A Different Barnes Solution

Many critics don’t want to see the Barnes Collection close its current location and move to Philadelphia. But what if the Barnes could do both? “What if the promised money from the foundations indeed went toward a new Barnes facility in Philadelphia but the original estate remained open and intact? Imagine, instead of a replica installation of the whole collection in an incongruously modern edifice downtown, a new urban Barnes Center that would connect visitors first to the idea of the Barnes and then to the strange jewel of a museum itself.”

When Harry Met Sally In The Theatre

Why does anyone see the need to take a perfectly delightful movie – When Harry Met Sally – and turn it into stage play? “Why take a quintessentially 80s-America, middle-class masterpiece, a diffidently murmured poem to interpersonal navel-gazing, played out in close-up and tight two-shots, and whack it on one of the biggest stages the 21st-century West End has to offer? Why? Why?”

Papp Spirit Looms Over Public

George Wolfe’s resignation from the Public Theatre brings up nostalgia for the theatre’s founding director Joseph Papp. “On one hand, it’s only natural that the Public’s founding spirit should loom large at a time when the institution is searching for its next leader. On the other, it’s a sign of the trepidation many in the industry feel about the uncertain course of America’s flagship theater when corporatizing trends are buffeting even Off-Broadway.”

Miles: Passion Is A Story Made For Hollywood

As one of the few people in the world who speaks and understands Aramaic, Latin, and Hebrew, Jack Miles belongs to “the over-educated sliver of the audience for “The Passion” that can hear both “original” languages with a measure of comprehension.” Of course there are historical inaccuracies. But “time will tell whether this film will have any longer a life or any deeper an impact than its predecessors in the genre, all of which seem faded or eccentric failures in retrospect. The plot of the Gospel—good, beautiful man confronts evil, ugly establishment, loses everything, but then miraculously wins everything back in the end—is Christianity’s supreme gift to Hollywood.”

See What A Movie Sounds Like

Hollywood filmmakers are beginning to make available prints of their films that are captioned for deaf people. “While the Americans With Disabilities Act of 1990 has dramatically increased captioning on television, it does not require movie captions. The reason is obvious: Unlike TV captions, they can’t be turned off. The studios and theaters convinced Congress that captioning would reduce the overall audience for movies. Since then, there has been progress in developing a technology that provides captions to people at their seats.”

US Mint Declares Snow Isn’t Serious

The US Mint has rejected depicting snow on the quarter to represent Minnesota. “According to the Mint, federal law bars ‘any frivolous or inappropriate design.’ It said that lawyers for the Treasury Department, where the Mint resides, decided in 2000 that a single snowflake didn’t pass the frivolity test. But not until after the Mint had come up with its own large lacy snowflake” and proposed the idea to Vermont.

Canadian TV Drama – AWOL

Two more Canadian TV dramas were cancelled last week, and Canadian drama production is getting to be AWOL on the TV schedule. “The crisis has spiked into a full-blown emergency. It’s absolutely shameful that Canadian broadcasters can’t support two long-running series that broadcasters admit Canadians were watching. Once again, Canadian audiences and creators have fallen victim to broadcasters’ hunger for profits. I guess doubling their profits last year just wasn’t good enough.”

Oscars Look For A “Clean” Broadcast

You won’t see anything like that Superbowl nastiness on this weekend’s Oscars telecast. ” ‘We want the show to reflect not a stuffiness, but a dignity appropriate for film’s highest honour. We want it to be a family affair that can be appreciated by the widest possible audience.’ ABC is charging a record $1.5-million (U.S.) for a 30-second Oscar ad, and has been sold out since September. CBS took in $2.3-million for a half-minute of ad time on the Super Bowl.”