Good Timing

Critics die. Audiences are reincarnated. The only true test of a work of art’s value is its timelessness, and perhaps its timeliness. Timelessness is the ability of drama to say something about the human condition in a way that penetrates generation after generation of audiences. Timeliness is the director’s (in…

Return of the Craft

The Paseos Shopping and Entertainment center is a semiabandoned structure on Coral Way, two blocks east of Coral Gables. On the third level (next to Bally’s Total Fitness) is Miami ArtWorks, a hybrid studio space, art school, gallery, and museum shop. Paintings of different sizes and styles, ceramics, metal statues,…

Reappraising Rear

It’s not a startling breach of conventional wisdom to apply the term masterpiece to Alfred Hitchcock’s Rear Window, which is being reissued in a nice restored print that, if memory serves, is better (though not by much) than we’ve seen before. But critical reputations can be as volatile as the…

The Devil May Care

Three decades after Rosemary’s Baby, two decades after The Tenant, and following a series of five non-horror films, Roman Polanski returns to the supernatural thriller with The Ninth Gate. What could be more promising? Regardless of what one thinks about Polanski’s personal life or legal status, the man is clearly…

Nippon All Around

As cities go, Miami Beach gets around. At least around the world. Our sparkling burg on the Atlantic counts Santa Marta, Colombia; Cozumel, Mexico; Pescara, Italy; Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; and Fujisawa, Japan among its ten or so sister cities. A nationwide program encompassing more than 1000 cities in the…

Warehouse Walk

Against the walls of sculptor Rafael Consuegra’s studio, the archangel Gabriel rests in pieces. When soldered together the stainless-steel seraph will stand nearly 36 feet high. Holding a trumpet aloft, this messenger from a vengeful Heaven threatens to usher in the apocalypse. Instead Consuegra’s creation will welcome visitors to this…

Lyric Revival

Back in its heyday during the Forties and Fifties, the stretch of NW Second Avenue from about Sixth to Fourteenth Street in Overtown where the Lyric Theater sits was a nightlife hub known as Little Broadway. Several black-owned hotels and clubs thrived there, as did the intimate Lyric, a 400-seat…

Pie in the Sky

The first thought you have while watching The Next Best Thing is, Was Madonna always this bad an actress? It’s a question that soon fades from consciousness to be replaced by, Was Rupert Everett always this bad an actor? and, Was John Schlesinger always this bad a director? Since the…

Dog on a Leash

Willie Morris’s autobiographical novel, My Dog Skip, is a nearly perfect piece of bedtime reading for kids and their parents. Each chapter is virtually a self-contained anecdote, the descriptions of World War II-era Mississippi are lush and dreamlike, and the escapades of the central canine character, depicted as smarter, faster,…

Tibetan Ball

The Cup takes place in a Tibetan monastery-in-exile in Bhutan, where the head abbot (Lama Chonjor) is curious, though not the least bit ruffled, to discover that some of his monks are secretly sneaking off to a nearby town to watch World Cup matches on television. Not surprisingly the abbot…

German Sex

Think Pretty Woman meets The Monica Lewinsky Story and you’ve got A Girl Called Rosemarie. Based on Germany’s biggest political scandal of the 1950s, Bernd Eichinger’s film (originally a miniseries for German TV) follows Rosemarie (Nina Hoss), an orphan who learned at an early age that sex gives her power…

Old Song, New Voice

Be honest. If someone told you ahead of time that you were going to see a play that depicts the coming-of-age of a young black girl somewhere in the South during the mid-Sixties, you might want to respond, “What a shame! I have a root canal to attend to.” Or,…

Rock On Love

There was a time when a young man with a dream in his heart and a guitar in his hand had to go to the City of Angels to make it as a rock and roll star. That was then. This is now. In the past decade, the Latin divisions…

Fest Full of Film

After a light lead with Bossa Nova, this week the FIU Miami Film Festival comes to an end on a heavier note with the French screen version of Stalin’s world, East-West. The big French offering in this second half is Battle Cries, the story of a pregnant woman with breast…

Crazy for Coco Palms

It’s highly unlikely members of the Miami Beach Garden Conservancy would be caught dining on hearts of palm. They’re more likely to be found nurturing palm trees than devouring their guts at dinner. The conservancy, a nonprofit advocacy group, was founded by eight members in 1997. Its mission: to restore…

United Movement

“I really needed to pull in some professionals and go for broke and see what happens, just push the envelope, because people weren’t taking me seriously,” says Karen Stewart, professor and director of dance at Miami-Dade Community College’s North Campus, and founder of the nine-year-old Black Door Dance Ensemble. “We…

Pre-Portrait of an Artist

As heir to the ideological battles of the late Nineteenth Century, the avant-gardists hoped to make art sovereign by ridding it of the evils of capitalist consumerism. Once outside those laws, art truly would liberate mankind, just as Schiller had exhorted in his letters, On the Aesthetic Education of Man…

Silver Screenings

Is it possible to take in 26 full-length movies in ten days? Most likely not. Although the heart and mind may want to, the eye could have a problem. And that’s not even including the two retrospectives and thirteen shorts unreeling at the FIU Miami Film Festival. (See “Kulchur” and…

Black in Time

“Good morning, everyone. Welcome to Miami-Dade Transit’s seventh annual Black History Tours,” begins veteran bus driver Craig Rolle. For now Rolle is sticking to the prepared script, a 21-page tome fashioned by Dorothy Jenkins Fields of the Black Archives History and Research Foundation. In honor of Black History Month, the…

Lady Liberty

“Ever since I’ve been old enough to reason,” says singer Tania Libertad, speaking by phone from her home in Mexico, “I’ve seen that the world has its rough spots.” Anointed an Artist for Peace by UNESCO in 1996, the celebrated vocalist chalks up her commitment to combatting poverty, AIDS, and…

More to the Point

First the good news: GableStage’s new production of Killer Joe features smart staging and engaging performances, backed up by a terrific design team. South Florida theatergoers should consider themselves lucky to have this company in their midst. Now the not so good news: Despite the merits of this particular production,…

The Man Who Would Be Killed

Director Chen Kaige is best known in the United States for Farewell, My Concubine, the most successful Chinese production ever released here. As many pointed out at the time, this Oscar-nominated 1993 epic of modern Chinese history may have been wholly Chinese in both content and viewpoint, but it was…