THEBOSTONGLOBEFRIDAY, AUGUST23,2019 | BOSTONGLOBE.COM/ARTS
Weekend
G
O
ne weekday evening in April
1974, Barry Schneier went out
to see some rock ’n’ roll in Har-
vard Square.
Schneier, then in his 20s,
spent a lot of nights in those
days checking out the local mu-
sic scene. While growing up in Newtonduring the
1960s, he’d played in a high school bandthat land-
ed a few gigs at Surf Nantasket. He’d recently gradu-
ated from Emerson College with a degree in film-
making, and he often brought his cameras to the
shows.
Schneier’s downstairs neighbor had just brought
home a copy of an album by an unheralded newcom-
er from New Jersey named Bruce Springsteen. The
album had an unwieldy title — “The Wild, the Inno-
cent & the E Street Shuffle” — and a similarly rowdy
mix of horns, guitars, and words. Schneier was intrigued.
So he and a couple of friends headed over to Charlie’s Place, on Bow Street.
When they got to the bar, they were startled by the enthusiastic turnout for an
unknown fromout of town.
Schneier asked one customersitting in a booth: Why such a crowd?The guy
gushed about Springsteen and his band. He was fromPhiladelphia, and he’d
SPRINGSTEEN,PageG4
Bruce, before the
future was written
How Barry Schneier’s rare photos captured a night in rock history
PHOTOS BY BARRY SCHNEIER
BY JAMESSULLIVAN | GLOBECORRESPONDENT
JONATHAN WIGGS/GLOBE STAFF
BOOKS
By Matthew Gilbert
GLOBE STAFF
One of the nice byproducts of Peak
TV is that the odds are a little better for
the weird shows.
And by weird, I mean original — se-
ries that don’t fit into the TV cookie-
cutter machinethat so many writers,
networks,and viewershave become
dependenton. The originals — like
Showtime’s new “On Becominga God
in Central Florida” — can often best be
described by what they are not: crime
or legal procedurals, superheroorigin
stories,reboots,sitcoms,supernatural
soap operas, or family melodramas.
Dunst
breaks bad
in ‘Florida,’
and it’s good
PATTI PERRET/SONY/SHOWTIME
TELEVISION
They aren’t even necessarilycomedies
or dramasbut some ratio of both.
Like AMC’s alchemy-in-SoCalun-
derdog“Lodge 49,” or Amazon’s ro-
mance-in-death one-season pleasure
“Forever,” “On Becoming a God in Cen-
tral Florida” followsno familiarrules.
Even the title has a will of its own — it’s
long and it doesn’t easily fix in the
‘‘FLORIDA,’’PageG6
Kirsten
Dunst and
Alexander
Skarsgardin
Showtime’s
new “On
Becominga
God in
Central
Florida.”
Inside
MOVIES
WWEORBUST
ManwithDownsyndrome
seeks wrestlinggloryin
‘PeanutButterFalcon’
G6
ALBUM REVIEW
WRONG TURN
Sleater-Kinneyoff course
on‘TheCenter Won’tHold’
G2
By NickA. Zaino III
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
J
osh Johnsonis not a political comedian. Those who see
any of his four shows at Laugh Boston this weekend are
morelikely to hear jokes abouthow he was terrified by
an opossum or getting bullied by New York City middle-
schoolers as an adult than a riff on President Trump
wanting to buy Greenland. But in his day job as a writerfor “The
Daily ShowWithTrevor Noah,” he doeshave to find a way to
make the news funny.
JOHNSON,PageG5
Josh Johnson saves
politics for hisday job
COMEDY CENTRAL
COMEDY
BruceSpringsteenwas photo-
graphedby Barry Schneier
(below)at Harvard Square
Theatre in 1974.
Springsteenwith
ClarenceClemonsat
the Harvard Square
Theatre show.
ComedianJosh
Johnsonis a
writerfor “The
DailyShow.”