The Michigan Daily - Monday, September 21, 1998 -9A 4ational gallery's van Gogh exhibit to draw crowd he Washington Post WASHINGTON -There is a den- tst in France who will paint a van Gogh reproduction on your front teeth if you want. A French cook fsiions copies of van Gogh's paint- sin sugar, and is gradually mak- ghis way through the entire oeu- v. Knitters turn the paintings into Weaters, craftsmen make them into iosaics, profiteers program paint achines to duplicate van Gogh's painstaking brush strokes. Vincent van Gogh and his art have spawned a vast industry of worship and imitation - reams of books and articles, movies, plays, songs, poems, Web sites, T-shirts, puzzles deven a "Great Artist Series" 0ne doll dressed in a sunflower. .igaims travel to weep in the room where he died in Auvers-sur-Oise, France, and leave ashes and memen- tos at his nearby grave. There is a Pin the Ear on van Gogh game; a mug with a detachable handle shaped like an car. Van Gogh can arguably also be held responsible for the glut of sunflowers that decorated everything @m hair clips to wastebaskets a few seasons ago. It is partly as a result of van Gogh mania that an exhibit of paintings from the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam is coming to the National Gallery Oct. 4 to Jan. 3, offering this city a chance to experi- ence its own version of the madness. Osmonds bring '70s to '90s TV Los Angeles Times $1 OLLYWOOD -They may be a lit- t e too long in the tooth to sing "Puppy Love" and "Paper Roses," but Donny and Marie Osmond don't seem much different from their days as the clean-cut teen-age siblings on the '70s ABC musi- cl-variety series "Donny and Marie." Now, 19 years after the series' demise, the pair are throwing their hats and well- known smiles into the talk-show ring with a new weekday entry, "Donny & -rie," which is being syndicated und the country. Both Donny and Marie, who still love to tease each other, have had enduring single careers. Performing since he was 3 years old with the Osmond Brothers, Donny later had great success on the legit stage, touring for several years in "Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat." This summer he was the singing voice of Shang in "Mulan." Donny, 40, is the Oer of five sons. Marie, 38, and the mother of six, also has branched out into the world of musi- cal comedy, touring in "The Sound of Music" and starring on Broadway in "The King and I." She also appeared in tlie ABC sitcom "Maybe This Time" and sells her line of Marie Osmond Fine Porcelain Collector Dolls at Disney Theme Parks and on QVC. She also is co-founder of the Children's Miracle Network, which has raised $1.4 billion we 1983 for medical treatment, research and assistance at children's hos- pitals. Brother and sister talked on the phone from Philadelphia,just one of their stops in a nationwide promotion tour. Q: Have you both worked together a lot since "Donny and Marie" went off the air? Donny: Not really. We did some tour- a little bit. arie: It will be about 20 years since we worked together. Q: So what's it like reuniting after two decades? Donny: It was actually quite interest- ing that everything justjust kind of came back together. The chemistry we had back in the '70s just immediately popped back into place. Marie: It's a very unique relationship when you have a sibling relationship ause you can go places with your ether or sister that you never could with a co-host or a host or even if you are married (to the host). Q: How did the talk show happen? Donny: This whole concept isn't new to us. We've been approached ever since we ended the "Donny and Marie" show to do something, whether it be another series or specials. The timing just didn't f9l right. Marie and I wanted to pursue own thing. Now that we have done that, the timing just feels really good. Columbia TriStar - their support of the show - and particularly with Dick Clark as our executive producer, it just felt right. Q: Can you talk about the format~of the~ cVhoi9 The National Gallery has already dispensed nearly 215,000 advance passes, and expects heavy demand for the 1,800 to 2,300 additional tickets to be released every morning during the exhibition. Even scalpers have gotten into the act, selling the free tickets for as much as S50 for opening day. "We don't usually do art exhibits," said Danny Matta, the owner of Great Seats Inc., a ticket brokerage in College Park, Md. "But many of our regular clients wanted them. This is basically a service for people who don't want to wait in line." "Surveys have shown that van Gogh is the most recognized artist in the world," said Eric Jackson of Anderson Consulting, which is underwriting the exhibition for a sum he would not disclose. That recogni- tion appeals to the Fortune 500 CEOs and CFOs who are his compa- ny's main clients, Jackson said of the decision to sponsor the show. Monique Hageman of the Van Gogh Museum says the artist's appeal is "because of the letters he wrote. So we know a lot more of him than of other painters of his time. Everybody wants to make a romantic life of what we know of him from his letters." Built to accommodate 60,000 visi- tors a year, the 25-year-old Van Gogh Museum has been attracting more than 15 times as many. With a single elevator and one staircase, viewers face long lines, especially during the summer season, when tourists come in droves. "A million people a year, and toilet facilities designed for 60,000," museum spokeswoman Marjelle van Hoorn said. Because it must close for eight months to complete renovations prompted by this popularity, the museum (which was started by van Gogh's nephew, the son of his beloved brother Theo) agreed to loan 70 of its 200 paintings to the National Gallery. Van Gogh mania perhaps reached its height in 1990, when "Portrait of Dr. Gachet" was sold at auction to a Japanese paper magnate for a record $82.5 million. That sale occurred 100 years after the impecunious artist died, shortly after painting the picture of his homeopathic physician, a man he thought sicker than himself. Given the vicissitudes of the art market, however, it is best to consid- er the value of the collection coming here as "priceless." Security will be extremely tight. Van Gogh has the dubious distinction of being among those artists who have been the target of art thieves and insane desecrators. The National Gallery will have its share of memorabilia for sale - 64 items ranging from 50-cent post- cards to a S139 vase, all of which have been approved by the Van Gogh Museum as suitably tasteful. The profits go toward subsidizing the gallery's publications. In its more-virulent forms, van Gogh mania goes way beyond 50-cent post- cards. "It's a peculiar global community of enthusiasts that all share the same kind of fever," said David Brooks, a Canadian computer expert who maintains the Website wwwvangogh- gallerym conc. "There is something indescribable that possesses you ... the majority of people, you couldn't show them a Vermeer and they would know what it is. But you show them 'Starry Night' or 'Bedroom' and they know who he is. Why are people so fasci- nated with Elvis or James Dean'? It's the tragic flavor to their story ... It touches people." "Lust for Life" is just one of more than 85 feature films and documen- t- - - taries about van Gogh from 19 coun- tries, according to Kees Pinxteren in "The Mythology of Van Gogh." They range from fictionalized dramas to Dadaist parodies to a one-minute humorous exegesis in Dutch called "The Bedroom." Van Gogh has inspired scores of novels, biographies and critiques, as well as sappy poetry. Painters, from the prominent to retirees copying postcards, have imi- tated or interpreted him for decades. Perhaps the most dedicated van Gogh worshippers are those who travel to the many places he lived in the Netherlands, England, Belgium and France. It can take two weeks to visit all the sites in Holland alone. I IMPACT JAZZ DANCE THEATRE. DANCE AUDITIONS FOR NON-DANCE MAJORS Thursdav, Sept. 24 7:00 PM Michigan Union Ballroom - Friendly Helpful - Affordable * Available Anytime (at ytxx camipus bookstore CAculu '~www.wizpower.com Questions? 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