals continue to be the only art form, popular or otherwise, that is publicly criticized by illiterates."

Stephen Sondheim, Finishing the Hat
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Published on March 10, 2011 18:15

TT: Her master's voice

In today's Wall Street Journal I review Florida Stage's regional premiere production of Michael Hollinger's Ghost-Writer . Here's an excerpt.

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Theodora Bosanquet is one of those fascinatingly unimportant people privileged by chance to play a choice walk-on part in the history of literature. In 1896 Henry James developed a case of writer's cramp so severe that he was forced to start dictating his novels to a typist, a practice that he continued to the end of his life. Bosanquet, the last of James' secretaries, was a brisk, bright young woman with literary ambitions of her own (she became a critic) who published an illuminating memoir called "Henry James at Work" in which she told what it was like to take dictation from a great writer. While there was no question of her being romantically attracted to James--she appears to have preferred women--Bosanquet was clearly obsessed with him, so much so that she later claimed that he continued to dictate to her after he died.

GhostWriterPix2.jpgSo curious a creature could scarcely help but attract the posthumous attention of other writers of fiction, among them David Lodge and Cynthia Ozick. Now Michael Hollinger has joined their ranks, using Bosanquet's obsession with James as the inspiration for a three-character play called "Ghost-Writer" that was first performed by Philadelphia's Arden Theatre Company in September and has just received its regional premiere in West Palm Beach....

"Ghost-Writer" is set in Manhattan in 1919, and Bosanquet's fictional counterpart is Myra Babbage (Kate Eastwood Norris), a typist who takes dictation from Franklin Woolsey (J. Fred Shiffman), a haughty, unhappily married novelist with a deeply buried romantic streak. Though the high-strung Myra has a beau of her own, she is a young woman of sensibility and so, not at all surprisingly, falls head over heels in love with Woolsey. The play begins shortly after his death, and we learn at the outset that Myra is fending off reporters. Why? Because it seems that Woolsey left behind the manuscript of an unfinished novel--and that Myra is finishing it, allegedly taking dictation from her deceased employer....

Those who are familiar with Henry James' ghost stories will see at once that this is a quintessentially Jamesian situation, so much so that one wonders why it never occurred to him to write about it. It is no insult to Mr. Hollinger to say that his handling of the situation is more conventional than anything that James would have been likely to write. (The denouement of "Ghost-Writer" is, in fact, reminiscent of Somerset Maugham, a no-nonsense writer who had no use for James' involuted ambiguities.) Still, that doesn't keep him from spinning an absorbing tale, or from putting words into Myra's mouth that are occasionally worthy of the master himself...

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Read the whole thing here .
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Published on March 10, 2011 18:15

March 9, 2011

TT: Almanac

"She was able to tap into the reserve of anger that fuels every comedian, high or low."

Stephen Sondheim (on Ethel Merman), Finishing the Hat
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Published on March 09, 2011 17:25

TT: So you want to see a show?

Here's my list of recommended Broadway, off-Broadway, and out-of-town shows, updated weekly. In all cases, I gave these shows favorable reviews (if sometimes qualifiedly so) in The Wall Street Journal when they opened. For more information, click on the title.



Warning: Broadway shows marked with an asterisk were sold out, or nearly so, last week.



BROADWAY:

La Cage aux Folles (musical, PG-13, adult subject matter, reviewed here)

Driving Miss Daisy * (drama, G, possible for smart children, closes Apr. 9, reviewed here)

The Importance of Being Earnest (high comedy, G, just possible for very smart children, closes July 3, reviewed here)

Lombardi (drama, G/PG-13, a modest amount of adult subject matter, reviewed here)

Million Dollar Quartet (jukebox musical, G, reviewed here)

OFF BROADWAY:

Angels in America (drama, PG-13/R, adult subject matter, closes Apr. 24, reviewed here)

Avenue Q (musical, R, adult subject matter and one show-stopping scene of puppet-on-puppet sex, reviewed here)

The Fantasticks (musical, G, suitable for children capable of enjoying a love story, reviewed here)

Molly Sweeney (drama, G, too serious for children, closes Apr. 10, reviewed here)

Play Dead (theatrical spook show, PG-13, utterly unsuitable for easily frightened children or adults, reviewed here)

IN WASHINGTON, D.C.:

Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (drama, PG-13/R, Washington remounting of Chicago production, adult subject matter, closes Apr. 10, Chicago run reviewed here)

CLOSING SOON OFF BROADWAY:

Black Tie (comedy, PG-13, closes Mar. 27, reviewed here)

CLOSING SOON IN SARASOTA, FLA.:

Twelve Angry Men (drama, G, closes Mar. 26, reviewed here)

CLOSING NEXT WEEK IN ORLANDO, FLA.:

A Midsummer Night's Dream and Pride and Prejudice (comedy, G, playing in rotating repertory through Mar. 19-20, reviewed here)

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Published on March 09, 2011 17:25

March 8, 2011

TT: Almanac

"I love wordplay, but when there's nothing behind it, when its function is to prolong a tiny idea, it becomes masturbatory."

Stephen Sondheim, Finishing the Hat
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Published on March 08, 2011 17:11

TT: Snapshot

Johnny Cash and the Tennessee Two perform "I Walk the Line" on The Tex Ritter Show in 1955:



(This is the latest in a weekly series of arts-related videos that appear in this space each Wednesday.)
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Published on March 08, 2011 17:11

TT: The way we were (and weren't)

In today's Wall Street Journal I review the first Broadway revival of Jason Miller's That Championship Season , which is awful (the play, that is, not the production). Here's an excerpt.

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Good or bad, every work of art is a time capsule, and sometimes it's the worst ones that contain the most information about what the world was like when they were new. In the '70s American playgoers rushed to embrace Jason Miller's "That Championship Season" as a masterpiece of hard-hitting truth-telling. It ran for 944 performances, won a Pulitzer and was turned into a movie that starred Robert Mitchum. Today "That Championship Season," which is now being revived on Broadway for the first time, looks like what it is, a quasi-political cartoon whose smugness stinks like dime-store perfume. Even so, I doubt that any other play that opened on Broadway in 1972 has more to tell us about the self-satisfied attitudes of the generation that made it a hit.

3.159702.jpgMiller, an actor-turned-playwright who is remembered (if at all) for having played the priest in "The Exorcist," apparently wrote "That Championship Season" to exorcise what he regarded as the collective sins of those Americans who, like him, grew up in the benighted Age of Eisenhower. The play's five characters are residents of a city indistinguishable from Scranton, the medium-sized Pennsylvania town where Mr. Miller grew up. In youth four of them played together on a high-school basketball team whose coach (Brian Cox) is hosting a reunion dinner at his home. The men seem friendly, but appearances are deceiving, for Phil (Chris Noth) has had an affair with the wife of George (Jim Gaffigan), the mayor of the town where the play is set, and is secretly planning to throw his financial support behind another candidate in the next election....

I won't say that a better playwright might not have been able to make something watchable out of this clichéd scenario, but what Mr. Miller made out of it in 1972 was pretty much what you'd have expected from a second-rate writer born in 1939 who had drunk deep from the well of the '60s and now proposed to inform his audiences that their parents' values were comprehensively corrupt. Hence the coach, a boorish, ill-educated stage-Irish blowhard who proudly displays pictures of Teddy Roosevelt, John Kennedy and Fightin' Joe McCarthy on his mantelpiece and salts his small talk with good old-fashioned ethnic slurs of the highest possible voltage, thereby alerting the audience to his lack of enlightenment....

Were there really people like the coach? Certainly, and plenty of them, too--but the ludicrous lack of subtlety with which Miller portrays this one kills "That Championship Season" stone dead. Every five pages or so, the action, such as it is, comes to a halt so that he can deliver a sermonette crammed full of his personal prejudices...

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Read the whole thing here .
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Published on March 08, 2011 05:00

TT: Almanac

"Poets tend to be poor lyricists because their verse has its own inner music and doesn't make allowance for the real thing."

Stephen Sondheim, Finishing the Hat
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Published on March 08, 2011 05:00

March 7, 2011

TT: Just because

An extremely rare kinescope of film noir actress Lizabeth Scott singing "He Is a Man" on TV in 1958:
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Published on March 07, 2011 05:00

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