I ENTERTAINMENT oese4oescsoeeeseesowisasioolliNl0004sloowce444 O Celebrating Our 27th Anniversary O O O O Presents e O JACK'S ORIGINAL O ODO SALE BUY ONE lb. CORNED BEEF AT REGULAR PRICE OF $ 7" GET A SECOND POUND FOR ONE CENT O 4 lb. Maximum Purchase O TUESDAY, JULY 4th ONLY O O O Hours For The July 4 Holiday 10 am, to 6 p.m. . . Carry-Out 10 am. to 3 p.m. . . Dining Room O O O o 6873 Orchard Lake Road West Bloomfield O c) 855-6622 :41 00 , 41344141 , 4401.4 , 44442444441) . ,0)(setsose Business Luncheon Specials $3 85 FIESTA ALLA TERRACE Beginning at CHEF NELSON'S ITALIAN MEDLEY SALAD PASTA APPETIZER ENTREE DESSERT Antipasto Garden Salad With Italian Vinaigrette Dressing Linguini with Special Marinara Sauce Prosciutto With Fresh Melon Veal Nelson Homemade Spumoni with Rum & Brandy $ 18 95 per person SUAVE 851-4094 titt Taimmi 44 01146 1128 E. 9 MILE RD., 1/2 Mile East of 1-75 • 541-2132 Invites You To Enjoy Dinner In A Warm, Friendly Atmosphere Choice Meats and Fresh Fish Daily EARLY EVENING SPECIALS MON.-FRI. 4 TO 6 PM $7.25-$9.50 58 ALL FRESH FRUIT PIES, APPLE STREUDEL, COGNAC TORTES FRIDAY, JUNE 30, 1989 Yards and Yards of BRUNCH Each Sunday 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. $1 3 95 per person $795 Children 12 and under Reservations Suggested 12 Mile and Orchard Lake Road • Farm. Hills I Spock Continued from preceding page O O A Restaurant Delicatessen O O J ALMA SMITH Songstress & Pianist Downstairs SAT. 6:30 to 10:30 p.m. Private Parties up to 200 355•2050 EMBASSY wommomplim. SUITES HOTEL 28100 Franklin Road Southfield movie, starring Diane Keaton as a single parent who loses custody of her child in court to her ex-husband because she will not evict her live-in lover, quickly fizzled at the box office. Nimoy felt the movie should have been carefully guided to the marketplace. Instead, the studio decided to "toss it out into several hundred theaters . . . It's a somewhat unusual film. You're looking for au- dience reaction to build gradually. But the intellectually curious Nimoy learned much from the audience reaction that the film received. "I set out to make the picture in a way which would give an au- dience an opportunity to res- pond to it based on their own prejudices and I think that that is still operative. I think the picture is kind of a Rorschach test and it has to do with each individual member of the audiences' feelings about what is proper .. what is morally right, what is morally wrong . . . in raising children and making decisions about parenthood." Unlike his Mr. Spock character, Nimoy is not unemotional. The filming of The Good Mother was a par- ticularly emotional time for Nimoy. He was directing an intense, emotional film short- ly after the death of both of his parents and the breakup of his marriage. "During the making of The Good Mother, I woke up one night in tears and grabbed for a piece of paper and pencil and I wrote down three words, `It's about loss.' And I had gone through some very per- sonal losses around that time, not long before that, and I suddenly realized that that was what the film was put- ting me in touch with, was my own sense of loss. It was a very moving experience." He adds, "I am deeply af- fected by each movie I make. By the time that picture's finished I'm a different per- son." As a director, Nimoy's emo- tions are affected by the mood of the film as a whole. As an actor, they are affected by his character. "I tend to assimilate the condition that I'm dealing with. It tends to become a part of me. I live with it . . . I'm in a much bet- ter mood when I'm doing com- edy than I am when I'm doing tragedy. When I was making the Star Trek series, we went many months at a time . . . I was conscious of the fact that on Saturdays I would still be in the Spock mode, on a day off! Sunday afternoon I would start to relax a little, get a lit- tle loose. But on Saturday I was still quite rigid and I was still doing Spock, in my per- sonal ife." Nimoy's Orthodox Jewish background left its mark on "Star Trek." In its second series, the show travelled to Vulcan, and Nimoy "in- vented" the Vulcan hand salute, raising his palm and using a "V" separation bet- ween his second and third fingers, with the thumb ex- tended. The sign, of course, is the Hebrew letter "shin" and is used on major Jewish holidays and festivals during the priestly blessings. Nimoy was a television, film and stage actor prior to the "Star Trek" series. After am deeply affected by each movie I make. By the time that picture is finished I'm a different person. the show was cancelled in 1969, he remained on the same studio lot and did two years on the TV series "Mis- sion: Impossible." He left the show on his own and did mostly stage work before "Star Trek" was reborn. A son of Russian im- migrants, Nimoy played Tevye in Fiddler on the Roof as well as Goldman in The Man in the Glass Booth, a play which deals with the Holocaust. Among his other 1970s stage roles were King Arthur, in the musical Camelot, McMurphy in One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, as well as Sherlock Holmes, the brilliant, singleminded and unemotional detective who is frequently compared to Spock. Just as Nimoy today seems comfortable with the character of Spock, the Vulcan would undoubtedly approve of director Nimoy's integrity. He was offered the chance to direct the acclaim- ed film Mississippi Burning. but turned it down because he felt it was unfaithful to the true civil rights struggle because the film showed white people and the FBI sav- ing the day. "That's not what the Civil Rights movement was all about," he says, ad- ding, "Mississippi Burning, was a big distortion. The pic- ture was offered to me and I couldn't do it." For similar reasons, he "did not like" the television miniseries Holocaust, although he sees two sides to the issue. "I thought it trivialized; I