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piece and things don't go away . Laws change that 's a real accomplishment for women in this century , but I think that any woman who has a child and has to le ave their child to go to work grapples throughout their life : Did I do the righ t thing ? That went on in 1901 and it goes in 1994 . '' Though the documentary p rofiles such well-known women as first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton , feminist Be tty Friedan and writer Edna St. Vincent Millay , most of the women are not house hold names . `` A lot of the women who really changed the laws are just average women , '' Atlas explains . One such `` average '' woman was Ida May Phillips wh o , in the 1970s , was a waitress with seven children . The family breadwinner , she wanted a better job and applied to become an assembly trainee at Martin-Mar ietta Co. . `` They said , ` You can't take this job because you have small chil dren , ' ' ' Atlas says . `` So she took it all the way to the Supreme Court . T he Supreme Court said you can't tell a woman with children she can't have a job unless you say the same thing to a man with small children . Ida Phillips had no background to say she would be able to go and do this , but she changed the wor ld for all of us . '' ( Optional add end ) Determining who to include in the doc umentary was difficult . One prominent woman not profiled is former first lady J acqueline Kennedy Onassis . Atlas says Onassis ' life had been so dissected and publicized that the production team didn't think it could add anything to her st ory , especially because the extremely private Onassis didn't give interviews . Nor did the people close to her . `` I 'm not sure we could have offered any ins ights that would have done her justice , '' Atlas laments . Former first lady El eanor Roosevelt , though , is prominently featured . According to Atlas , the do cumentary 's historical advisers all agreed that Roosevelt was the most influent ial woman of the 20th century . `` I gained tremendous respect for her , '' Atla s says . `` She took stands that she hadn't been raised to take . She took a sta nd against racism in this country . She took a stand against anti-Semitism , bot h of which were prevalent in her husband 's administration . She also defended J apanese-Americans during World War II , who were rounded up . '' For Kopple , di recting fiction was not much different from making a documentary . `` In a sense , it was a documentary because we were searching for something that was deeper and going sort of underneath and being intimate , '' she explains . `` When we s tarted out to do the fictional , we had a rehearsal the first day and all the se ven actresses sat around and read through the entire script . There was just thi s explosion of all of these women suddenly being so intimate with each other . I t was if there was a bond between all of us . They talked about their mothers an d being mothers and different things that happened to them in their lives . Ever y second we weren't shooting was an excuse to talk to each other . '' `` A lot o f the women that we deal with in the documentary led very public lives , '' Atla s adds . `` The women in the fictional lead what would be called small lives . W e were always concerned if the balance would seem OK . Can the fictional family compare to ( birth control pioneer ) Margaret Sanger ? She was dealing on such a public level that impacts all of our lives and would some of the small concerns that we go through during the day hold up in the bigger world ? '' Documentarie s , Kopple says , `` have so much drama and passion what we were afraid , ` Woul d the fictional hold up to the documentary because the documentary is so strong ? ' Not until we got into the editing room did we see that yes , this is going t o work . '' `` A Century of Women '' airs Tuesday-Thursday on TBS ; all six hour s repeat June 18 . The last thing most kids want to do when they grow up is work 14-hour days with their dad . But Barry Van Dyke who co-stars in his father Dick Van Dyke 's `` D iagnosis Murder '' doesn't mind at all . `` I 'd work with him any time , '' say s Van Dyke , 42 , from his Conejo Valley , Calif. , home . He adds that his dad , long labeled one of Hollywood 's nicest actors , is `` the best to work with , very creative . He has a lot of integrity and he 'll work no matter what , incl uding physical discomfort . He set a fine example . We 've always talked about w orking together . '' On the CBS comedy-drama , where father and son act as fathe r and son , Van Dyke plays police investigator Steve Sloan , who often helps his physician and mystery-solver dad , Dr . Mark Sloan , get out of hot water . Pro ducers thought it would be easier if they made the local police investigator Slo an 's son . `` He doesn't really want to arrest his meddling dad , '' Van Dyke s ays , laughing . Of the Sloans ' relationship , he adds , `` It 's an easy role for me to fall into . My dad pretty much plays himself . You 're seeing the real him . All that warmth and humanity really comes across . So I tend to play myse lf . So their relationship is pretty much ours . '' While Van Dyke 's siblings o ne brother and two sisters all considered careers in show business , he was the only one who took it seriously . His father , well aware of the trappings of a f ickle industry , advised his oldest son to wait . `` He wanted me to have my chi ldhood , '' says Van Dyke . `` He told me that if I still wanted to act after I graduated high school , then it would be OK . '' Even though the family moved to Los Angeles when he was 9 for `` The Dick Van Dyke Show , '' he never felt they were part of the show-business community . `` My father didn't travel in those circles . We were aware he was on TV and watched the show and knew it was succes sful , but we didn't socialize with a lot of show-business types . '' Yet some o f Van Dyke 's best memories include visits to the set of his father 's show . Wa tching Carl Reiner , Mary Tyler Moore and his father work together was `` the gr eatest thing to see , '' he recalls . When his father worked on location , it be came the family vacation . Trips to England and Hawaii are remembered fondly . H e acknowledges that , initially , his father 's name may have helped him get an agent , but it certainly didn't help him get work . `` There 's too much at stak e for producers and casting directors to get you in on just a name , '' Van Dyke says . Eventually , it comes down to : `` You either perform or you don't . You work or you don't . '' And he worked , beginning as a `` go-fer '' on `` The Ne w Dick Van Dyke Show , '' shot at his father 's small production studio in Arizo na , where the elder Van Dyke had decided to `` retire '' before being persuaded to return to television . Dick 's son held cue cards , ran the transportation d epartment and basically gathered production experience . But he always wanted to be in front of the camera . Finally , he got his wish : He landed a job as an e xtra . More extra work and small parts followed . Then he got really lucky . He landed a development deal with ABC . Although initially pigeonholed in comedy , his father 's milieu , Van Dyke found he had more of an affinity for action-adve nture . Regular series work followed , including `` Battlestar Gallactica '' and `` Airwolf . '' And Van Dyke may be following in his father 's footsteps in mor e ways than one : He 's got his own family dynasty in the works . During his fir st foray into `` entertainment , '' Van Dyke took tickets at a local movie theat er , where he met his wife Mary , when they were both 16 . They married seven ye ars later , when Van Dyke was working as an extra . The Van Dykes have four chil dren : Carey , 18 ; Shane , 14 ; Wes , 9 , and Taryn , 7 . It seems his kids are eager to work with their dad too . The Van Dyke family , who surf and dirt-bike together , is hoping to start its own production company soon . `` Diagnosis Mu rder '' airs Fridays on CBS . One glimpse at the new `` Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle '' and you know that it 's a produ ct of Shelley Duvall ( `` Faerie Tale Theater , '' `` Bedtime Stories , '' `` Ta ll Tales and Legends '' ) . Based on the popular children 's stories by Betty Ma cDonald , `` Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle '' is filled with colorful , exaggerated sets wi th costumes and characters to match . Jean Stapleton stars as the eponymous lead character , a wise and loving lady who lives in an upside-down house and offers uncommon cures for such common childhood problems as `` The Not Truthful Cure , '' `` The Never Want to Go to Bedder 's Cure , '' `` The Fraidy Cat Cure '' and `` The Tattletale Cure . '' `` Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle , '' the fifth original serie s Duvall has done for Showtime , offers `` a wonderful , uninhibited creature , fearless and able to relate to children in a perfectly comfortable , uncondition al way , '' Stapleton says . Most of all , the actress notes , Mrs. Piggle-Wiggl e is child-like , but not childish . `` She has a great sense of humor , with a lot of common sense , '' Duvall adds . Not only was she drawn to the series of b ooks because they were hilarious but also because they offer great information f or families . Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle gets her message across without using the waggi ng finger . `` She never says , ` do this or do that , ' ' ' Duvall says . Throu gh suggestion , the errant children always `` end up understanding the right way on their own . '' As Stapleton puts it , `` She helps them see the light . '' T he hourlong `` Special Parents ' Sneak Peek '' of `` Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle '' airs Tuesday . Beginning June 14 , the show begins its regular time slot on Showtime . For ages 2 and up. -0- Beginning Monday , `` Storytime '' the award-winning se ries produced by KCET in Los Angeles , will be carried by PBS affiliates nationw ide . The show 's goal is to show how much fun reading can be , using new books and classic stories read aloud by celebrities . Many read to their own children , as well as to members of the kid audience . `` What 's great is that everyone is passionate about one story that 's their favorite , '' notes producer Steve K ulczycki . He hopes that the show can encourage youngsters to find a favorite of their own . `` A lot of the show depends on the imagination of the kids , '' he says . `` Maybe parents will do some reading with their own kids , too . '' Cel ebrity readers include Tom Selleck , Mariel Hemingway , John Goodman , Shari Bel afonte , A Martinez , Paul Rodriguez , Edward James Olmos , Fred Savage , Cloris Leachman , Valerie Bertinelli , Paula Poundstone , John Ritter , Patricia Richa rdson , Cindy Williams , Amanda Plummer , Mayim Bialik , Meshach Taylor , Regina ld Veljohnson , Maria Conchita Alonso and Hector Elizondo . Puppet Kino and host Mara ( Marabina Jaimes ) are joined by a new co-host named Lucy ( Anne Betancou rt ) . Lucy adds a grandmother-like appeal , Kulczycki points out . Twenty new s hows have been added to the original 20 , which will be presented in rotation na tionally . The 67 new readings bring the total of books read on the show to 137 . On June 20 , Charles Dutton of `` Roc '' hosts a prime-time `` Storytime '' sp ecial . Dutton reads `` Muckey Moose , '' and Jamie Lee Curtis reads her own boo k , `` When I Was Little . '' The special will feature excerpts from the new sho ws . `` Storytime '' airs daily . For ages 2 and up . Arts & Entertainment 's 7-year-old `` Biography '' series has developed into th e most popular show on the cable channel that offers an eclectic mix of document aries , British mysteries and drama , arts programming and vintage movies . `` B iography '' has become so successful over the last 18 months that last week the series went from airing once a week to five times a week . Michael Cascio , vice president of documentary programming , explains why he believes the series , ho sted by Peter Graves and Jack Perkins , has become an audience favorite : `` Whe re a big network might give you 10 minutes on a person , we will give you a whol e hour , '' he says . `` You get detail . That 's one thing we can do that the o ther people can't . I think the reason why ` Biography ' succeeds is that it liv es on the name of the persons being profiled . If you do an Alfred Hitchcock or Margaret Thatcher or Hillary Clinton or John Belushi , these are people whom eve rybody knows who they are . They have an interesting life and can sustain detail that can last for an hour . Generally , you look for people who are popular and have a little bit of weight behind them . '' The type and era of personalities the series chooses have evolved since the series premiered April 6 , 1987 . Orig inally , most of the biographies were culled from the '60s Mike Wallace-hosted C BS series , also entitled `` Biography . '' These days , `` Biography '' profile s more than recent historical figures . `` We have covered a lot of historical f igures from the '30s and '40s Churchill and Roosevelt . We will still do some of those . But we have gone way forward . We have just done Sid Caesar and Milton Berle . We have done Madonna and Elizabeth Taylor . '' Because production techni ques have become so sophisticated , `` Biography '' also can examine the lives o f such not-so-recent historical figures as Ulysses S . Grant , George Washington and Davy Crockett . `` You can go back in time and use drawings and paintings , '' Cascio says . `` We can have some fun . There are a lot of people that you c an choose that are going to have audience appeal . The range is phenomenal . We have so much fun figuring out who we want to do . '' `` Biography '' aspires to give viewers a fresh look at a particular person . `` You have an obligation to the public , '' Cascio says . `` We are not sensationalized . We are not tabloid . Our goal is fairness not to highlight the bad stuff or just dwell on the good parts . It 's to present a balanced portrait of a person or a particular portra it . Generally speaking , the biography is meant to deal with people in all of t heir aspects and look at them as a whole , which is more difficult to do than yo u might think . '' ( Optional add end ) Members of the Hollywood community have become more receptive about participating in the series . `` You can do anything , '' Cascio says . `` We can do a biography , but it 's difficult to do not imp ossible without ( the subject 's ) direct approval . Even if they don't talk , t hey can say to their friends , ` Don't talk to them . ' When we told Sid Caesar we were doing this , he had a choice of cooperating or not , and he cooperated . He knows his life has had ups and downs . He said , ` It 's better for me to co operate and give you my side of the story rather than have a bunch of people tel ling stuff they don't know about. ' ' ' Famous folks , Cascio says , also percei ve the documentaries as a way to leave a legacy . ` I 'm sure that for Milton Be rle , aside from the fact he 's a natural ham , this was a chance to get on reco rd his life in an hour . '' And what have been the highest-rated `` Biography '' subjects ? Elizabeth Taylor , Milton Berle , Bruce Lee , Shirley Temple and How ard Hughes . `` Right below that there is a surprising middle pack including Nap oleon and Vincent Price , '' Cascio says . A&E plans to produce between 70 and 1 00 original biographies this year , including John Belushi , Sherlock Holmes ( ` ` We can do fictional people as well , '' Cascio says ) , Steve Allen , Davy Cro ckett , George Washington and Lucille Ball . `` Biography '' airs twice weeknigh ts on A&E . Several `` Biography '' documentaries are also available on A&E Home Video .
NEW YORK Outside Henry Bookbinders , the street is polyglot and polychrome : a wonderful collision of languages spoken by men and women of every hue , multicol ored storefronts and awnings awash in alphabets and ideograms whose messages run in every direction . Inside the bindery , it 's only a bit less so : Two alphab ets predominate , Hebrew and Roman , and two languages , Yiddish and English alt hough there 's a smattering of medical Latin on some of the pages as well . Shul em Halpert , Henry 's proprietor , speaks English with the pronounced accent and imperfect grammar that marks those for whom it is a second language . It theref ore comes as something of a surprise to learn that he is American-born . `` I co me from America , '' he says . `` My father came from Hungary . English is for m e a second language . I learn it in school ; also , I catch it from the streets . '' His first language , and the one most used for communication in the shop , is Yiddish . Halpert is a Satmar Hasid , a member of a sect so strict and inward -looking that it exists in enclaves . The nearest is in Williamsburg , where Hal pert was born and grew up . Another enclave is Kiryas Joel , a Satmar community in Monroe , N.Y. , where Halpert moved 19 years ago , and where he still lives w ith his wife and those of his 16 children who are as yet unmarried . He is 45 ye ars old , looks quite a bit younger , and already has eight grandchildren . ( Be gin optional trim ) Halpert is an intense and voluble man with an aggressive sen se of humor . `` I like a joke , '' he says . `` Even a Jewish joke you know , a joke that makes fun of someone ? As long as it is not meant to hurt . As long a s the person is a friend . '' Bookbinding is a second career for Halpert . His f irst was as shammes for the Grand Rabbi Joel Teitelbaum , who led the Satmar unt il he was succeeded , in the dynastic tradition of the movement , by a nephew . Halpert cannot find a term in English that matches shammes . `` I help him , '' he says of the rebbe , Yiddish for rabbi . `` He was an old man . Before I was m arried I stayed with him I helped him eat , dress . I write things . He was a re al rebbe . Not a phony baloney . Everybody liked him like a father . '' His expe rience with the printed word then was restricted to parchment . `` Really , I wa s an artist , '' he says . `` I wrote the parchments , the mezuzah , the scrolls . '' But after the rebbe 's death about 15 years ago , he decided to come to th e bindery , which was then run by his brother 's father-in-law , Itzak Glanz . ( End optional trim ) Henry Bookbinders is precisely what the name says , a place that binds books . It does not print them , publish them , sell or distribute t hem . Customers must supply the text ; Halpert supplies the outside . Some of th e outsides are probably at least as satisfying and instructive as the material t hey shelter . Halpert does very nice work with some very nice leathers . These e xceed the chromatic variety of the street outside : They are blue , green , crea m , red , yellow , maroon , white and brown of many shades . Pretty much everyth ing is done at least in part by hand . For instance , Halpert stitches the books together with the aid of a big , foot-operated sewing machine . He takes a stac k of loose pages about a quarter-inch high , sets them in place and steps on a t readle . A bank of threaded needles descends to sew the pages together . The sew n batches are folded and fastened into covers held down in presses until the glu e dries . Leather is hand work , and the tools Halpert produces for a demonstrat ion speak eloquently of how long Henry Bookbinders has been going about its busi ness : Halpert hones an old kitchen knife ( whose blunt , broken blade had been all but worn away in past sharpenings ) on a whetstone that was once the size of a pound of butter . Now it is down to the equivalent of perhaps nine ounces . H alpert sets a scrap of leather on a granite slab whose once-sharp edge has been dulled by long wear . He takes a board , the cardboard that stiffens the cover o f a hardbound book , and traces one corner onto the back of the leather . He cut s a generous triangle around this corner and bevels the edges with the razor-sha rp knife . When he has the leather slimmed down to his satisfaction , he fits it to the corner and , using a flat , round-cornered rectangle of plastic called a bone , bends the leather over the board and glues it down in a neat bedsheet co rner , with Elmer 's glue . This is a leather corner ; Halpert will also bind or rebind books entirely , or partially , in leather . He will also put hubs , tho se horizontal raised bands , on the spine . It is the labor , not the material , that makes leather binding expensive , Halpert says . He always has a selection of leather on hand for customers , but occasionally someone will come in with h is or her own piece of leather . `` Someone brought me an old leather briefcase once , '' Halpert says . `` It had belonged to his great-grandfather . He wanted to make a book from it , to save something . '' Halpert offers a choice of endp apers to liven the insides of the covers , and also will decorate the page edges . This he does with a sponge and inks of various colors , dipping and dabbing t o give the blank edges an interesting design . You also can have the edges gilde d but Halpert sends this work out to a specialist in Soho . Most of the books th at leave Henry Bookbinders are less elegantly clad in what the trade calls libra ry binding buckram , or imitation leather , or fabric , in the unadorned style f amiliar from library shelves . Halpert uses a stamping press to print the titles on the spines of these books in plain gold block letters . In the past , Halper t says , Henry Bookbinders was quite well known in the city as a binder of city documents . The company did a great deal of work that wound up in the libraries of city hospitals . `` A lot of journals , medical books , magazines , '' Halper t says . ( Optional add end ) Lawyers , too , are among Henry 's clients ; the b etter-off ones use a roomful of leather to impress laymen with their prowess . H e takes on other projects as well , such as an order from a television productio Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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