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September 22, 1967 - Image 39

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1967-09-22

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

OPENS WEDNESDAY!
Whenever
they talk
about
great
suspense
motion
pictures,
they always seem
to mention

Henri-Georges Clouzot's

DIABOLIQUE =La.



Awing

on the
conversation
STUDIO-NORTH

SIMONE SIGNORET

LAST S

"YOU'RE A

DAYS:

BIG BOY NOW r

4-Hr. Meter Parking lot front of Theatre

Woodward at 9-Mile • LI. 1-5168

SEE IT WITH
SOMEONE YOU LOVE!

GRAND PRIZE

i WINNER

A MAN
;1966
1966 CANNES
FILM FESTIVAL
ANd
A
WOMAN'
pi

ughwicotoR Fri., 8:00, 10:00; Sat.: 7:00, 9:00, 11:00

STUDIO I

!Nee ATTCNO.NT PARKING
MCI, TO TN .....

Uvernois at Davison • WE. 3-0070

Am

ACADEMY

AWARDS
A MAN it
INCLUDING
FOR ALL BEST PICTURE
SEASONS OF THE YEAR!

Fri.: 7:30, 9:45; Sat.: 6:00, 8:15 ' •

STUDIO NEW CENTER

3rd at the Blvd. • TR. 4-0025 FREE PARKING • Entrance on 3rd opp. Theatre

1/4

We have re-opened with a new

addition . . . the most modern

all stainless steel kitchen in the

Detroit area.

ettt,

Bountiful Brunch Buffet

Every Sunday Morning-10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Adults $2.95 — Children $1.95

ALSO

from

Special Sunday Dinner
$2.95
2 P.M.

Children's Portions Available—$1.85
Our Famous Northwood Inn Relish Tray

(Served with All Dinners) -
Choice of: Soup du Jour, Iced Tomato Juice, Frosted French Fruit Juice

ROAST YOUNG VERMONT TURKEY
With Dressing, Cranberry Sauce and Sweet Potatoes
BRAISED PRIME BEEF SHORT RIBS
With Buttered Noodles .
FRESHLY GROUND CHOPPED SIRLOIN
With Mushroom Gravy and Creamy Whipped Potatoes
COMBINATION BABY FRIED SHRIMP AND 1 BAKED STUFFED
DEVILED CRAB with Tartar Sauce and French Fried Potatoes

$2.95
'2.95
$2.95
$2.95
$2.95

GOLDEN BROWN FRIED CHICKEN
With Country Gravy and Creamy Whipped Potatoes
Choice of: Chef's Tossed Green Safest or Head Lettuce with 1000 Island
-
Dressing, Coffee, Tea or Milk

Of course our regular Sunday menu items are also available

We ifre garty glanners

AT NORTHWOOD INN We Can Handle from 20 to SOO People in Our
Gwn Banquet Rooms with Ample Parking Available
SWEET SIXTEEN PARTIES, SHOWERS
WEDDING RECEPTIONS, BAR MITZVAHS
We Also Do Outside Catering to Your Home, Office or Plant

GEORGE GENOFF'S ORCHESTRA

ACIESI=EIMEECEZEMI
Dinner Music from 6 p.m. and for Dancing After 10 p.m. Nightly

NAN CARRONE, VOCALIST, Friday and Saturday Night 9 p.m.

Remember

Tues. - Thurs. Are Bountiful Buffet Nights, 6 p.m. to 10 p.m.

RESERVATIONS JO 4-6688 OR LI 1-2577

Woodward Ave. at 111/2 Mile Road

Friday, Septmeber 22, 1967-39

Bustling Hollywood Activity

••

production of "The Brotherhood
for Paramount to be shot in Holly-
HOLLYWOOD — Stirling Silli- wood and on location in Southern
phant, an advertising executive Italy. The picture deals with the
turned screen-writer, with a dozen brotherhood organization of the
credits as scenarist and producer. Sicilian Mafia and stars Kirk Doug-
now has been signed by the Mirisch las and Alex Cord as two vengeful
Company to follow up his most brothers engaged in a vendetta,
successful adaptation of "In the with Irene Pappas as the female
Heat of the Night" with "The Art- lead and Adler as Cord's father-in-
ful Dodger." His new work is based law. The casting marks a reunion
on the treatment by Paul BrIckhrll. of Adler and Douglas who both
author of the novel, "The Great)] starred in the epic of Iarael, "Cast
Escape," made by John Sturges A Giant Shadow."
7 •
for the Mirisch Bros. five years
ago. Sturges also directs the new To Film Leo Rosten Novel
film, somehow a sequel to "The
Leo Rosten, author of "Capt.
Great Escape•" involving certain Newman, M.C.," the premise for a
of the characters from the PW most successful movie of bygone
escape from Stalag Luft HI in years. has written a new novel, "A
World War II. "The Ait'ul Dodger" Most Private Intrigue," acquired
goes before the cameras in late for filming by producer-director
1968 and will be released by Unit- Stuart Rosenberg for Paramount
ed Artists.
Pictures. The off-beat , suspense

.
yarn, which locales in New York,
Walter Shenson, whose latest Washington, London and Istanbul,
screen comedy, "Don't Raise the is the second property acquired
Bridge, Lower the Water," has by Rosenberg under his new studio
been completed in London with contract.
• • •
Jerry Lewis portraying the starring
Producer Ted Richmond and di-
role and Jerry Paris - directing, now
switches from Columbia to a four- rector Buzz Kulik have launched
picture-pact with the British Para- their private war in Colmenar
mount unit, Carting with "A Talent Viejo, Spain, with the staging of
for Lovin g, " from the book by "Villa Rides" .starring Yul Bryn-
Richard Con on, with Jack Rose ner, Robert Mitchum and Charles
scripting the , tirical yarn slated Bronson. The first day of produc
to start on location in Spain in tion ended with an estimated 3,003
explosions from guns and bombs
spring of 1963.
It is all about "Pancho Villa," the
Shenson produced in 1954 the Mexican revolutionary of the 1910s
first successful Peters Sellers who challenged his own government
pictur e. "The Mouse That and the government of the United
R o a re d." for $500,000 and
States.
made millions with the theatrical
• • •
release of the nonsensical farce
Stanley Margulies currently is
. which now goes on television in
completing in Hollywood his pro-
October with Pepsi-Cola as the duction of "The Jolly Pink Jungle.•'
sponsor. He made the first Beatle directed by Delbert Mann with
film. "Hard Day's Night." for an- James Garner and Eva Renzi. Also
other half-a-million dollars. His for Universal Pictures, Dick Berg
first 'our screen comedies for Co- is producing on location in France
. lumbia and United Artists, made and Italy. "House of Cards." star-
for an aggregate budget of ring George Peppard and anger
'$2.500.000 have grossed approxi- Stevens.
mately 525.000,000. ,' -

By HERBERT G. LUFT

Danny Raskin's

LISTENING

(Copyright 1967, JTA Inc.)

' M. Kenneth Hyman was intro-
' duced to the press at Warner Bros.
studios as the new executive vice-
president in charge of world-wide
production for Warner-Seven Arts
Ltd. and as member of the Board
of Directors. Hyman succeeds Jack
L. Warner (currently on vacation
in France) who. will continue his
association with the consolidated
firm as officer and independent
producer of major motion pictures.
The young executive, son of movie
financier Eliott Ilyroan.'has worked
in all facets of the• trical film and
television productio and most re-
cently produced f MGM "The
Dirty Dozen" in the studios and on
location in England. His experience
in the U.S. Marine Corps doubtless
helped Hyman with the production
of the war epic.
• • •
Alan Arkin, who won a Golden
Globe and an Oscar nomination
'or "The Russians are Coming, The
Russians Are Coming," and now
is co-starring with Audrey Hep-
burn in the forthcoming screen
melodrama, "Wait Until Dark."
says that none of his professional
triumphs made him as jubilant as
did his winning of the Spade
Cooley Talent Scout Contest when
he was a mere 16.
"That contest prize sent me to
the top of a hill near my home."
recalls Arkin, "and I stretched
out my arms and proclaimed loud-
ly, 'Today Hollywood. tomorrow the
world!' That honor was the great-
est."
Arkin currently is seen in the
Shirley .MacLaine comedy, "Woman
Times Seven," in which he depicts
a companio'n of the leading lady n
a would-be dpuble-suicide that turns
info a farce.



• •

Adler Eyes Next Role

Luther Adler who completes a
two-year run in "Fiddler on the
Roof," at the MeVickers Theater
in Chicago this coming October,
will report for his assignment as a
Sicilian elder in the Martin Ritt

Yachting
Pioneers

. BY

JESSE SILVER

(Copyright 1967, JTA Inc.)

0

S
T

, HOST AND HOSTESS for the
Meadow Brook Theater cocktail
party and luncheon last week were
Alan and Marianne Schwartz . . .
They are this year's co-chairmen
of the very fine professional
theater group in its second year
1 and featuring the f a m e d John
Fernald Company . . . At! the
luncheon for newspaper, radio acid
TV, Fernald and his actors and
actresses were introduced to the
large crowd ... Besides picking up
the tab for the day, Alan was
chairman of the luncheon and in-
troduced Oakland University, Chan-
cellor D. B. Varner, who said a
few words and turned the mike
over to Fernald . . . England's
great director told of the plays
coming to Meadow Brook this year,
and introduced the members of his
troupe ... The John Fernald Com-
pany of the Meadow Brook Theater
opens the 1967-68 season Oct. 6 with
"The Importance of Being Earn-
est" . . . This also marks the open-
in; of the second season for the
JF Company at Oaklan Univer-
sity's Meadow Brook Theater in
Rochester . . B e fro r e coming
here. Fernald had just ended
a 10-year stay as principal of Lori-
ch.n's noted Royal Academy of
Dramatic Art. plus establishing a
vast reputation as a director of
great ability . . It is to Oakland
U's Chancellor Varner's dynamic
personality that Fernald was con-
vinced to come to Michigan . .
After directing such famous stars
as Judith Anderson, Peter Ustinov,
Susanah York, Albert Finney and
Peter O'Toole among many others
. . . Ustinov called Fernald's de-
parture from the London Academy
"saddening for Britain and another
stroke of gratuitous fortune for her
powerful ally."
• • •

Bus Mosbacher. and his new
HERMAN GOLDMAN of Tiger
12-meter yacht, Intrepid, was
picked to represent the United Publications was traveling with the
Detroit
team recently and stayed
States againSt Australia in the
America's Cup sailing races off in a hotel with thin walls . . He
was
awakened
in the middle of
Newport. R.I. Mosbacher was at
the helm in 1962. when Weatherly the night by a sleepy voice saying,
defended the Cup against Australia. "Would you get me a drink of
The United States never has lost water, dear?" . . . He got up,
the Cup sine& it was first put tote stumbled to the bathroom and
competition in 1851. Mosbacher came back with a glass of water
ke ,, t his record intact by win- before he realized he was sleep-___
ning four straight races this year. ing alone!
• • •
In a recent cover story Time
CIRCUS SAINTS & SINNERS.
magazine said that one of the rea-
sons Mosbacher was taking the disbanded for the summer, will
risk of becoming the first Ameri- soon resume activities again . . .
can to lose the Cup was. ". . . in No meeting date has been decided
1961 he became the second member upon as yet, but a new program
of Jewish ancestry (although he is and format of activity is being
an Episcopal , convert) ever elected worked on for the Detroit Tent
of this great national organization.
to the New York Yacht Club."
-
• • •
The first member of Jewish an-
cestry, to whom Time referred.
CLIENT OF C.P.A. Jack Linden
was probably August Belmont Sr.. asked his wife, "For our wedding
who was elected in 1888. However, anniversary, would you rather
NYYC records show that some have a mink coat or a trip to
other Jews have made this very Swede n?" . . . "Let's go to
exclusive club over the years.
Sweden," the wife replied, "I un- .
Alan Levinson of Indianapolis derstand that mink coats are much
placed second in the national snipe cheaper there than here."
class sailing championships in
• • •
Muskogee, Okla. . . Robert S.
BILL FREEHAN, Detroit Tiger
Halperin of Chicago took part in catcher, can take full credit for
the recent world startkoat sailing saving Miles Rogin from getting
championships in Denmark. Hal- a ticket last week . . Miles was
perin won an Olympic bronze pulled over after going through
medal in 1960 and - .a Pan-American a stop sign . . . His excuse ryas ,
Games gold medal in 1963.
that the Tigers, behind 4-2 against
Baltimore, had just filled the bases
Medals for Handicapped
. The policeman, equally inter-
ested
in the torrid pennant race.
. Final - medal count of the Israeli
squad at the International Para- joined in pulling for Freehan to
plegic Games in England was 14 get a hit . . which Bill promtly
gold. 13 silver and nine bronze. did to tie up the game . . . "Take
The Israeli team, 20-strong, was it, easy now," said the smiling
made up of members of the Israeli policeman as he walked happily
Win- Veterans' clubs and the Spe- back to his squad car . . . (Al
wLck Sports Club for the Handl- Kaline's homer eventually won the
• 1 game.)
t erapped.

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