I ENTERTAINMENT
Nosimm ■ mo
Stephen Becharas . . . and The Staff Of
to
Adlers
Continued from preceding page
V.V.6
6638 Telegraph Road at Maple
In The Bloomfield Plaza
851-0313
Sincerely Wishes It's Many
Friends And Customers
A VERY
HAPPY PASSOVER
We thank you for your
gracious patronage . . . and
most sincerely
wish the very best
in health, joy and
prosperity to all
ichaets
at the corners
WE'RE FIGHTING FOR
YOUR LIFE
American Heart
Association
RESTAURANT • BAR ••WINE
A VERY JOYOUS AND HEALTHY
PASSOVER TO OUR CUSTOMERS
AND FRIENDS
17600 W. 13 Mile (at Southfield Rd.)
5404444
till, To/um/ 44 (Rao
1128 E. 9 MILE RD., 1 /2 Mile East of 1-75 • 541-2132
WISHES ITS CUSTOMERS AND FRIENDS
-rime A VERY HEALTHY AND HAPPY
PASSOVER
Choice Meats and
Fresh Fish Daily
EARLY EVENING SPECIALS
MON.-FRI. 4 TO 6 PM
57.2549.50
I
ALL FRESH FRUIT
APPLE STREUDEL,
COGNAC TORTES
ALMA SMITH
Songstress & Pianist
Downstairs SAT. 6;30 to 10:30 p.m.
HAPPY
PASSOVER
Lunches • Dinners • Sunday Brunch • Cocktails
Beautiful Banquet Facilities
725 South Hunter
Birmingham
Reservations
642-6900
WE TAKE EXCEPTION
TO WHAT YOUR
MOTHER TAUGHT
YOU.
YOU SHOULDN'T EAT
EVERYTHING PUT IN
FRONT OF YOU.
You should avoid foods high in
cholesterol. It's a fact, a high
blood cholesterol level sub-
stantially increases your
chances of developing heart
disease. By cutting down on
fatty, rich foods, you can do
yourself a big favor. You could
lower your blood cholesterol
level and reduce your risk of
heart disease.
For more information about a
planned and balanced diet,
contact your American Heart
Association. We'll give you
some free advice on how to
plan a diet good for life.
Lulla Adler Rosenfeld has warm memories about her famous ancestors
— the Adlers.
hear about Yiddish theater
dying off, because, to a degree,
it's true," says Rosenfled.
"People today don't have an
image of Yiddish theater that
does it justice. They think of
the shund theater," a type of
exaggerated, outlandish pro-
duction. "The theater I
remember, the Adler tradi-
tion, was a big artistic
theater, a grand theater."
Certainly, she says, she
knows of the revived interest
in Yiddish theater today.
"People want it very badly.
Who knows? Maybe it can
happen again."
But Rosenfeld is not about
to bet her last Sholom
Aleichem book on it. "There
are not that many people who
speak the language. While
young people are learning
Yiddish, it is hard to have a
theater that you learn in
school."
What Rosenfeld has learn-
ed is that some things never
die — memories prevent that.
"What stands out in my life
— I have flashes of my grand-
father and my grandmother
— a great actress also, Sara.
"What I remember most is
being in the theater and hav-
ing the sense of everyone —
the audience and the actors —
having a wonderful secret
together. A sense of joy."
But then, being an Adler
was a constant joy. "As the
Adlers got famous, their
children and grandchildren
got famous," she says.
"We were a family of excep-
tional gifts," says this woman
of stage presence without any
sense of bravura. "Even if one
weren't an actor, one would be
a raconteur or a writer."
Some joys don't last forever.
She remembers seeing a Yid-
dish show in New York
recently. "I walked in and
Certainly, she
says, she knows of
the revived
interest in Yiddish
theater today.
"People want it
very badly. Who
knows? Maybe it
can happen again."
from the lobby I heard so-
meone do a run on his
trumpet. I got that sense of
excitement I always used to
get."
The Adlers have done it all.
But if she had it to do all over
again, Rosenfeld admits, "I
would have changed all my
life. I would have done the
same things, but better."
One thing life could not
have improved on, she says
proudly. "I would never have
taken away being a part of my
family."
❑
94
FRIDAY, APRIL 14, 1989