Hot Dots
by Clif Garboden
THURSDAY
9:00 (2) Mystery: The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes: The Three
Gables. Holmes receives a woman seeking help after "thugs" ran off with her
brother's biography. Fast-paced? (Until 10 p.m.)
FRIDAY
9:00 (2) Evening at Pops. A repeat airing of Pops' conductor Keith
Lockhart's first concert. Guests include soprano Sylvia McNair and the always
offputting Mandy Patinkin. (Until 10 p.m.)
10:00 (2) Evening at Pops. Visitors are opera's Migenes (singing
classical lite) and 13-year-old violin virtuoso Kawakubo. Everyone's on a
first-name- (or at least one-name) only basis tonight. (Until 11 p.m.)
SATURDAY
9:00 (2) A Letter to Three Wives (movie). Linda Darnell, Jeanne Crain,
Ann Sothern, Kirk Douglas, Paul Douglas, Jeffrey Lynn, and the voice of Celeste
Holm star in this 1948 Joseph L. Mankiewicz-directed comedy about three women
who receive letters from a mutual friend claiming she's run off with one of
their husbands. Apparently a simple head count isn't enough to sort out the
faithful from the stray. To be repeated on Sunday at 2:45 p.m. (Until 10:45
p.m.)
9:00 (10) Star Trek 6: The Undiscovered Country (movie). Never could
trust those Klingons. Starring William Shatner as the Federation's
trigger-happy peace envoy. (Until 10 p.m.)
10:45 (2) The Snake Pit (movie). This heavy 1949 drama about a woman
tossed into a loony bin after her nervous breakdown actually had the social
impact of championing mental-institution reform. Olivia de Havilland stars as
the patient. From a novel by Mary Jane Ward, and also starring Mark Stevens,
Leo Genn, and Celeste Holm. To be repeated on Sunday at 1 p.m. (Until 12:35
a.m.)
SUNDAY
3:00 (10) Basketball. NBA playoff action: game four of the Western
Conference final, between the Houston Rockets and the Utah Jazz.
8:00 (2) The National Memorial Day Concert 1977. Oh yeah, tomorrow, May
26, is May 30 this year. And this year's version of the annual war-dead salute
from the White House West Lawn features Colin Powell and a typically unlikely
roster of guests, including Charles Durning, Tony Danza, and Barbara McNair.
Assume these choices were politically motivated. Now try to figure out what
point is being made. (Until 9:30 p.m.)
8:30 (10) Mr. Saturday Night (movie). School figures for Billy Crystal as
a stand-up comic regretting that he put his one-liners ahead of his family.
(Until 11 p.m.)
9:00 (12) Thicker Than Blood: The Larry McLinden Story (movie). That
title presumably means this is a based-in-fact TV-movie (BIFTVM). Peter Strauss
and Rachel Ticotin dispute custody of a child he did or didn't father. (Until
11 p.m.)
9:00 (6) Murder One, part one. The troubled series closes with a
three-parter in which Wyler (Anthony LaPaglia) agrees to defend vigilante
serial killer Clifford (Pruitt Taylor Vince). Is that all there is? To be
continued on Monday and Thursday, starting at 9 p.m. (Until 11 p.m.)
12:30 a.m. (2) Nagasaki Journey. Welcoming in Memorial Day with a
reminder that World War 2 wasn't as much fun as it looks in the movies, 'GBH
gives us a collection of eyewitness accounts of the bombing of Nagasaki (August
9, 1945) and the subsequent occupation of southern Japan. (Until 1 a.m.)
MONDAY
3:00 (10) Basketball. NBA Eastern Conference final game four, with the
Heat and them Bulls. NBC obviously thinks you got the day off.
7:00 (5) African Americans in World War 2: A Legacy of Patriotism and
Valor. Guess this is a positive report. (Until 8 p.m.)
9:00 (2) The American Experience: Vietnam: A Television History:
Roots of War and America's Mandarin. A rerun of the landmark 1983
series based on the definitive Vietnam chronicle by Stanley Karnow. A chance to
be reacquainted with (or meet) such famous-long-ago personalities as Bao Dai,
Ngo Dinh Diem, Ngo Dinh Nhu (and the infamous Madame "Let Them Eat Cake" Nhu),
and Uncle Ho Chi Minh, and to revisit such places as Phnompenh and Dienbienphu.
The whole affair was a miserable waste of time and money -- not to mention
58,000 American lives and an estimated one million North Vietnamese. The
strength of this series lies in the way it puts the whole disaster into
perspective, harking back to the century of French occupation in Indochina that
set the stage for the tragedy of the century. Worth taping, and in the "let
Saigons be bygones" atmosphere that's cropped up in the past decade, worth
watching. (The book is also being reissued.) To be repeated on Tuesday at 10
a.m. on Channel 44. (Until 11 p.m.)
9:00 (6) Murder One, part two. (Until 11 p.m.)
9:00 (10) Abducted: A Father's Love (movie). The tale of the first male
to be assisted by the "mother's underground," which usually helps runaway moms
hide their kids from dad. (Until 11 p.m.)
TUESDAY
8:00 (2) Nova: The Mind of a Serial Killer. Inside the FBI and
the real "profilers" who helped the cops catch serial murderer Arthur
Shawcross. To be repeated on Thursday at 9 p.m. on Channel 44. (Until 9 p.m.)
9:00 (2) Frontline: Innocence Lost: The Plea. A follow-up to a
controversial Frontline documentary on the Little Rascals Day Care
child-sexual-abuse case, reporting on the dramatically varied fates of the
defendants. (Until 11 p.m.)
9:00 (12) Broken Promises: Taking Emily Back (movie). A BIFTVM from 1993
-- sweeps month must be over. Cheryl Ladd and Robert Desiderio adopt Emily from
a homeless couple who presumably change their minds. (Until 11 p.m.)
9:00 (10) Basketball or Not. They're into the "if necessary" phase of the
NBA semifinals, so if the Jazz and the Rockets absolutely have to play,
they'll do it here and now. If not, we get Frasier, Caroline In the
City, and Dateline NBC.
WEDNESDAY
8:00 (2) Mark Russell Comedy Special. The Simpsons has this guy's
number. You'd figure that by now he'd be too ashamed to appear in public. No
such luck. The thoroughly lame political song parodist visits another round of
obvious and unfunny tunes on an audience of dopes. (Until 8:30 p.m.)
8:30 (2) The Durst Amendment. And here's another political lampooner --
San Francisco's Will Durst, whom we will not be quick to judge. (Until 9
p.m.)
8:30 (10) Basketball or No Basketball. More "if necessary" NBA action
from the Heat and the Bulls, or The Single Guy (who let that back
in rotation?), Wings, Men Behaving Badly, and Law and
Order.
9:00 (2) American Visions: The Republic of Virtue and The
Promised Land. The start of an eight-part series that follows US history
through the nation's arts, architecture, and monuments -- a tantalizingly valid
approach that gets too little attention. Tonight we consider the Roman Republic
as the roots of inspiration for the American ideal and document the
relationship between art and religion in Colonial America. Time magazine
art critic Robert Hughes hosts. (Until 11 p.m.)
9:00 (12) Where Are They Now? Tonight's repeat show includes as guests
Kim Phuc, the Vietnamese napalm victim in the famous photo, and Nick Ut, who
took the famous photo. (Until 10 p.m.)
10:00 (12) The American Film Institute Salute to Martin Scorsese.
Behind-the-scenes stories about the man behind Taxi Driver, Mean
Streets, Raging Bull, and The Last Temptation of Christ.
(Until 11 p.m.)
THURSDAY
8:00 (10) Basketball Confusion. NBA Western Conference game six
preceded by Friends at 8 p.m. and Seinfeld at 8:30 p.m. If
there's no game, the 8-to-10-p.m. schedule will be: Friends, News
Radio, Seinfeld, Suddenly Susan, and E.R.
9:00 (2) Mystery: The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes: The Red Circle.
Wish we knew more. All the WGBH program-schedule blurb writer could come up
with is, "Holmes looks into the background of a woman who is trying to escape
the clutches of the Red Circle." Oh, that Red Circle. Jeremy Brett
stars. (Until 10 p.m.)
9:00 (6) Murder One, part three. The conclusion. (Until 11 p.m.)