SB - The Michigan Daily - Wet4- e. - Thursday, December 7, 1995 New magazine makes readers do a'DoubleTake' By Dean Bakopoulos Daily Books Editor If you don't take a double take when you see the cover of "DoubleTake," you need to have your eyes checked. The cover has no words, save the magazine's masthead. Rather, it de- votes the entire cover to a striking color photo by Paul D'Amato en- titled "Blue Boy." The photo cap- tures young schoolboys at play in a city lot, and well, it's incredible. Few photographers have captured such a disturbing and intense collection of emotions on the faces of child sub- jects. Looking at the picture, one knows that inside the cover will be no ordinary magazine. Indeed, DoubleTake, published by the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University, is certainly not an ordinary magazine. This unique- ness stems largely from the editors' promise to "treat photographers and writers - both in the field and on the page - as equals." Indeed, DoubleTake is filled with just as many beautiful and stunning visual images as beautiful and stunning words. Both the photographic work and the poetry contained in its pages are varied and original. One of the most interesting photo- The Magazine Column graphs in the fall 1995 issue, only the magazine's second, is Camilo Jose Vergara's "The Ruins and Revival Archive." This series of images cap- tures the storefront at 65 West 125th Street in Harlem, not from different perspectives or angles, but across a period of seven years. The changes in the facade of the building capture not only the sad decline of urban America, but also the country's uncanny ability to adapt and survive. Another powerful photographic piece is that of Bill Bamberger, who offers readers a glimpse at his "Fac- tory Lives" collection. Again, here the reader gets skillfully evocative photographs of former employees at the now shutdown White Furniture Company in Mebane, N.C. Bamberger's images of the American proletariat are surely meant to con- jure up scenes from the short stories of Raymond Carver, often thought of as the chronicler of the American working class. Speaking of Carver, "DoubleTake" also includes poetry, including a new poem from Tess Gallagher, Carver's widow. Gallagher's poem, "For Cer- tain Foreign Anthologists of Raymond Carver" is a tenderly written remem- brance of her husband, and at the same time, a bitter reprimand to those who distort his image. Another top-quality poem in the second issue of "DoubleTake" is Stephen Dobyns' "Thelonious Monk." In this piece, the poet recalls the magic of his first record album, a Monk LP. Dobyns poem is filled with pleasing lines such as, "I was eighteen and between my present and future was a wall so big that not even sunlight crept over." Fittingly, Dobyns' poem is followed by "Jazz," a photo essay by Anthony Barboza. In addition to featuring some of the best poets of contemporary literature, "DoubleTake" also contains some of contemporary fiction's best and brightest. Particularly testimonial to the liter- ary merit found in "DoubleTake" is the short story "Nightcap" by Ron Carlson. Wavering between humor- ous and sorrowful, the story brings to life the trials of a middle-aged lawyer who feels he is losing control of his world and himself. The story is exemplementary of Carlson's sadly witty and insightful prose. He writes, "One of the primary cowardly acts of the late twentieth century is standing beneath the bleachers finishing a new beer before buying another and re- joining your date." Other contributingwriters include poets Paul Zimmer, Sandra McPherson, and Dave Smith, as well as fiction writers Patrick Yachimski and Lucy Honig. In addition, DoubleTake has all the staples of other literay/intellectual periodicals-book and film reviews, essays, investigative journalism, and biographical profiles. And all of this is laid out cleanly and well, with a nearly perfect eye and sense ofpreci- sion. Perhaps the most gripping feature in this fall 1995 issue are excerpts from the artistic, photographic and poetic journals of Dan Eldon, a 22- year-old Reuters photographer stoned to death in 1993 by an angry mob while working in Somalia. Eldon's journals, which are now on display at the Cedar Rapids Museum of Art in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, show the world that it may have lost one of its great artistic minds far too soon. Inshort, "DoubleTake" is the perfect magazine for that car/bus/train/plane ride home for the holiday break. Filled with a variety of amusing and provoca- tive writing, plus photographs you will want to linger on for long periods of time, "DoubleTake" ranks among the best new magazines on the market. Actually, even despite it's youth, it seems have no trouble matching the quality of writing and visual images of some of today's top periodicals. You may have some difficulty find- ing a copy of "DoubleTake" in some areas. Call 1-800-221-3148 for fur- ther information. Tim Robbins and Jennifer Jason Leigh face off in the 1992 film "The Hudsucker Proxy." New movie 'Georgia' hits dose to home for Jennifer Jason Leigh This startling photo by Paul D'Amato graces the cover of the fall 1995 issue of "DoubleTake," an Intelligent, Insightful new magazine featuring poetry, fiction, investigative journalism by some of today's best writers. Newsday Actresses exist most profoundly within the lives they borrow, but un- less they're Norma Desmond, they generally know where to draw the line. Jennifer Jason Leigh knows where to draw it, too. She just likes to move it around a little. In her new movie, "Georgia," which opens Friday, Leigh doesn't play Georgia. She plays her sister, Sadie, who wants to be Georgia. Shame- lessly imposing, desperately needy and occasionally pathetic - prime Leigh territory - Sadie is a woman living a co-opted existence: The mar- ginally talented relative of a really big singing star, Sadie desires noth- ing more than to be her own sibling. And she can't. And she is absurd. But for all the embarrassment and discomfort Sadie causes - to every- one - Leigh makes Sadie memo- rable, meaningful and occasionally frustrating. You want her to straighten out, separate her life from Georgia (Mare Winningham), get it together with her musician friend Bobby (John Doe), get as far away as possible from the dives and the demented wackos. And most of all, be happy. The emotional connection Leigh makes with her audience will come as no surprise to anyone familiar with the actress' career, or the litany of vamps, tramps and psychopaths she's played since 1980's "Eyes of a Stranger"; her work has placed her in the vanguard of American actresses. But she may have surpassed even her own good work, because she's crossed some self-drawn line from pure act- ing to personal investment. "She's just burning herself into the ground," Leigh said of Sadie, look- ing small and pale and cradled by her hotel-room couch. "I'm so tired. I was so jet-lagged I just couldn't fall asleep at all last night. May I lounge like this?" she asked, a little laugh escaping as she stretches out. Leigh has never been considerd a warm and wonderful interview. Dur- ing press for "The Hudsucker Proxy" in 1993, for instance, she was always cordial, always a bit chilly. She com- ported herself like a pure professional, and not much more. But during the recent New York Film Festival, where "Georgia" screened, it was a new Leigh: Friendly, warm, eager to an- swer questions, quicker to laugh. The unsettling thing is, she's an actress of considerable abilities, but she seemed sincerely interested, at the very least, in getting "Georgia" across. She dragged on a cigarette. "Sadie doesn't have a great voice; she doesn't write songs. She even says, 'I don't write songs, I just make them up,' which is a line from Janis Joplin. It's not even her own line. And she wants to be thought of as this Janis Joplin character, too." But what she really wants to be is Georgia, who is one of the very few title characters around who is neither hero nor villain but neurosis. Sadie Now leasing for May and September Hurryor the best selection! isn't untalented - plenty of careers have been built on less - she just lacks a self. And where it leads her- into alcoholism, drugs, stupid affairs and two-bit gigs in bowling alleys - is the stuff of the film. As a social symptom, Sadie repre- sents a broad constituency that in- cludes everyone from Geraldo's next guest to Mark David Chapman: In an age when you presumably don't exist if you're not on television, there are many people who are desperate for MONO TUnversity~. 536 S. Forest Ave. 761-2680 9 and 12 month leases available "The highest quality apartments and service for the most affordable price" Walk to classes A blond Leigh takes a drag in 1989's "Heart of Midnight." stardom but also desperate for talent. It's like needing water but not having a mouth. Sadie has a mouth, which is part of the problem. "It's so funny," Leigh said, "be- cause whenever I do anyone's song I would try to do it as close to that person as possible, because that's who Sadie is. She's dying to be Georgia, but when she sings other people's songs ... When she does a Van Morrison song, it's Van Morrison, ya know? And yet, the more she tries to become these other people, the more she becomes herself. The thing I didn't even realize until I saw the film was that the more she tries to emulate others, the more Sadie she becomes." For the actress, who appeared ear- lier this year in Taylor Hackford's "Dolores Claiborne" and will soon be seen in Robert Altman's "Kansas City," "Georgia" was a family af- fair. Her mother, screenwriter Bar- bara Turner (Leigh's father was the late Vic Morrow), was someone she'd "always wanted to work with." So she made a proposal. "I had this germ of an idea about two sisters," she said, "one with a voice from God and one with a voice, as John Doe says, from Detroit. It was about the relationship between the eternal screwup and the one who's so grounded. I also always wanted to do a movie about sisters, because I have two sisters and I'm really close to both of them, and I find these rela- tionships moving and fascinating and a big part of my life. So, anyway, I told her this vague idea, and she said she liked it and that she'd be inter- ested in writing it." The crossings of borders in "Geor- gia" are considerable. Mare Winningham, for instance, actually was the older, folksinging counselor to Leigh when they attended art camp together (Leigh was 14, Winningham 17). Then there's Leigh's relation- ship with her older sister, Carrie Mor- row, 36, whom Leigh, 34, decribedas the "gut" kid who got in trouble while the "cerebral" Jennifer was cleanig her room. Carrie Morrow's difficulties have been resolved, Leigh said. "She's in school and she's going to become a drug counselor; she's really goe through it and come out the other side. And she's one of the most amaz- ing people I know. My other sister's an actress, Mina Badie. She's just starting out. Both my sisters are also my closest confidantes." Leigh, who also co-produced the film with her mother and director Ulu Grosbard, spends a large amount of screen time singing and performing, usually in run-down honky-tonks. Her compatriots in- clude Doe, former member of the Los Angeles band X, and John C. Reilly, who plays the doomed drum- mer Herman. The centerpiece of the film - and the moment of relative triumph for Sadie - comes during an eight-and- a-half minute performance of Van. Morrison's "Take Me Back," a ram- bling, passionate musical meditation that Sadie sings onstage in the middle of a Georgia concert. It was done in two takes, and is extraordinary to watch, a collision of desire and fate. Did the actress have to fake singing badly through any of the film? "I sang as well as I possibly could." And yet, on certain numbers, such as Elvis Costello's "Almost Blue," Sadie's voice seems to contain just the right wistful fragility. It works. And because it does, it adds to the complexity of Sadie's plight. From "Last Exit to Brooklyn" to "Rush" to "Mrs. Parker and the Vi- cious Circle"to "Dolores Claiborne" to "The Hudsucker Proxy" - which featured her insanely mannered hom- age/parody of the Kate Hepburn-Roz Russell-style screwball heroine _ Leigh has consistently won praise, even ifthe people praising didn'tnec- essarily like the movies she was in. "I found that to be the case a lot during the first couple of years I was working," she said. 'But back then, I felt lucky to find parts I found inspir- ing and wanted to play; I didn't even look at the whole movie - mean, as a choice. I'd just say, 'This is a char- acter I could do something with. It excites me and it's challenging to play.' "Now I feel like I'm getting to make movies I would pay to go see. For me, that's a great thing, so I feel very lucky in that respect." 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