Hot Dots
by Clif Garboden
FRIDAY 11
7:00 (2) The Long & Short of It. Kennedy School professor and former
Republican Oklahoma congressman Mickey Edwards joins Robert Reich and Alan
Simpson. (Until 7:30 p.m.)
7:30 (38) Hockey. The Bruins versus the New Jersey Nets.
9:00 (2) Frank Sinatra: The Concert for the Americas. A 1981 show with
the Buddy Rich Orchestra, from the Dominican Republic. (Until 10:20 p.m.)
9:00 (44) Around the World in 80 Days: The Challenge. A repeat of
the British travel-stunt series with Monty Python's Michael Palin off to match
Jules Verne's Phileas Fogg's 12-week-plus trip from London to London via
everything east. (Until 10 p.m.)
10:00 (44) Looking for John Muir. Cambridge-based naturalist Robert
Perkins retraces the steps (literally) of proto-environmentalist/mystic Muir.
(Until 11 p.m.)
10:20 (2) Marvin Hamlisch and the Pittsburgh Pops. Marvin, the Pgh.
Poppers, Pete Fountain, the Preservation Hall Jazz Band, and Nell Carter on the
stage of Heinz Hall. (Until 11:20 p.m.)
SATURDAY 12
6:00 (44) American Masters: Man Ray: Prophet of the Avant-Garde.
Repeated from last week. A bio of the American artist who broke enough ground
to replace the IRT. (Until 7 p.m.)
6:30 (2) La Plaza: From Here and There. Confronting the reality
of a Latino heritage versus the American culture of everyday life. The theme is
played out by example as La Plaza cameras follow young Chileans Pablo
and Alejandro Picker through their search for identity. (Until 7 p.m.)
8:00 (44) Masterpiece Theatre: Persuasion. Repeated from last
week. A 1995 combo theatrical/made-for-TV Jane Austen adaptation involving BBC
Films, WGBH, and Millisime productions. For all that, the thing should have
subtitles; the characters mumble into their laps in some no-doubt authentic
dialect that 20th-century Americans should be excused from understanding.
Amanda Root stars as Jane's Anne Elliot, who, at the tender age of 19, turns
down a proposal from handsome, but unproven, Captain Wentworth (played by
Ciaran Hinds), who then goes off to seek his fortune at sea and finds it. Later
on, Wentworth returns, rich and decorated, to find Anne unmarried and way
behind the social curve. She still loves him; he can't quite place the face.
But there's time, and what with all the reversals of fortunes that apparently
characterized people's lives in the late Napoleonic era, the opportunity for
love to rebloom will certainly present itself. What did she say? (Until 10
p.m.)
9:00 (2) Les Misérables (movie). No tedious music here. Fredric
March plays a Jean Valjean hounded by by-the-book police chief Charles Laughton
in this 1953 film edition of Victor Hugo's classic. To be repeated on Sunday at
3 p.m. (Until 10:50 p.m.)
10:50 (2) Julius Caesar (movie). The case for why it's okay to be lonely
at the top -- from 1970, by Shakespeare, and starring John Gielgud, Richard
Johnson, Jason Robards, and Charlton Heston. To be repeated on Sunday at 1 p.m.
(Until 12:50 a.m.)
SUNDAY 13
Noon (2) Antiques Roadshow. Repeated from last week. The attic-treasure
seekers hit Concord, Massachusetts, appraise some colonial trinkets, and do a
bit of Minuteman National sightseeing. (Until 1 p.m.)
1:00 (2) Julius Caesar (movie). Repeated from Saturday at 10:50 p.m.
3:00 (2) Les Misérables (movie). Repeated from Saturday at 9
p.m.
3:00 (4, 12) Tiger Woods: Son, Hero, Champion. Even if you don't dig
golf, you've got to like this guy. (Until 4 p.m.)
7:00 (2) Eyewitness: Prehistoric Life. In which you learn what
fossils have taught others about the origins of life on earth. (Unless, of
course you're one of the faithful who believe that we're all descended from
some heterosexual pre-incarnation of Do deposited here as part of an
extraterrestrial science-fair project -- in which case you're incapable of
learning anything.) (Until 7:30 p.m.)
9:00 (2) Masterpiece Theatre: Rebecca, part one. Rerouting the
fabled Road to Manderlay. This Daphne du Maurier gothic romance was given
atmospheric but shallow -- one might say dramatically impoverished -- treatment
by Alfred Hitchcock in 1940. We can't imagine the story gets any more
compelling thanks to this two-part TV treatment starring Emilia Fox as the
second Mrs. de Winter. (She marries a widower, moves into his mansion, suspects
the place is haunted by this first wife's spiritual remains, lives in fear of
the maid her predecessor left behind, and deduces hubby's awful dark secret
about an hour and half after the dimmest-witted among the audience has.) Faye
Dunaway plays the part of the New York socialite who introduces Fox to her
Cornish beau, who's played by Charles Dance. Diana Rigg is Mrs. Danvers. (Until
10:30 p.m.)
9:00 (5) Mother Knows Best (movie). That's because daughter married a
social undesirable. Naturally it's up to Mom to restore the status quo. Joanna
Kerns stars with Grant Show, Christine Elise, and Jessica Walter. (Until 11
p.m.)
9:00 (7, 10) Meteor Man (movie). Mild-mannered inner-city school teacher
is hit by a rock from outer space and becomes a superhero. Robert Guillaume and
Marla Gibbs are the proud stars of this one. (Until 11 p.m.)
10:30 (2) Mystery: Cadfael: The Leper of St. Giles. Repeated from
last week. Baron Huon de Domville unexpectedly rides off into the night on the
eve of his wedding. Derek Jacobi stars. To be repeated on Tuesday at 8 p.m. on
Channel 44. (Until midnight.)
Midnight (2) In the Life: As American As Apple Pie: Gay Americana
Uncovered. Repeated from last week. The history of gays and lesbians in
vaudeville and the circus, plus a trip to an old building on Pittsburgh's North
Side (where, though it's of no special importance, we used to shop for sheet
music and clarinet reeds), now home to the Andy Warhol Museum (which is worth
the trip, by the way). (Until 1 a.m.)
MONDAY 14
8:00 (2) Mysteries of Deep Space: To the Edge of the Universe. A
chance to catch up with those 39 numbskulls from Rancho Santa Fe, who must be
proffering their Nikes on the Tatooinian black market by now, trying to raise
their return fares. But seriously: this three-part series combines animation
and pictures from the Hubble space telescope to offer a modern astronomy
lesson. To be repeated on Friday at midnight. (Until 9 p.m.)
8:00 (7) The Walk for Hunger. Preview and promotion for the May 4
20-mile trek to raise cash for the good institutions that feed the hungry.
Funny that the government can't handle this, but it can't, so vote in the
streets. (Until 8:30 p.m.)
8:00 (44) The American Experience: Demon Rum. A prohibition
chronicle focusing on how the highhanded goody-goody crusade against high
spirits plunged the country into corruption and hypocrisy. (Until 9 p.m.)
9:00 (2) The American Experience: Troublesome Creek: A
Midwestern. How one Iowa couple saved their family farm from the clutches
of the mean old bank during the agribiz-inspired foreclosure purge of the
1980s. The film won at Sundance. To be repeated on Wednesday at 9 p.m. on
Channel 44. (Until 10:30 p.m.)
9:00 (5) Reality Bites (movie). Ben Stiller directed this story of four
Gen Xers trying to figure out what twentysomethingness holds for them, and he
stars with Winona Ryder, Ethan Hawke, Janeane Garofalo, and Steve Zahn. From
1994. (Until 11 p.m.)
9:00 (7, 10) Nightscreams (movie). Ghost of a murdered woman invades the
body of her living look-alike. Starring Teri Garr and Candace Cameron Bure.
(Until 11 p.m.)
TUESDAY 15
8:00 (2) Nova: Kingdom of the Sea Horse. Get startled: 1)
in the world of seahorse sexuality, it's the male who gets pregnant; 2)
there are seahorse experts (one of whom, McGill University's Amanda Vincent,
hosts this program); and 3) seahorses are endangered, especially in
(where else?) the Philippines, where the locals are harvesting them into
extinction because they believe the kinky little critters are (what else?) an
aphrodisiac. God save us all from the horny uneducated peoples of the world. A
look at Vincent's conservation efforts. To be repeated on Wednesday at
midnight, and on Thursday at 9 p.m. on Channel 44. (Until 9 p.m.)
8:00 (44) Masterpiece Theatre: Middlemarch, part two. Dorothea
experiences life with Casaubon. Let this be a lesson to you, young lady. (Until
9 p.m.)
8:30 (5) Soul Man. Dan Aykroyd mixes messages playing a clergyman in a
new sit-com titled to evoke The Blues Brothers. Give it a chance; Dan's
been doing those Canadian ghost-story re-enactment shows too long. (Until 9
p.m.)
9:00 (2) Frontline: How To Buy a President. The knee-jerk
anti-Clinton crowd would have you believe that Bill would sell out for extra
cheese on his Whopper. That's both irrelevant and unfair. It is, however, true
that the guy's campaign accepted money from Asian special interests, which is
at best a clownish mistake, at worst a federal crime. (Until 10 p.m.)
9:00 (4, 12) Deep Family Secrets (movie). Could be the title of nine out
of 10 TV-movies. This 1997 effort has a wife disappearing, hubby accused of her
murder. Acting might save it: Angie Dickinson, Richard Crenna, Molly Gross, Meg
Foster. Might. (Until 11 p.m.)
9:00 (44) Mystery: Cadfael: The Leper of St. Giles. Repeated from
Thursday at 9 p.m.
10:00 (2) Viewpoint: Missing in Tibet. We have no background
worth sharing here -- only that this show profiles Ngawang Choefel, who was
sentenced to an 18-year prison term in Chinese-occupied Tibet. (Until 10:30
p.m.)
10:30 (2) Lost Africans of the Andes. James Earl Jones narrates this
account of an expedition to obscurest Ecuador and a secret village of people of
African descent. (Until 11 p.m.)
WEDNESDAY 16
9:00 (2) The Fight in the Fields: Cesar Chavez and the Farmworkers'
Struggle. The history of Latino labor leader Chavez and the crusade that
launched the nation's first farmworkers' union. In an era when the union notion
is abused to protect incompetent public-school teachers, it's good to be
reminded that some worthy folks really need to organize for self-protection.
(Until 11 p.m.)
9:00 (44) The American Experience: Troublesome Creek. Repeated
from Monday at 9 p.m.
Midnight (2) Nova: Kingdom of the Sea Horse. Repeated from
Tuesday at 8 p.m.
THURSDAY 17
9:00 (2) Mystery: Cadfael: Monk's Hood. First a wealthy landowner
announces his intention to leave a lot of dough to Shrewsbury Abbey. Next thing
you know, the guy's been poisoned to death. Go figure. Cadfael does. Derek
Jacobi stars. (Until 10:30 p.m.)
9:00 (44) Nova: Kingdom of the Sea Horse. Repeated from Tuesday
at 8 p.m.
FRIDAY 18
7:30 (38) Basketball. The Celts versus the Philadelphia 76ers.
9:00 (2) The Great Love Songs. Tender lyrics from the 1920s through
today, delivered by Jack Jones, Maureen McGovern, John Raitt, and other people
like that. Tina Turner's "What's Love Got To Do with It?" probably didn't make
the final cut here; the Channel 2 program schedule blurb lists three examples
-- "I'll See You in My Dreams," "When I Fall in Love," and the immortal "When
Time Goes By" (must be from that unforgettable Bogart/Bergman film
Casanova -- "Play it again, Stan"). (Until 10:20 p.m.)
9:00 (44) Around the World in 80 Days: Two Arabian Fights.
Michael Palin continues his British-TV race against the globe and the clock
with a visit to Egypt and a rough passage to India. (Until 10 p.m.)
10:20 (2) Marvin Hamlisch and the Pittsburgh Pops: Looking Back.
Hamlisch is no big deal (Pittsburgh just wanted to hire someone as lame as John
Williams to lead it's orchestra-lite), but it's always nice to check in with
tonight's guest stars, Steve Lawrence and Eydie Gorme, who sing a tribute to
the Gershwin brothers. (Until 11:20 p.m.)
Midnight (2) Mysteries of Deep Space: To the Edge of the
Universe. Repeated from Monday at 8 p.m.