Tidy Tidbits: Medley of Viewing Options

SERIES ON TELEVISION

MEDICOS IN THE AUSTRALIAN OUTBACK

RFDS: Royal Flying Doctor Service (Prime Video)

Pete & Eliza (RottenTomatoes.com)

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If you like medical shows and unusual cases in remote locations, then you might enjoy this Australian series.  The main base is in Broken Hill in southeastern New South Wales.  Much of the area is desert. In a medical emergency, the most efficient way to reach patients is usually by plane.  The Royal Flying Doctor Service is a real organization still in existence today.  

This fictional series focuses on the pilots, doctors, and nurses who work in this challenging environment.  Chief among them are Dr. Wayne Yates, nurses Pete and Matty, new arrival Dr. Eliza Harrod, and pilots Mira and Graham.  Eliza has come from London (her marriage is breaking up) with her teenage son Henry.  Wayne and Mira are pretty much of a couple; Pete is single and likes attractive women; Graham is a bit crusty, but caring; Matty embarks on a drag career in his spare time; and ops manager Leonie is super effective.  Add in devastating crashes, conflicts and romance, and the result is an engaging, sometimes heart pounding series.  There are two seasons of eight episodes each and possibly a third one in the works. Recommended!

HAUTE COUTURE UNDER THE NAZIS

The New Look (Apple TV+)

Dior & Chanel (preview.ph)

This dramatic series set in 1940’s Paris focuses on the high fashion industry while France is under Nazi occupation.  Designers must decide if they will make dresses for the Nazi wives or if they will quit working and possibly not survive.  Coco Chanel closed her studio, but she played both sides in this war and both fraternized with various Nazis and worked to get her nephew Andre released from captivity.  She then became a person of interest.  

Christian Dior was just coming into his own and designed under the aegis of Lucien Lelong along with others. They did what they did to make a living.  Dior is the principal figure in this saga of danger, dresses, and determination.  Dior’s sister Catherine was a member of the Resistance and worrying about her fate consumes Dior.  At the same time, fashion is changing and a new group of designers, Dior, Balmain, and Cardin challenge Chanel’s precedence.  

Juliette Binoche is superb as the fidgety, demanding, yet caring Coco, and Ben Mendelsohn as Christian is hauntingly broody.   There will be ten episodes in all, and they are being released weekly on Wednesdays. Highly recommended! 

MOVIES:  TEACHER & STUDENT

The Holdovers (Prime Video, etc.)

Tully & Mr. Hunham (IMDb)

The role of the very strict, no nonsense history teacher, Paul Hunham, is perfectly captured by Paul Giamatti.  Left at school during the Christmas holidays as the lone chaperone for prep schoolboys not going home with their parents, Paul is challenged, harassed, and berated by the students.  One by one, even the stragglers leave, and Paul is left with just Tully, a smart troublemaker.  Tully, Paul, and Mary, the school cook who’s mourning the death of her soldier son in Vietnam, make a for an unlikely set of compatriots.  

This is a film that is both funny at points and poignant.  The Chief Penguin enjoyed it very much.  I thought it was good and did appreciate Giamatti’s performance.  

LIVE THEATER: CORSETS AND CLASS IN NYC

Intimate Apparel (Asolo)

Mr. Marks & Esther

Lynn Nottage’s play, Intimate Apparel, encompasses a full spectrum of friendship, romance, prejudice, anger, and forgiveness.  In Lower East Side Manhattan in 1905, Black seamstress Esther has made her own way and supported herself making fine underwear for ladies of all types for eighteen years.  Strong of character, she has always lived in Mrs. Van Buren’s boarding house and yet wishes for a man of her own, a husband.  But Esther is particular and won’t settle for just anyone, so when a laborer in Panama starts writing her letters, she has hopes that become high hopes.  

Although she doesn’t really approve of her friend Mayme’s business, the two help each other out.  Esther is even an available ear for Mrs. Dickson, her married white upper-class client.  What is more challenging is the relationship between Esther and Mr. Marks, the Jewish man from whom she purchases her fabrics.  How much can be said with just a silent glance or the barest touch.  

The play moves through a series of scenes, much like tableaus, with headings over top echoing the article of clothing key to that scene. The beginning seems long, but the early scenes are essential to developing the characters and providing context for the events to come.  It gathers depth and richness as it works to its climax.  And I’m still reflecting on it 24 hours later.  Highly recommended!  It runs through April 18. 

Tidy Tidbits: Theater & Movies

WONDERFUL THEATER!

Born with Teeth (Asolo Repertory Theatre)

Will and Kit (Sarasota Herald Tribune)

Born with Teeth is a recent play (2022) by Liz Duffy Adams.  It debuted at the Alley Theatre in Houston and is now being presented around the country.  It’s a historical play with just one setting and two actors in three scenes set in a London tavern in 1592 and 1593.  The characters are the popular successful Christopher (Kit) Marlowe and the then less well-known Will Shakespeare.  Here, they are collaborating on an historical play.  

There is some evidence that the two did collaborate and Duffy Adams has taken that likely fact and woven a drama around it.  Kit baits and taunts the more cautious, overtly timid Will in the opening scene.  Later they spar and trade barbs over the political climate, discuss the dangers lurking around them in this repressive age, and they tease and flirt.   The climax in the last scene comes with a twist.

It is not necessary to know the details of the times, other than to be aware it was a contentious time with factions railing against Queen Elizabeth and several of her courtiers, Raleigh, Cecil, and Essex warring and plotting with or against each other.  Some even believed Marlowe was a spy.

I found the first fifteen minutes a bit slow; perhaps it was getting my head wrapped around the language, but then the play took off and the next hour plus flew by.  Born with Teeth runs through March 29.  It’s yet another example of the Asolo at its finest! (~JWFarrington)

RECENT MOVIES

Black Life: Real vs. Imagined: American Fiction (Amazon Prime)

Monk flanked by his siblings (npr.com)

Another nominee for Best Picture, American Fiction is fun, witty, and satisfying.  A satirical look at fiction that sells, it features a Black writing professor and author of several books.  But Monk hasn’t published anything recently.  Somewhat incensed by all the attention given to a stereotypical, racist depiction of Blacks by another Black author, he takes a pseudonym and writes his own novel of what he thinks white folks want to read about Black people.  The results upset him but gain him far more attention than he ever bargained for.  

One of the great things about this film is its depiction of a successful upper middle class Black family.  Monk, the star is a professor, his sister is a doctor, and his brother, albeit with his own personal issues, is a plastic surgeon.  There is much to like about this film, some food for thought, and an ending with a couple of surprises.  Highly recommended!

Female Friendship & Romance: The Book Club: The Next Chapter (Amazon Prime)

Dynamic foursome (pluggedin.com)

Several years ago, I not quite dragged the Chief Penguin to the cinema in Manhattan to see The Book Club.  It was fun and a nice change of pace, but not much more.  It was redeemed largely by the marvelous cast of Jane Fonda, Candice Bergen, Diane Keaton, and Mary Steenburgen.  These four talented women, now in their 70’s and 80’s (Fonda is 86!), are together again.  

This time, they’ve convinced their friend Vivian (Fonda), recently engaged, that the women only should go to Italy for her bachelorette party.  Carol and Diane have husbands or partners, and Sharon, a retired judge, is single. 

What follows is silly, partly predictable, and just plain fun.  There’s also a message in there, “carpe diem,” but not exactly expressed that way.  This is a chic flick for sure, but some special guys might enjoy it also.   Call it a delayed Valentine!

SERIES VIEWING: DON’T BOTHER

Expats (Apple TV+)

I read the novel of the same title on which Expats is based and was looking forward to the TV series.  I think I lasted about 20 minutes into the first episode.  Weird, disjointed, and nothing like the book.  I felt somewhat justified when a friend felt similarly.

Good Apprentice (Amazon Prime)

This Italian series about a young woman interested in forensic medicine is one of Walter Presents many offerings.  I watched the first episode and part of the second one.  It’s okay, but seems light, and her frequent clumsiness is overdone.  I’m not going back to it.

Note: Header photo, Pelicans at Robinson Preserve, ©JWFarrington (some rights reserved.)

Tidy Tidbits: Favorite Books & A Play

PURE ESCAPISM 

Crazy for You at the Asolo Theatre

(Sarasota Magazine)

With music and lyrics by the Gershwin brothers, this classic of American musical theater was an afternoon of romance, some hijinks, and lots and lots of dancing!  In 1930 in a dead-end town in Nevada, earnest Bobby Child tries to revive the theater he’s been sent to shut down.  Captivated by Polly Baker, the town’s postmistress, and indulging in some theatrics of his own, he and the cast tap dance their way to a successful finale. Along the way are some all-time favorite songs such as “Someone to Watch over Me” and “Embraceable You.”

(Sarasota Herald-Tribune)

It isn’t profound drama, the plot is simple and predictable, but overall, it’s uplifting and a great respite from the politics of today.  If you’re local, see it before it closes in early January!  

SOME FAVORITE BOOKS OF 2023

(courtesy Basmo)

I liked many of the books I read this year, so it’s hard to choose, but here are a few that have stayed with me. Happy reading to you!

NOVEL ABOUT A HOT BUTTON ISSUE

Mad Honey by Jodi Picoult & Jennifer. F. Boylan

NOVEL BY A FAVORITE AUTHOR

Tom Lake by Ann Patchett

NOVEL BY A NEW AUTHOR

Lessons in Chemistry by Bonnie Garmus

NOVEL THAT READS LIKE A MEMOIR

Hang the Moon by Jeannette Walls

MYSTERY

Exiles by Jane Harper

Runners upSmall Mercies by Dennis Lehane

And White Lady by Jacqueline Winspear

HISTORICAL NOVEL

Horse by Gwendoline Brooks

Runner up: Bookbinder by Pip Williams

NOVELLAS

Foster by Claire Keegan

And Small Things Like These, also by Keegan

NONFICTION/MEMOIR

Enough by Cassidy Hutchinson

Runner up: Giving up the Ghost by Hilary Mantel

To all my readers, best wishes for a most happy, healthy holiday season!

Note: Header photo of open book courtesy of Unsplash.

Tiny Tidy Tidbits

BOOK OF THE WEEK

Trespasses by Louise Kennedy

Author Kennedy (TheTimes.co.uk)

Set in Northern Ireland during the Troubles, this first novel portrays gritty daily life in Belfast and its environs.  The tension between neighboring Catholics and Protestants is often escalated by seemingly random acts of violence.  Cushla, a young elementary school teacher, lives with her alcoholic mother and helps occasionally at the bar owned by her older brother Eammon.  The bar has its regulars, Catholics, but sometimes a Protestant wanders in.  

One evening, barrister Michael Agnew, notices Cushla and strikes up a conversation which leads to involvement and then an affair.  Michael is not only Protestant, but also married and considerably older.  Theirs is a tender love story marked by absence, evasion, and affection.  

Kennedy straightforwardly captures the small details in the setting.  I found the first part a bit slow, but then the book gained momentum as one tragic event led to another.  Kennedy grew up near Belfast and was a chef for almost 30 years before becoming a writer.  Trespasses was the A Post Irish Book Awards Novel of the Year 2022 and also shortlisted for several other awards. It’s the first read from my summer list.

LIVE THEATER

Man of La Mancha (Asolo Repertory Theatre)

Don Quixote & Sancho (SarasotaHeraldTribune.com)

This run of Man of La Mancha has ended, but it was the all-time best production the Chief Penguin and I have enjoyed at the Asolo.  This is not faint praise as the overall caliber of Asolo productions is always extremely high.  The staging, the setting in a contemporary prison, the intricate choreography of fight scenes, the voices and sounds of actors and musicians, and the music itself combined for an engrossing performance.  We were entranced!  And hearing The Impossible Dream sung and then sung again two more times, we were uplifted.  This play was a gift for our complex, polarized times.