|
|
A Laughing Matter
Critics have given Woody Allens latest movie, Hollywood Ending,
a mixed reception. Some say the Woodman has whittled away his shtick.
Others call the film his best work in years. But theres consensus
that actor Barney Cheng, 93, is hilarious. The New York Times calls
his performance surgically precise. Slant Magazine
enthuses, Note to Hollywood: someone hire scene-stealer Barney Cheng
quick!
Cheng plays the translator for a washed-up movie director (Allen) and
his Chinese cameraman. When the director suddenly goes blind (psychosomatically,
of course), he enlists the translator to help keep his affliction a secret
on the set. Cheng, who has appeared in a variety of film, television,
theater and advertising productions, recently told an interviewer that
hed never considered himself funny but comic roles kept coming.
His latest one caps a résumé that includes playing Shakespeares
Puck, Bill Clintons adviser on Saturday Night Live and George
W. Bushs voice on the Letterman show.
Faithful
to Yellowstone
Imagine Yellowstone Park as your backyard. It was like that for Janet
Chapple as a child, when her parents worked at Old Faithful Inn. She still
fondly recalls summer days playing hide-and-seek while waiting for
geysers to erupt. Later, Chapple, 57, became a professional
cellist and moved to Providence, R.I., but she kept going back to Yellowstone.
Now she shares an insiders expertise in Yellowstone Treasures
(Granite Peak Publications, 2002). The 384-page guidebook offers more
than maps and sightseeing tips. It also includes information on flora
and fauna, historical tidbits and a chapter on geology by Chapples
husband, Bruno Giletti, a professor emeritus of geological sciences at
Brown University. Beth Chapple, 87, was the editor and Alice Merrill,
68, designed the book.
|