Manchester hears Paxton By WENDY GOODMAN and MIKE TAYLOR "You're a person first, a musician second, and a political View third," Jim Post reminded Tom Paxton after their successful performances Monday night at the Black Sheep Repertory Theatre, located in downtown Manchester. It was the first time either musician had played at the converted 1800's opera house, which combines professional repertory theatre with folk and blues musical performances. Post, a muse with an energetic per- forming style, got the crowd into a spir- ited mood. "This is a test to see if you're a real folk audience or not," Post noted as he taught the chorus to one of his songs to the audience; happily, the folks in the seats passed the test. His biggest crowd-pleaser was a gospel tune done holy roller style, teaching the lesson of humility. As a performer, Post was as fun to watch as to listen to. Occasionally, he would step back and into characteriza- tions of back-up singers such as 'the Pips' (of Gladys Knight fame). To do Dancing in the Wind, Post came into the audience to do just that. He finished the song and the set by dancing away; it was quite an exit. Paxton began his set with an amusing tune about Saturday night in a bar. He then changed the pace masterfully with the beautiful, lyrical Can't Help Won- dering Where I'm Bound. "The next couple of songs I'm going $10,000 fingers. Steven DeGroote, of Bloemfontein, South Africa, is the latest winner of the Van Cliburn International Quadrennial piano competition, winning $10,000 and a worldwide concert tour. MacArthur New fall TV show features Betty White It's hardly the easiest cinematic un- dertaking in these post-turbulent, cyni- cal days to attempt a biography of an authentic American legend, especially of the political or military ilk. Since the era of overtly pseudo-ecclesiastical homage to historical luminaries seems behind us, the biographical filmmaker now appears duty-bound to throw an ob- ligatory bone to both the smugly dur- able anti-hero crowd and the recently and fashionably re-insurgent Panama Canal-Orange County gang. Thus it is with the film MacArthur, which' right off the bat asks in bold- typed prologue, "Was he a dangerous demagogue or one of the greatest men in the world?" MacArthur was, of cour- se, both, and Hollywood's obliquely sta- ted admission of such, however com- mercial in motivation, would hopefully give promise to a genuinely shades-of- gray depiction of one of the most notable - and one of the last American superheroes of the century. Unfortunately, the biographical genre still suffers from what might be termed de facto reverence, which creeps and plods its way into the best- intentioned efforts and results in a kind of righteous atrophy, withering reality into a pseudo-saintly paralysis in which the protagonist's triumphs and failings both seem cast in the same bronzed bigger-than-life stardom of the old Abe Lincoln-Tom Edison vintage.' So on the one hand we get MacArthur the military genius masterminding a brilliant stroke in Korea to cut the ene- my in half; on the other we see Mac- Arthur the supercilious egomaniac de- manding photographers shoot him solely from an upward angle. MacArthur doesn't distort as much as it omits. The film limits itself to a ten- year period of the general's career, from his forced retreat from Japanese- beleagured Corrigidor in 1942 ("I shall return") to his abrupt but inevitable dismissal by Harry Truman in 1951 for disobeying orders in Korea. Had the time-span been broadened, the picture might tjave given some domestic scope to this complex aristocrat, such as his brutally cavalier dismantling - with aides George Patton and Dwight Eisen- hower - of the Washington Bonus Mar- chers in 1932. As it is, MacArthur sticks to foreign- based strategisms, taking the General through his triumphal return to the Phillipines near war's end, his five- year reign as governor of occupied Japan, the triumph and disaster of Korea culminating with Mac's hero's welcome home only to, in his own wor- ds, "just fade away." A history or mili- tary buff could probably groove on all of this, but the rest will probably find it less than stimulating. The Japanese oc- cupation segment provides the most genuine interest, with MacArthur quiet- ly exhaulting in his virtual king's role over his conquered subjects, even proving something of a closet liberal as he dictates reform after reform into the newly-created Japanese Constitution. Always merely a competent actor at best and cursed with an eternal Lin- colnesque sonorousness that blunted his most diverse characterizations, Peck tries hard but can never make you forget that this is simply good old Greg imitating a famous person. In MacAr- thur he's atmhisbest when recreating the general's various speeches, stirring the masses from Corrigidor to West Point. But Peck always sounds like he's delivering a speech even in quiet con- ersation, and after a while the effect becomes simultaneously lulling and maddening. MacArthur is a cinematic history book, and as such an enterprise to avoid unless you enjoy the privilege of paying money to do homework. By NINA SHISHKOFF There's something that clicks in a truly good TV show. After good writing and good acting, there's still some mys- terious quality that meshes the story and characters, and gives the show its distinct personality. One show that "had it" was "The Mary Tyler Moore Show." Perhaps more than any other situation comedy, the comedy centered around charac- ters, not situations. The newsroom bun- ch was a "team," a "family." The de- parture of Rhoda and Phyllis didn't even slow it down. The subsequent spin- offs "Rhoda" and "Phyllis" didn't have it. The jokes were there, but not the spirit. This season, two more "orphans" .of the "MTM" show try to make it on their own. "The Betty White Show," Monday nights on CBS, stars Betty White and Georgia Engles, better known as MTM's Sue Ann Nivens and Georgette Baxter, playing essentially the same characters. Carrying on where the "Mary Tyler Moore" show left him,; fired from the newsroom job, "Lou Grant" goes back to his first love - newspaper editing. Asner can be seen in the newsroom Tuesday evenings at 10 p.m. "The Betty White Show" has every- thing going for it; Betty White, for starters, good acting, good writing, and the usual MTM productions' broad framework, suited to its cast. But the 'something' isn't there. Betty is supposed to be Joyce Whit- man, an actress who stars in "Under- cover Woman," an idiotic police show. Her ex-husband directs the show, and as the episodes go by, we see they have a love-hate relationship that fuels most of the plots. When Joyce isn't insulting or being insulted by him, she is insult- ing or being insulted by a young actress on the show. Betty White's Sue Ann Nivens was perfection in bitchiness, but here Joyce Whitman recites her insults hollowly. There's no spirit in the show; characters talk past each other, and the relationships aren't convincing. Perhaps the show still needs to find itself. If it does, it ought to be a success; thA ingredients are all there. When a show has it, it's not hard to see. Lou Grant has it. As Lou enters the newspaper building he hopes to work in, a surly guard hands him a number. "Stick this on .your pocket, and don't take it off. It authorizes you to be on the 4th floor." 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