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Show Sumi.n, iJeceniber The Vili l.iikf Tribune, E7 22, I9H5 How to give the arts for Christmas Iron) E 'lores, reviews 400 films made tie tween 1980-8that are now un While there are books for the movie buff which have reviews of many more movies Leonard Maltin' TV Morn's, lor example), fewer are more entertaining than this new collection of reviews from Ebert, the syndicated critic who writes fur the Cltun o s and TVs "At the Movies " He includes a cast list and gives each film a star rating Continued I videe-'.jssette- . e Sun-Tnne- Buoks on Mov ies Leonard Maltin's TV Mnrnw, $4 95. at local bookstores, sticks to the facts and gives a quick opinion on more than 6.000 films and made-for-Tmovies. Because of the large number of entries, the reviews are very brief, yet Maltin is a succinct writer and provides important information (such as a cast list) about each film. A good resource for trivia 1 Memorabilia for the film buff is available at Hollywood and Vine. 754 E. South Temple. This store has some 2,200 movie posters from the '30s to the present. There's "The 10 Commandments," "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid," "Singing in the Rain," "Midnight Cowboy, "E.T," and many more. "Back to the Future" is the hot poster at the moment. Prices range from $10 to hundreds. Hollywood and Vine can frame your gift for an extra charge. Other movieland paraphernalia includes stills, press kits, and pins. For the Sylvester Stallone fan in your life, a "Rocky headband. Country Councert Tickets for what may well turn out to be the best country music concert of 1986 Kenny Rogers, Lee Brown GreenwoodSawyer may be purchased for $13.50 or $16.50. The concert is Jan. 19 at the Salt Palace. Hannah and Her Sisters, the latest film by Woody Allen, shown in "Broadway Danny Rose, .'ill premiere in Utah. U.S. Film Festival sets ambitious schedule Organizers of the United States Film F estival have firmed up the schedule for the event which runs Jan. 17 to 26 in Park City. A number of works from major filmmakers will be premiered at the festival, along with documentary and narrative films by independent American filmmakers. The festival is presented by the Sundance Institute. screened in late night sessions during the week. A series of seminars and programs for filmmakers and serious film buffs also will be presented. Hector ("Kiss of the Spider Woman") will conduct a directing seminar Jan. 18. Other seminar topics focus on financing and marketing independent Among the major premieres will be Woody Allen's "Hannah and Her Sisters." Allen wrote, directed and stars in the film. The cast includes Michael Caine, Mia Farrow, Carrie Program guides are available at the festival's box office in the Triad Center, Cosmic Aeroplane, Inkley's stores and the University of Utah o films. Union Building. Fisher, Barbara Hershey and Sam Waterston. "Hannah and Her Sisters" will play Jan. 25. It will be the films world premiere. Allen's last film, "The Purple Hose of Cairo," had its world premiere at last year's festi- In the book department, Shirley MacLaine's Dancing in the Light, published by Bantam, and Jan Carden Castro's handsome coffee table offering, The Art and Life of Georgia O'Keefe by Crown are recommended. Alt the World's a Stage, recently published by Little, Brown and Company, is Ronald Harwood's look at theater over the last 2,500 years, beginning with the Greeks and continuing to the Age of Olivier. Also there's In Person: The Great Entertainers, written by former drama critic Martin Gottfried. Published by Harry N. Abrams, the book pays tribute to "every performer who ever stepped through a curtain to tumble, tap dance or sing hisher way to survival. The expensive edition ($49.50) ft'.ituro in many humli fds of illu.sti uiitiiiN, rulor Live Theater live theater is more to vur taste, two Salt Lake City productions continue after Dec. 25 I he Salt Lake Acting s company annual benefit itickets are $17 50 and $13i "Saturday's Voyeur Christmas 83' may be seen Thursday through Saturday and Dee. 29 and Jan And at Promised Valley Playhouse, a musical adaptation of Hans Christian Andersen's "The Snow Queen" will continue Friday and Saturday Tickets are $5 to $10. For those who want Christmas to be remembered during the summer, tickets to the 25th Anniversary of the Utah Shakespearean Festival would be ideal. Plays to be presented this year from July 10 to Aug 30 in Cedar City are "A Midsummer Night's Dream." "Julius Caesar," and "Love's Labour's Lost." Tickets range from $5 to $14 and may be ordered by writing Box Office, Utah Shakespearean F'estival. Cedar City, Utah 84720. Buy A Production Or for the actor, director, playwright or patron who has everything, you may want to purchase an entire Utah Shakespearean Festival production for a mere $20,000. Each performance of the production will be dedicated to the recipient, who also will receive 12 guest passes and a profile in the festival's souvenir program. Whether you've seen Ballet West's production of Wiliam F. Christensen's "The Nutcracker" 10 times or merely once or never before, it's a wunderful way to catch the spirit of the holiday season. The ballet, now in its 31st season, plays daily except Christmas, through Dec. 31 at the Capitol Theatre, 50 W. 200 South. Tickets, ranging in price from $7 to $20 for matinees and $8 to $30 for evening performances, are available at the Ballet West box office in the theIt ater Ihc clu-- ul the family mas enjoy the Ballet West Cookbook a compilation ul lenpes from dancers, directors and li lends of Ballet West tie cookbook is priced at $9 with an apron available fur $6 Other items for sale in the boutique include buttons at $2 and posters for $3. tote bags for $1U and visors fur $4. and porcelain ballet shoes, which can be autographed by any of the company's ballerinas, for $22 and $26. The boutique also has a diversified collection of nutcrackers, ranging in price from $23 to $70 I Nutcrackers Galore Nutcrackers of all sizes, shapes and colors are, in fact, abundant at this time of year in Salt Lake City. Most department stores and gifts stores have their share of the charming wood figures, with particularly fine selections available at the Ml Olympus Clock Shop, 2265 E. 39U0 South, Modern Display, 424 S. 700 East, Southeast Pharmacy, 2670 S 2000 East, and Uhlstem's in Trolley Square. terest in modein dance Modern Dance Available on Monday from 9 a.m to 3 p rn at the RDT offices on the upper I niversity of Utah campus (south of I niversity Hospital), are RDT sweat shirts for $15, for $8 and posters for $5. Also on sale are tickets, ranging in price from $10 to $20, to the company's 20th anniversa ry concert March at the Capitol Theatre The Dance Com panv offers sweat shirts for $12, for $8 and posters tor $5 These items are available for purchase as Christmas presents Monday from 9 am. to 5 pm and Tuesday from 9 a m. to 3 p.m. in the company's offices on the second floor of the Capitol Theatre. Also on sale are tickets to spring concert April 25- 26 MONDAY, JANUARY 13 7:30 PM SALT PALACE $9.50 $8.50 All Seats Reserved $2 Discount Youths Under 15 Senior Citizens lobby. Ballet Tickets Also available for purchase are gift certificates for tickets to Ballet West's premiere production of "Sleeping Beauty." The ballet, to be staged by Denise Schultze and Louis Godfrey, will run Feb. at the Capitol Theatre. Gifts for the ballet lover abound at the Ballet West Boutique, open during intermission of Nutcracker" performances. Sweatshirts with "Nutcracker" themes range from $18 to $20 for adults and $14 to $18 for children. Also available are for $9 and a variety of tie tacks, charms, necklaces and stick pins. Repertory Dance Ttiealie and the Dance Company both carry items which would make qipi upi late gifts foi those w ith an in- Information & VISAMC by Phone: 363-768- $2 Surcharge on bank cards Tickets on sale at Salt Palace, full-lengt- h ZCMI Stores, Data Tix Outlets GROUP RATES AVAILABLE: 12-2- 363-768- 1 InlfiiliiUUslIivU appearing at Weber State (Dee Event Center) in Ogden 7.30 PM January 14 Also GLOBETROTTERS Information: 6264)550 val. Opens in S.L. The festival will open with a screening in Salt Lake City hosted by Gov. Norm Bangerter. "The Trip to Bountiful," produced by Sterling vice president of the Sundance Institute and one of the founders of the festival, will be the Horton night attraction. opening Foote ("Tender Mercies," "To Kill a Mockingbird") wrote the screenplay for "The Trip to Bountiful." The film Album or Cassette these selected titles stars Geraldine Page, John Heard, Carlin Glynn and Rebecca De Mor-na- "Power," the new film by Sidney Lumet starring Richard Gere, Julie Christie and Gene Hackman, will play Jan. 19. The festival will be the site of the United States premiere Jan. 18 of the French comedy "Une Femme ou Deux (One Wpman or Two), directed by Daniel Vigne and starring Gerard Depardieu, Sigourney Weaver and Dr. Ruth or Dr. Dr. Westheimer Ruth, as shes popularly known will be on hand for the screening. Winner of Award The winner of the Golden Bear award at the 1984 Berlin Film Festival, The Woman and the Stranger, will have its U.S. premiere at the Park City festival Jan. 21. Directed by Rainer Simon, The Woman and the Stranger" stars Joachim Latseh, Kathrin Waligura and Peter ZimmerWest-heime- ROCKY IV THEISLEY BROTHERS ORIGINAL MOTION PICTURE SOUNOTRACK Maste'P'ece ELTON JOHN KISS Ice on ASYLUM CONTAINS THE HITS TEARS ARE TAILING WHO WANTS TO BE LONELY UH ACL NIGHT tCiHuimy SUfiVIVORJAMf S PHQWN UPPEHJOHN CAfUftlY LOGONS & GLADYS KNIGHT GO WES' ROBER1 KENNY ELTON JOHN KISS oQeouooo ICE ON FIRE ASYLUM RECKLESS Mercury A&M r. ISLEY BROTHERS SOUNDTRACK ROCKY IV MASTERPIECE Wbrner Bros. Scott! Brothers Geffen BRYAN BARBRA STREISAND SEVEN including Sei At A WatponInvinobtcL M 7 Room CH GtoomRd Vltion Age JAMES TAYLOR THATS WHY I'M HERE Columbia THE JETS .... mi iikimiihm M hi m incluOmq Somewher (From Wesl Side Story Send In The Clown ic (From A Lifile Niqht Cant Help lovm That Mari (From Showboat H loved You iFmrn Canniset t THE HARD WAY ADAMS TwtS7D SisTift, CURIOSITY CuH'OSiT'' ON RUSH THE UNf (U U COKE Out top (LAY ( rv. man, Desert Bloom," a film developed at the Sundance Institute's summer lab. will have its world premiere Jan. 24. Written and directed by Eugene Corr. the film stars Jon Voight, Williams, Ellen Barkin and h 'U 'dJC3 iRd-lt- Yni, HEARf RAT BENATAR SEVEN THE HARD WAY Chrysalis BARRY MANILOW MANILOW RCA HEART Capitol THE JETS CURIOSITY MCA BARBRA STREISAND THE BROADWA Y ALBUM Columbia O' VVt'lt 'Am f TWISTED SISTER COME OUT AND PLAY Atlantic Gish. 'Lost Horizon print of Frank Capra's 1937 classic "Lost Horizon" will be shown Jan. 22. The film, starring Jane Wyatt and Ronald Colman. has been restored to its full length by the National Center for Film and Video Preservation. "Trouble In Mind." a new film by Alan Rudolph ("Choose Me"), also will be shown during the week. It stars Kris Kristofferson, Keith Lori Singer and Genevieve BujolJ. "FX," an action film directed bv Robert Mandel, will be shown Jan 23. It stars Bryan Brown and BriA newly-restore- d ARCADIA (Le BonTaytor Rhode) SoRedThRoe ...and many more!! Car-radin- ARCADIA SO RED THE ROSE CHARLIE SEXTON PICTURES FOR PLEASURE MCA Capitol SADE PROMISE DO YOU EMI WELCOME TO THE REAL WORLD RCA Portrait an Dennehv SALT-LAK- CfTY 5400 S. RtDWOOO (IN PLAZA 5400 Festival Focus The festival's focus once again will be the independent film competition, 2 Pi TO. NEXT TO LEATHEIWY S) MIQVAIE comprised of approximately two dozen dramatic and documentary films. A sidebar of independent Australian films also will be presented. The films of the late Orson Welles - "Citizen Kane, "The Magnificent Ambersons," "The Lady from Shanghai," "Othello," "Touch of Evil" and "Chimes at Midnight" - will be TAPES RECORDS " VIDEO (he jound. tjou umnl of. doftoTi OIL I" 40 (A ST W. HOLIDAY HOURS 586-03- Open 10:00 0 m til 10:00 pm Sunday 1 2:00 Noon til 8:00 pm ChrittmAt Eva Open 10:00 am il 6:00 pm CLOSED CHRISTMAS W., 7200 S. Of STOKES BOOST 52 PLENTY OF FREE PARKING Sale ends Christmas Eve, December 24th, 1985 Quantities limited while supplies last DAY -- 4 ) I 1 I |