The Washington Post - 16.11.2019

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saturday, november 16 , 2019. washingtonpost.com/style eZ re c


BY BETHONIE BUTLER

The Latin Grammys celebrated
20 years of “the biggest night in
Latin music” o n Thursday, a nd t he
ceremony’s biggest honor went to
Rosalía, the Catalan singer whose
flamenco-infused pop has pro-
pelled her to the verge of interna-
tional superstardom.
While nominees for album of
the year included Panamanian-
born Latin jazz veteran Rubén
Blades, Argentine rocker Andrés
Calamaro and Luis Fonsi — the
Puerto Rican pop star whose 2017
smash “Despacito” topped the
Billboard chart for 17 weeks — it
wasn’t altogether surprising that
Rosalía took home the trophy. Her
exuberantly well-reviewed sopho-
more effort, “el Mal Querer,”
which blended flamenco styles
with more modern genres includ-
ing electronic and R&B, debuted
atop Billboard’s Latin pop albums
chart last november and broke
spotify streaming records in her
native s pain.
There is a long tradition of span-
ish artists in Latin music, a genre
that (at least within the music in-
dustry) has been defined as music
recorded in the spanish language.
since the first Latin Grammys tele-
cast in 2000, the Latin Recording
Academy — headquartered in Mi-
ami — has recognized spanish
(and Portuguese) musicians.
Honorees have included leg-
endary spanish crooner Julio I gle-
sias, his son enrique Iglesias and
Alejandro sanz, a spanish pop v et-
eran. s anz was t he m ost-nominat-
ed artist at this year’s ceremony,
which a ired o n Univision.
Rosalía picked up five nods,
making her the most-nominated
female artist for the second con-
secutive year. she won in four of
see rosalía on C2

Rosalía’s win


at the Latin


Grammys


hits a nerve


BY PETER MARKS

Feet do all the best talking in
Arena stage’s “newsies.”
oh, t here is the r egular invento-
ry of other body parts in director
Molly smith’s faithful revival, but
the various gestures and vocaliza-
tions they execute over the course
of this plain vanilla musical don’t
amount to much.
It’s t he appendage t hat routine-
ly taps the floorboards — and wait
till you see t he w ay f eatured n ews-
boy Luke spring taps! — that as-
sumes t he starring role here. Park-
er esse, the choreographer for
smith’s fine productions of “okla-
homa!” and “The Music Man,”
marshals a brigade o f young danc-
ers so vivaciously that Arena’s
Fichandler s tage takes on the e xu-
berant spirit of a halftime show.
Disney originally had modest
aspirations for this stage version
of its 1992 live-action movie musi-
cal about a scruffy band of news-
paper hawkers who go on strike
against a publishing titan in turn-
of-the-20th-century new York. It
did not set its sights on Broadway
until the positive press for its 2 011
premiere at new Jersey’s Paper
Mill Playhouse. one can see,
though, why executives were ini-
tially hesitant: The show by com-
poser Alan Menken, lyricist Jack
Feldman and book writer Harvey
Fierstein exudes old-school corni-
ness. Its anthem — “one for all,
and all for one,” goes the lyric in
“seize the Day” — is catchy, but
much of the score retains the fla-
vor o f summer stock.
see theater review on C4

theater review

Arena Stage’s


‘Newsies’


finds its extra


in its steps


BY HANK STUEVER

netflix’s “ The Crown” returns for a third season in
topmost form sunday after a wait of two years, which
is still not as long as the w ait f or some kind o f solution
to Brexit. It has a smashingly good new cast (whose
performances are equal to if not better than their
predecessors’) and a brisk, almost urgent sense of
galloping through the long life story of Queen eliza-
beth II.
As b efore, i t’s a show to savor — every d rop of it. Ten
episodes, opening a few months before the death of
Winston Churchill in 1965 and ending with the
queen’s 2 5th jubilee i n 1977, c an easily seem like never
enough, even when a couple of episodes start to
wheeze toward the e nd.
Played by oscar winner olivia Colman (“The Fa-
vourite”), this queen becomes the far more recogniz-
able stalwart, the stiffest upper lip in the United
Kingdom, so sparing in her interactions that even she
wonders whether she might have some sort of social
anxiety disorder. she fantasizes about a life in which
she has to care only about her racehorses. As envi-
sioned by creator Peter Morgan and his team, “The
Crown’s” greatest strength is the way it richly imag-
ines those private moments that no one ever saw.
see tv review on C3

tv review

‘The Crown’: A jewel of a cast


The Netflix series returns with midlife crises, but some of the episodes aren’t as spry as a corgi


photos by sophie mutevelian/netflix
oscar-winning actress olivia Colman, at top, plays Queen elizabeth ii, and
helena bonham Carter is Princess Margaret, the queen’s increasingly dissatisfied
sister, in the new season of netflix’s “the Crown.”

nina prommer/epa-efe/shutterstock
rosalía won four latin
Grammys, including album of
the year and best urban song.

BY ROBIN GIVHAN

she entered the room with her
American flag sparkling and sa-
bers flying.
Former ambassador to
Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch sat
before the House Intelligence
Committee already speaking the
language of diplomacy with its
peculiar mix of calm, bluntness
and symbolism. Before she ut-
tered a single word, she had al-
ready announced her patriotism,
toughness, experience and indi-
vidual humanity, all with her
style.
Her prepared remarks told her
backstory in detail. In a quiet,
almost soothing voice, Yovano-
vitch schooled the listening pub-
lic on her fearlessness while also
correcting any misinformation
that her life as a diplomat was a
glamorous affair. Her chosen ca-
reer of more than 30 years had
given her a nomadic life, she said,
one that regularly included being
in harm’s way.
“There is a perception that


diplomats lead a comfortable life
throwing dinner parties in fancy
homes. Let me tell you about
some of my reality. It has not
always been easy. I have moved 13
times and served in seven differ-
ent countries, five of them hard-
ship posts,” s he said. she and her
colleagues have been under gun-
fire as diplomats. But she carried
on, she said, because it “was our
duty.”
Her clothes sketched out the
broad strokes of her identity as a
veteran of Washington. “The
woman,” as President Trump re-
ferred to her in a July 25 phone
call, had slipped off her red coat
to reveal a sizable American flag
brooch glittering from the lapel of
her dark jacket. It was striking
because of its size, but also be-
cause it was a classically feminine
accessory with its sparkly stones
and its swirling lines. It was nota-
ble in the room because the lapels
of the mostly male panel — which
was separated by party — were
adorned with their congressional
see notebook on C2

critic’s Notebook

At hearing, former ambassador’s scarf is draped with symbolism


matt mcclain/the Washington post
Marie Yovanovitch at Friday’s impeachment hearing on Capitol hill. her scarf is “a stately
declaration of military might, of a willingness to fight for one’s honor,” robin Givhan writes.

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