S "0 0 ' 0 AGIANT AMONG HIS PEERS Martin Short fills creativity's tall order. BY MIKE BYGRAVE (Left to right) Jessica Lange, Cissy Spacek and Diane Keaton are the high-powered stars of Crimes of the Heart, based on Beth Henley's Pulitzer Prize-winning play. Dec.-NATIVE SON Richard Wright's classic and tragic novel about racism in the 1930s, set against the murder trial of a black chauffeur who is accused of killing the daughter of his white employer. This low-budget adaptation stars Ger- aldine Page, Matt Dillon, Elizabeth McGovern and Oprah Winfrey. Dec.-PLATOON Director-writer Oliver Stone knows a thing or two about Vietnam from per- sonal experience. And now he's going to tell you. This gritty, realistic war drama about the soldiers who served in the conflict's most har- rowing battles stars Charlie Sheen, Willem Da- foe, Tom Berenger, Matt Penn and Kevin Dillon. Martin Short is, well, short. At five feet, eight ("and a half!l") inches, the ex-Saturday Night Live star and creator of the infamous Ed Grimley can't hold a candle to Chevy Chase's six feet, four inches, or even Steve Martin's six feet even. But this is one time when size works to his advantage, distinguishing Short-in his first film role-from his more lofty co-stars, Chase and Martin, in The Three Amigos, a comedy-musi- cal-Western. (Heigh-ho Silver, awayl) Size apart, Short has, in his own estimation, "a boyish quality,'' which serves him well in The Three Amigos where he plays Ned (formerly 'Little Neddy Knickers") Nederlander, the "little guy" among a trio of stars from Hollywood's silent film days. While the three are on a visit to Mexico, the inhabitants of a poor village mistake them for real Western heroes and recruit them to fight local banditos. In person, like many comedians, Short is alive- ly, articulate, essentially serious man who doesn't seem at all boyish ("I know. It comes out in my work."). Though Short, Chase and Martin, strangers when they met, did indeed become friends during the filming of Three Amigos, any- one expecting tales of demolished cantinas and wild and crazy practical jokes is in for a disap- pointment. Actually, they're a pretty tame trio. "We played a lot of games. Scrabbe. Triviat Pursuit. If Chevy was filming, Steve and I played dominoes. My trailer became ''The Three Ami- gos Clubhouse,'" and that's where we ate lunch and played our games.'' There was a serious purpose to the game- playing, since The Three Amigos are supposed to be fast and old friends on film, and "you can't really fake that. We had to be friends for the film to work best, and fortunately, we all got on to- gether very well." One thing they didn't do very much of was talk over old times. While Saturday Night Live has become a vital cog in many new comic careers, working on it is not something you look back on with unalloyed pleasure. Says the Canadian-born Short, "When Chevy and I did talk about it, our experiences were very similar. Of course, when he did SNL, the show was brand new, and when I went there, it was an established show. But basically any time you write your own material on a show, it means you're there all the time. It's unrelenting. From the beginning, I only signed a one-year contract, and I left when the year was up. I don't think it would have been fair to my family to do more." Like SNL creator and Three Amigos co-writer and producer, Lorne Michaels, (who recom- mended Short for the film although the two men had never worked together), Short came up through the ranks of Canadian show business. Now 34, he went straight from McMasters Uni- versity to the cast of a Canadian Godspett ("my 'class' of Godspell included Gilda Radner and Andrea Martin and our pianist was Paul Shaffer") before heading to Los Angeles and the television series, The Associates. He also played with To- ronto's Second City company before making his real mark on SCTVL and then on Saturday Night Live. The rest is history. "Ed Grimley actually developed out of a char- acter I did with Second City. There was an exist- ing sketch called 'Sexist' when I joined the com- pany (Short recently recreated 'Sexist' with Harold Ramis for Comic Relief, the comedy fund- raiser for the homeless of last summer that was organized by Robin Williams, Whoopie Goldberg and Billy Crystal). Another actor had played it, so when I took over the part, I naturally wanted to make it a little different. I changed the voice, and I started to grease my hair to give it a funny look. One night I put the hair right up, and the audience laughed, and my tendency is, if they laugh, keep it!" A sound performance philosophy. Grimley's emergence then moved to the with another ape. But she's in love with Brian Kerwin and he's . . . well, it's going to get real messy. This version is brought to you by the same folks responsible for the 1976 remake. Dec. 19-CRIMES OF THE HEART The most intriguing cast of the season is featured in this adaptation of Beth Henley's Pulitzer Prize- winning black comedy. Diane Keaton, Sissy Spa- cek and Jessica Lange play three offbeat sisters who gather at their childhood home in the South after the youngest of the trio murders her hus- band. Also in the cast are playwright Sam Shep- ard and Tess Harper. Dec. 25-BRIGHTON BEACH MEMOIRS Neil Simon's semi-autobiographical Broadway comedy about growing up in Depression-era Brooklyn was one of his biggest hits in years. Now it comes to the screen with Jonathan Sil- verman in the lead role and Blythe Danner, Bob Dishey and Judith Ivey as members of his overly extended family. Dec-THE LITTLE SHOP OF HORRORS What began as a movie and then became a stage play is back to being a movie again. Only this time the rather offbeat story about a neb- bishy greenhouse employee and his relationship with a jealous, person-eating houseplant is a big- budget musical. Rick Moranis is the star (no, not as the plant, as the nebbish), and Steve Martin and Bill Murray show up in cameo roles. Native Son, from Richard Wright's power- ful novel of racial hatred, stars Victor Love and Akosua Busia. Dec. 25-THE MORNING AFTER Jane Fonda momentarily changes out of her exercise tights to play an alcoholic, has-been actress who's framed for murder. Jeff Bridges plays the unlikely redneck accomplice who helps her es- cape the law. Raul Julia plays her ex-husband. Dec-SQUARE DANCE Island Pictures, the company that has turned out such sophisticated hits as Kiss of the Spider Woman and Mona Lisa, makes another contribution to grown-up enter- tainment with this drama about a young girl who leaves the security of her grandfather's Texas farm to spend the summer with the mother who deserted her many years before. Jane Alexander is the irresponsible mother, Jason Robards is the grandfather, Rob Lowe is the young man who offers the girl her first taste of romance and Wi- nona Ryder stars as the young teenager. The Platoon, screenwriter Oliver Stone's (Year of the Dragon, Salvador) gritty look at the Vietnam war, stars Charlie Sheen. Neil Simon's affectionate reminiscence of Depression-era Brooklyn, Brighton Beach Memoirs, stars Jonathan Silverman. 8 Ampersand Ampersand 17