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hat Simon sent him a note , now also hanging on his office wall : `` Worry . I d on't know how to fix it . '' CASTING ABOUT : We 're not going to see Judy Kuhn a s the young love interest in `` Sunset Boulevard '' when Andrew Lloyd Webber 's megamusical comes to Broadway in the fall . In fact , she left the Los Angeles c ast Sunday to get ready for motherhood . Her first child is due in October . Und erstudy Anastasia Barzee has taken over the role in L.A. . No word yet on who 'l l play it here .. . As of June 7 , the `` Blood Brothers '' will no longer be pl ayed by the brothers Cassidy . Understudy Philip Lehl replaces David Cassidy and Ric Ryder takes over for Shaun Cassidy . On the same day , Carole King steps in to the role of their mother , currently played by Petula Clark . Clark takes the road company out in September first stop , Dallas .. . Peter Bartlett , J. Smit h-Cameron , John Cunningham , Debra Messing and Mary Beth Peil head the cast of the new Paul Rudnick play , `` The Naked Truth , '' now in previews at the WPA T heater . The plot involves photography , pornography and politics .. . Dennis Pa rlato , seen recently in `` Hello Again , '' replaces Howard McGillin in `` She Loves Me '' Tuesday . Starting June 6 , McGillin plays Molina , the gay window d resser in `` Kiss of the Spider Woman . '' ON THE RECORD : Speaking of Judy Kuhn , her debut solo album is due out this summer : a collection of Jule Styne song s on the Varese Sarabande label . Another star from the original cast of the cur rent `` She Loves Me '' revival , Sally Mayes , is also recording solo for Vares e Sarabande . With emphasis on the lyrics of Betty Comden and Adolph Green , the disc is due in the fall . Mayes is also moonlighting this month and next with l ate Saturday night shows at Eighty Eight 's , the Greenwich Village cabaret .. . `` Ruthless , '' the musical about unbridled ambition in a preteen actress , en joyed a good Off-Broadway run here last season but never made it into the record ing studio . The show is having an even better run at Beverly Hills ' Canon Thea ter and getting an album out of it too . Although the murder-minded moppet is no w played at the Canon by Kathryn Zaremba , the production 's original star , Lin dsay Ridgeway , is on the just-released Varese Sarabande recording . Zaremba is remembered here in the kinder , gentler guise of Annie Warbucks . REVIVAL UPDATE : The Drama Desk 's special award citing the 25-year record of York Theater Com pany and producing director Janet Hayes Walker is prompting a preview of their l atest show , a revised version of Sondheim 's `` Merrily We Roll Along , '' open ing June 8 . The cast of York 's revival will perform two numbers at the awards ceremony June 5 at the Roundabout Theater . Carole King is also on the program . . . American Jewish Theater 's revival of Jerry Herman 's `` Milk and Honey '' i s proving enough of a box-office draw to warrant a month 's extension . The show , set to close this weekend , will now play through June 26 . Distributed by th e Los Angeles Times-Washington Post News Service . HOLLYWOOD When Arsenio Hall takes his final bow Friday night , record company e xecutives fear that the curtain may also drop on urban-oriented music on the lat e-night talk-show circuit . Officials at MCA , Epic and other labels said for th e past 5 years , the syndicated `` Arsenio Hall Show '' provided a valuable nati onal outlet for urban music while other late-night hosts such as Johnny Carson , Jay Leno and David Letterman focused on more traditional , mainstream musical t astes . `` I 'm really bummed , '' said Laura Hynes , vice president of artist d evelopment and media relations for Tommy Boy Records , a New York-based label sp ecializing in rap and urban music . `` This show helped break a lot of our artis ts Naughty by Nature , House of Pain , RuPaul , Queen Latifah , '' Hynes said . `` Before this show , there was no national late-night outlet where a viewer cou ld tune in to see happening music that appealed to the segment of the audience t hat liked rap or dance music . '' Even as Hall 's ratings slipped in the last fe w years by 24 percent in the last year alone these executives and other observer s of the urban music scene maintained that his show never lost its status as a d esired gig for rap and rhythm & blues artists to reach their core young audience . An appearance on the Hall show often translated into a boost in popularity an d record sales as much as 400 percent , said Kim Jackwerth , director of televis ion media for Epic . It was , said Ernie Singleton , president of MCA Records ' black music division , `` the single best platform for urban music , even better than ` Soul Train , ' ` Showtime at the Apollo ' or the occasional Leno and Let terman appearance . '' Hall not only gave visibility to established mainstream r appers and groups such as Salt-N-Pepa , Arrested Development and Queen Latifah , but also featured more controversial artists such as Snoop Doggy Dogg , Dr. Dre , Cypress Hill , Tupac Shakur and Ice T . Now , with Hall quitting after Friday 's show , the music industry is wondering if those artists will be able to `` g et busy '' with Leno , Letterman or Hall 's expected replacement , Jon Stewart o f MTV . The opportunities to get a coveted slot on a late-night show will certai nly be slimmer , they agreed . Reggie Miller , music editor of the Source , a ra p and hip-hop-oriented magazine , said , `` The overall vibe of Arsenio 's show was a party , and it was also family . It was a real symbol to appear on Arsenio 's show . There is definitely not another late-night show that would devote an entire program to rap . I 've seen that Jon Stewart has a lot of music acts on h is ( MTV ) show and he feels very contemporary , but I doubt if any other show w ill be of Arsenio 's essence . '' Another executive who asked not to be identifi ed said there was a perception in the music industry that Leno and Letterman wer e biased against rap and urban music acts . `` They 're white shows for white au diences , '' said the official . `` Unless you have appeal to white people , you 're not going to get a booking on those shows . '' A spokesperson for `` The To night Show With Jay Leno '' disputed that claim and other perceptions that Leno placed less of a priority on urban-oriented music . `` We were the first to have on R. Kelly , '' said the spokesperson . `` In the past , we 've had Gang Starr , TLC and a number of hip-hop artists . On June 2 , we 've got All 4 One booked . '' The spokesperson added that Leno 's booking of rap and hip-hop artists wou ld not change due to Hall 's departure . A spokesman for Letterman could not be reached for comment . ( Optional add end ) Marla Kell Brown , producer of `` The Arsenio Hall Show , '' said she does not believe the other late-night programs are biased against urban artists . `` Initially , we were an alternative to John ny Carson , who had a whole different audience and didn't necessarily speak to t he younger generation , '' Brown said . `` It 's more an issue of age than of bl ack and white . It 's an issue of being uninformed . '' Some urban artists will get shots on the Letterman and Leno shows , she predicted , `` but many will not have a place to go . There are only so many slots available . '' And `` the oth er shows are not going to change their format , '' she added . `` If you try too hard to be what you 're not , that looks strange , too . '' Brown said Hall , a fter all , was only doing what came naturally to him . `` I always felt that the re was this misconception by the media that we were on the cutting edge , '' she said . `` We just brought out what young America was listening to . In our firs t week , we had Bobby Brown on as a guest . He had the No. 1 song in the country then ` My Prerogative ' but he had never been on a late-night show . There just wasn't a venue for artists like him to get their stuff out there . So we were n ot cutting edge . We were just reflecting the mainstream of young America . '' T hat reflection extended beyond the music scene , the producer said . `` There we re actors and athletes that were very popular , but popular in a world that was different than the world populated by the producers of those other shows , '' sh e said . While pessimistic , many of the urban music executives said they were w illing to give other talk shows the benefit of the doubt in terms of the booking of rap and hip-hop artists . `` These musicians will have a place to go , but i t just willn't be the same , '' said Lisa Jefferson , manager of West Coast pres s and artist development for Elektra Entertainment . `` I don't know how hard it will be for an artist to get on . It may take a Top 10 single . With Arsenio , if he knew the group , he would put them on . Plus , it willn't be the same cama raderie . He will definitely be missed . '' I get the calls a couple of times each year . A local public junior high school counselor , usually from a school boasting a `` mostly minority '' student popu lation , will ask me to speak at Career Day . Unless my schedule is unyielding , I cannot resist the invitation . I am a Role Model , capitalized : an African A merican woman with an advanced degree who does work that many of the audience me mbers have fantasized about . I may be the first person of color some of the kid s have seen who does the work that I do . I may be the first real-life lawyer so me have ever seen . Having been there , I cannot resist going back . I know that I have been invited because I represent possibility . My information kit usuall y directs me to tell the students something about the education I needed to beco me a law school professor . I am to impress them with the hard work it will take to get from where they are to where I am . They are at a crossroads , I am told , having to decide what to do about the rest of their secondary education in or der to realize a dream or two . Some of them are considering whether to continue their education at all . Last fall , the Santa Monica , Calif. , YWCA Career Da y was at the John Adams Middle School . The students were restless , wearing on the patience of their teachers and vice principal . The other panelists were a p rofessional beach-volleyball player , a recreation supervisor and an intimidatin g karate instructor with the fourth-degree black belt . As befits our host , the panel was all female . As I gathered my notes , I realized why I make the time to attend career days : It is a grounding exercise . I do not want to forget tha t my present self is the sum of my life . As much as career days give me a chanc e to represent possibility to young African Americans , I also get to remind mys elf , `` Here is very much possible from there . '' I once was , in the language of social science , an economically disadvantaged , single teen mother . Statis tically , I should not be a law-school professor , nor should my daughter be an only child or a college graduate . These facts are vital elements of my discussi on , because the risk exists that some members of the audience are or will becom e single teen parents . There is an equal likelihood that there are many economi cally disadvantaged children at the school at which I am speaking . I tell them about my origins and my early parenthood , not merely as cautionary tale , but a lso as an offering of hope . It is as important to me to include unplanned paren thood in my presentation as it is to point out how I got into college , what my grades were like or the route I took from law student to law professor . It is p art of my objective of presenting possibility to these students : You can have a life after early , unexpected parenthood . It will not be an easy life , but it can be productive and fulfilling . There are innumerable sources willing to sug gest to them that they will fail in life . I like offering the possibility that they will succeed . I don't sugarcoat the teen parenting experience : Once I bec ame a parent , I gave up dating as it is traditionally perceived and deferred a college education in favor of full-time employment until my daughter was 8 and a ble ( if not particularly willing ) to accept an explanation for our changed eco nomic circumstances . I tell the students that my daughter and I grew up togethe r , that I was attending to the needs of a child while just out of my own childh ood . And I always identify the life choices I made that were directed by the pr omise I made to myself that my child 's life would be better filled with more op tions and possibilities than mine . Nor do I forget to tick off the positives : Having a daughter gave me great joy and purpose . I discovered that , to persuad e this child that she could do anything or be whatever she wanted , I had to liv e my life in a way that affirmed that . It was not enough simply to tell her tha t the world was her oyster if I , her primary role model , did not do what I wan ted . She was a powerful catalyst , propelling me through college and graduate s chool , keeping me from remaining in a job that bored me . And , my daughter has always been my most ardent fan and strongest supporter . She even helped me get through law school . She gave me a life-saving study tip : When studying for lo ng periods , take a two- to five-minute break every hour . During this short bre ak , wash your face , make a doctor 's appointment , prepare lunch , check the m ail , check airline ticket prices to Tahiti . Whatever you do , she advised me , get out of the chair in which you are studying and move your brain to something else . As promised , I came back from my breaks refreshed , ready for work . I continue to pass this hint on . ( It works for bar-exam preparation as well . ) It is with wonder that I tell students that life is change and growth , and what seems like a mistake can become an opportunity . I remember how my high school guidance counselor responded to my pregnancy . She suggested that I withdraw fro m my college-preparatory public school for gifted and talented girls and enroll in vocational school , where I could `` learn a trade and maybe find a husband a nd father '' for me and my child . I ignored her and graduated with my class ; m y mother brought my daughter to the ceremony . Sometimes , surprised silence gre ets my reference to my teen pregnancy . Usually , the students are more interest ed in my annual income , whether I go to court , whether there is a test you hav e to take to get into law school . Once a student asked if law-school professors are `` real lawyers . '' Then there are the other times . For instance , in San ta Monica , a student asked my favorite career-day question : What is my daughte r doing now ? She 's living in Philadelphia , finishing her MBA , working in mor tgage banking . She is planning a July wedding . We are friends , she calls four times a week , she is happy . These are the most affirming facts of all . Time was compressed and accelerated for Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis , or so we ' d like to think . Things just seemed to have an awful habit of befalling her too soon and too quickly . It wasn't right . It wasn't natural . As Teddy Kennedy e ulogized : `` Jackie was too young to be a widow in 1963 , and too young to die now . '' She died at 64 , which is way too young in my lexicon of denial . At th e very least , it 's not the `` ripe old age '' in which we middle-aged survivor s are accustomed to seeking relief . They say this is the age at which we begin scrutinizing obituaries . If that is so , Jackie 's death is the obituary page w rit large . A lot of people I know , especially those who were children when our association between Jackie and the funeral hearse was forever forged , are busi ly consulting our mortality calculators and computing how much longer her death date gives us . Twenty-five years ? Twenty ? A little more ? A little less ? Wha tever it is , it 's not much . Certainly , it 's not enough . But then , as Tedd y said , Jackie was `` too young to die . '' Phew . It has been said the intensi ty of the public 's mourning has to do with our perception of Jackie as invincib le , the perfect princess whose wealth and bearing and eternal slimness and styl e enveloped her in a kind of magic shield . Yes , she suffered ; but look how no bly she endured . It has been said , too , that her passing is particularly pain ful because it marks the passing of our youth and its seminal events . Even the veteran broadcaster Sander Vanocur teared up while commenting on her funeral Mon day ; the lights of his youth had gone out , he said , never to be seen again . For me , though , the sadness or is it the fear ? is more banal . It has more to do with the speed with which the cancer claimed her . Diagnosed in January , go ne in May . Can it really happen that quickly ? To a woman who ate right , exerc ised regularly , had the best medical care her millions could buy ? Can it happe n this quickly , even to her ? Perhaps Jackie 's life seems unduly attenuated be cause she embraced and embodied the length and breadth the sheer velocity of her time . She was so many things , in such a short space . The still photographs f lash before us child equestrian , debutante , adoring wife , glamorous first lad y , grieving widow , international swinger , stoic single mother , accomplished professional , proud grandmother . In such a short space , at such a breakneck p ace , she created such a kaleidoscope of images . I tend to think of Jackie as p art of a threesome of Kennedy wives she , Ethel and Joan forming a triumvirate o f female possibility within that testosterone-rich patriarchy of sports and poli tics . A quarter-century after Bobby 's death , Ethel remains his widow , a matr only woman with a horde of children . After decades of drinking , personal decay and finally a legal split from Teddy , Joan remains the recovering alcoholic , the damaged divorcee behind the dark glasses . But Jackie was never static . She continually transcended the present and moved on . She was never stuck , never vanquished by the Kennedy code any more than by the prying paparazzi . Somehow , Jackie managed to accomplish what her counterparts couldn't . She changed . It has been startling , in recent days , to hear her little-girl voice explaining , back in 1962 , how important it is for a woman to worship her husband . It has been startling because it so sharply contrasts with the sophisticated Doubleday editor who shared her Park Avenue apartment with her `` companion of recent year s . '' It has been startling , too , to see her walking one day in Central Park , and then , just a week later , buried at Arlington . Even in death , Jacquelin e Kennedy Onassis moved fast , which is , of course , what we 've all got to do in life . We 've got to move fast , or we 'll miss it . We 've got to grab on an d let go , again and again . We 've got to change . For the excruciating truth i s that life is short , no matter how long it lasts . We may live in a wonderful world of color , but when it comes to television , m uch of what we watch is still in black and white . A quick remote-control journe y through network prime time reveals a lineup of programs divided by race . Most shows feature white characters ; a small but growing number star black performe rs ; but very few offer both in major roles . Our viewing habits mirror those di visions . A recent breakdown of Nielsen Media Research ratings showed a wide dis parity between black and non-black households in television viewing preferences . For fall 1993 , the two groups had completely different lists of top 10 prime- time programs , based on Nielsen ratings . Of the top 20 , only one show , ABC M onday Night Football , appeared on both lists , according to BBDO , the New York advertising agency that analyzed the ratings . And the preference gap is wideni ng . In a similar survey eight years ago , the top-20 lists for black and non-bl ack audiences featured 15 programs that were on both . One reason for the dispar ity in viewing habits is the greater variety of program choices . Only a decade ago , there were just a handful of shows featuring major black characters . For 1993-94 , the networks , led by Fox , offered more than 25 shows starring black people or featuring them in major supporting roles . `` There 's no mystery . Bl acks now have more options than they did in the old days , '' said BBDO Vice Pre sident Doug Alligood , who conducted the survey . People , no matter their age , race or socioeconomic status , are attracted to programs featuring people of si milar appearances or circumstances , he said . For example , 13 of the top 20 pr ograms favored by African-Americans feature black people as stars , while suppor ting roles are the best they can do in programs in the non-black top 20 . Alligo od said television programs are meant to entertain , and that it may not be wise to put too much weight into the differences in viewing preferences . Others are not as sanguine , however . They acknowledge that differences in viewing habits by race and the small number of programs with multiracial casts are symptoms of the divisions in our society . However , television is too powerful a medium me rely to reflect such divisions . Its influence tends to amplify them , some said . `` To the extent that people take television as an indication of the way peop le are in the world , it reinforces stereotypes . And there 's a lot of evidence that people take television as a reinforcement of the world , '' said Clay Stei nman , associate professor of communications studies at Macalester College in St . Paul , Minn . Television can be especially influential in matters of race , wh ere social divisions often keep whites and blacks from knowing much about each o Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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