64 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, November 8, 1985 FAMILY ITALIAN DINING & PIZZA MARIO'S 1 PIZZA RIBS FISH HOMEMADE GARLIC BREAD '4 SERVING ONLY FRESH FOOD FOR YOUR GOOD HEALTH! Featuring ROUND PIZZA SQUARE PIZZA SMALL OR LARGE SMALL MED LARGE 1 OF F ON FOOD PURCHASES OF $6 OR MORE DINING ROOM, CARRY-OUT Expires Nov. 30, 1985 • BEER • WINE I • BANQUET ROOMS 1 • COMPLETE CARRY-OUT • COCKTAILS THEATER Pizzeria 4033 W. 12 MILE, 3 Blks. E. of Greenfield 548-3650 Berkley On Stage Continued from Page 112 Italian-American Food 4:30 p.m.-10 Tues.-Thurs. 4:30 p.m.-11 Fri. & Sat. 4:30 p.m-9 Sun. 1 2464 N. WOODWARD Bet. 12 & 13 547-0272 •••• ••••• ■ •••■• ••••• • mum ommmO m momm••• • • • 110 ■ ALL-U-CAN-EAT • BABY BACK RIBS -X11.95 50% OFF NOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER PROMOTION LUNCH OR DINNER ENTREE WITH THE PURCHASE OF ANOTHER ENTREE OF EQUAL OR GREATER VALUE. NOT VAUD WITH ANY OTHER PROMOTION. OFFER GOOD 11-8 THRU 11-14, WITH THIS AD ONLY. DINING IN ONLY BEVERAGES NOT INCLUDED. ALL NEW MENU & OUR DAILY LUNCH, DINNER AND ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT SPECIALS • • • • m • • ■ • • m • • ■ LIVE ENTERTAINMENT FRI. & SAT. HITE WITH TIM SMITH BLOOMIES OPEN SUN. 4-9 • • 626-1587 • ■ Luncheon Daily from 11 a.m., Dinner Mon.-Thurs. til 10:30 p m , Fri. & Sat. til 11 - 30 p.m 6560 Orchard Lake Road at Maple, West Bloomfield • ME= QMUu., IM■■ • MIER II= • 111111111111101MIMP M O — "THE ONE & ONLY" ENJOY ROSE'S FAMOUS HOMEMADE COOKING! IRVING'S • la ALL FOODS ARE MADE. FRESH DAILY IN OUR OWN KITCHEN!! Restaurant AT LA MIRAGE MALL 352-3840 29555 NORTHWESTERN HWY. BREAKFAST SPECIAL—NOV. 8 THRU NOV. 14 Tuesday-Sunday 7 a.m. to 11 a.m. 78 SALAMI & EGGS BAGEL, ROLL OR TOAST SATURDAY AND SUNDAY ONLY, NOV. 9 & 10 OUR FAMOUS HOMEMADE OLD - FASHIONED (Bean & Barley) CHOLENT WITH SALAD, FLANKEN, KISHKA & BREAD BASKET $ 98 DINNER SPECIAL—NOV. 8 THRU NOV. 14 FRESH GROUND CHOPPED SIRLOIN SAUTEED WITH ONIONS $4 INCLUDES SOUP, SALAD, VEG. OR POT. & BREAD BASKET COMPLETE CATERING FOR WEDDINGS, BAR MITZVAS, SHOWERS, ETC. CATERING AREA AVAILABLE F ROM 50 TO 300 PERSONS. THE ONE & ONLY IRVING'S AT LA MIRAGE MALL CONTINUES AN OVER 30-YEAR TRADITION OF MEETING AND EATING! 98 WE GRIND OUR OWN MEAT! Burstyn has a reflective moment before he appears. his own variety series. He ac- cepted and the show ran from 1978 to 1981. Each month he made a trek to Holland to tape the program. It was this experience that led him to the Barnum role on Broadway. He had struck up a friendship with entertainer Chita Rivera, a guest on his show, and she recommended that Burstyn try for the Barnum role because actor- Jim Dale was leaving the musical. Burstyn auditioned and was in competition with a lot of heavy-hitters — Lee Majors, Paul Michael Glaser and Bobby Morse. To his surprise, he won the role. "What they told me — I sim- ply did the best audition. I had the experiences — the years on stage — to do it." Burstyn has also co-hosted the Mery Griffin Show, co-starred with Jason Robards in the film Death in Jericho and appeared in a Variety Royal Command Performance at London's Pal- ladium. He made his Broadway debut in 1968 in a musical, The Megil- lah, and in 1970 portrayed at- torney Roy Cohn in Inquest. He is an executive board member of Israel's Variety Club and a founding member of the Israeli Union of Performing Arts. Despite the successes, there have been disappointments. Burstyn regrets the fact that he never went to college. "It's something I regret now, but I always knew I wanted to be an actor anyway." His biggest professional dis- appointment came in 1973. He had auditioned for the role of the district attorney on Barney Miller. An ABC vice president — Jewish — saw Burstyn's audition tape, and said he looked "too Jewish" for the role, and so' he lost the part, even though the character was sup- posed to be Jewish. Eventually the part was written out of the series. But Burstyn has nothing to worry about. Last year, he was booked in Australia, Brazil, in Israel, all over the United States, in Canada and in the Bahamas. For Israel Bonds, he appears all over the country singing and telling jokes. On stage, he has a good time, singing mostly English, Yiddish and Hebrew songs. He speaks and sings in eight languages — English, Yiddish, Spanish, French, Hebrew, German, Por- tuguese and Dutch — adding he can "get along in Italian." His jokes focus on topical is- sues, the Israeli government ("The Knesset is a satirical Is- raeli nightclub in Jerusalem") and about Jewish life in gen- eral. A song he sings is Chai, and he introduces it thus: "Chai means life. and I'd like to dedi-