Barbra Streisand, who stars in a new release titled "Nuts," dedicated the film to her father. Dustin Hoffman has shown an increased awareness of his religion, especially since his second marriage, to Lisa Gottsegen, for whom he used to babysit when she was a kid. "Although I grew up in a Jewish home, my family was not religious," Hoffman told a reporter in 1985. "I can't for the life of me understand why I have faith. We never went to temple and I wasn't even Bar Mitz- vahed." Hoffman has graduated to a new level of awareness since then. "Lisa has encouraged me to do what I've been wanting to do for many years, which is to become more observant and pass that on to my kids. These are a few things I really want to do before it's too late. I want to learn Hebrew. And I would love to be Bar Mitzvahed." Learning Hebrew, studying rIbrah — these are new classes Jewish actors fit in- to schedules already over-loaded with dance, voice and movement. This new movement to study one's roots has made religion a growth industry on the West Coast. Rabbi David Baron, religious leader of the Synagogue for the Performing Arts in Los Angeles, has a congregational membership loaded with stars seeking a road back to their roots. It is a real "Highway to Heaven," without the com- mercial interruptions. "Several factors contribute to what could be characterized as an overall trend toward rediscovery of heritage," Baron said. "We are now dealing with the '50s baby-boom generation; the family orienta- tion has shifted from the 'Me Decade.' Such a shift promotes the ritual aspect of Jewish life. "I find that some television network ex- ecutives I have in the congregation are thinking more and more about the ceremonies, the rituals they grew up with." In such a competitive atmosphere as Hollywood, "where a person can blink for a minute and become history," said Baron, the past may supply welcome relief for those whose present is rootless. Baron cited Brandon Tartikoff, president of NBC Entertainment, as a prime-time example of a programmer who is program- ming Jewishness into his life. "Brandon was a recent honoree at the Jewish National Fund dinner," said Baron. "When he received the Tree of Life Award, he spoke of his early memories of that lit- tle blue box in his house." The box, the "pushka," and what it represented, tzedakah, have stayed with Tartikoff all his life. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 49