ENTERTAINMENT I GOING PLACES WEEK OF DEC. 25 - 31 THEATER BIRMINGHAM THEATRE 211 S. Woodward, Promises, Promises, Wednesday through Jan. 31, admission. 644-3533. MEADOW BROOK THEATRE Oakland University Rochester, Educating Rita, 8 p.m. Thursday, through Jan. 24, admission. 377-3300. " DETROIT REPERTORY THEATRE 13103 Woodrow Wilson, Detroit, Glengarry Glen Ross, now through Sunday, admission, 868-1347. ATTIC THEATRE 7339 Third Ave., Detroit, Holiday Cabaret, now through Thursday, admission, 875-8284. GREAT LAKES DINNER PLAYHOUSE 31 N. Walnut, Mt. Clemens, Showboat, now through Jan. 30, admission, 463-0340. FISHER THEATRE Fisher Building, Detroit, Tango Argentino, Saturday through Jan. 10, admission, 423-6666. Sonny Eliot takes time out from compiling his weather reports. Mostly Sonny ART SHOWS Longtime Detroit weatherman Sonny Eliot can bring out a smile even on a cloudy day LILA ORBACH Special to The Jewish News S onny Eliot won't reveal his age. "I'm slightly younger than my tongue and older than my teeth," quips one of Detroit's longest working weather- man. "Pm somewhere between puber- ty and paralysis!' Well, for Sonny Eliot, that must mean pubalysis. Famous for turning the highs and lows of a weather forecast into a stand-up comedy routine, Sonny is best known for his weather word com- binations. Chalk in hand, he is like- ly to describe a hot, hazy and humid day as "ho ha hum" kind of weather. A day of snow and rain brings "snain" and when it's showers and gritty .. . The art of Sonny Eliot is his abili ty to give even the most dismal of weather a Sonny forecast. After 30-plus years in the weather business, Sonny is still showering his audience with useless trivia, touching anecdotes and one liners. "Why is age so important, anyhow?" questions Sonny, after the reporter asks about his age for the sixth time. Well, if Sonny won't divulge his age, perhaps a glimpse into his history will put us in proximity. He's weathered quite a bit in his life — from his 15 months as a prisoner of war in Germany to more than three decades on the air at WWJ-TV (now WDIV). The youngest of six children, Son- ny was born in Detroit under the name Marvin Eliot Schlossberg. His parents, Jennie and Jacob, were Lat- vian immigrants. They owned a hard- ware store on Detroit's lower east side. Sonny speaks fondly of his parents. His father, a master of Rus- sian and German, taughfyoung Mar- vin how to speak Yiddish, a language in which he'll often kibbitz. But it was his mother who showed.Marvin how to make people laugh. "She had a great sense of humor," reflects Sonny. Though far from religious, the Schlossbergs had a culturally Jewish home. When Marvin turned 13, his father wanted him to have a bar mitz- vah. But Marvin had never gone to Hebrew school. So a local rabbi of- fered to make housecalls, preparing Marvin for a bar mitzvah in three months. "I read it flawlessly," recalls Sonny. "When I sang, it sounded like a grackle or a bluebird. It pleased my folks, and, on reflection, it pleases me!' In his youth, Sonny dreamed of being an actor. He often sneaked backstage at the old Cass Theatre to get a glimpse of the stars like Al Jolson. Katherine Cornell and Sophie Tucker and perhaps even park up some conversation. In 1933, Marvin E. Schlossberg graduated from Central High School and went on to Wayne State Univer- sity, where he started his career as an actor and began working on local radio shows like The Lone Ranger and The Green Hornet. Radio was much more com- plicated then," says Sonny, who, 50 years later, still works in radio, doing five minutes of weather just after 5 RUBINER GALLERY 7001 Orchard Lake Rd. West Bloomfield, exhibit of New York and Santa Fe artists, including Fredrick Prescott, Richard Hogan, Rob Russell, Susan Tunick, James Wolfe, now through Jan. 30, free. 626-3111. PARK WEST GALLERY 29469 Northwestern Hwy., Southfield, Erte exhibit, now through Jan. 21, free. 354-2443. CADE GALLERY 214 W. Sixth St., Royal Oak, Karen Sepanski, glass, now through Jan. 6, 546-3365. PIERCE STREET GALLERY 217 Pierce, Birmingham, 0. Winston Link, railroad photographs of the 1950's, now through Thursday, 646-6950. CANTOR/LEMBERG GALLERY 538 N. Woodward, Birmingham, exhibit, now through Thursday, 642-6623. DETROIT HISTORICAL MUSEUM 5401 Woodward, Detroit, "Artists from Michigan of the 19thCentury," now through March 6, 833-1805. NAWARA GALLERY 1160 Welch, Walled Lake, Continued on Page 55 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS . 51