ENTERTAINMENT FRAN ROTHBARD Special to The Jewish News andy Patinkin's solo concert perfor- mances started as an intimate revue in a 275- seat theater off Broadway. Just Mandy and pianist Paul Ford, in an informal evening of song called "Mandy Patinkin: Dress Casual." Mr. Patinkin put the concert together to fill in the waiting periods between acting jobs. The film actor, Tony- award winner and singer has since performed at Lin- coln Center backed by a 45- piece orchestra and with the Boston Pops, the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra and the Cin- cinnati Pops. Last week, Mr. Patinkin brought his soulful tenor voice to Pine Knob, where he performed with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. Mr. Patinkin admits there's a big difference bet- ween the small and large venues, but like most every- thing else in his life, he rel- ishes the variety. "Every place is different. You can be in a huge place and the audience can make you feel very intimate," he said during a telephone interview from his home in Manhattan. "I don't do that many of these concerts. It's new ground and I've got to get used to it." In the many articles that have been written about him since he first won critical ac- claim on Broadway (he won a Tony for his portrayal of Che Guevara in Evita), the word most used to describe Mandy Patinkin is versatile. He is also known for the study and devotion he brings to his acting roles. A gifted singer ("a gorgeous theatrical voice" said one writer) and a dedicated actor, Mr. Patinkin has chosen roles that cross the spectrum of human nature — and has taken them on with great skill. For his role as the Spanish swordsman in The Princess Bride he studied fencing for six months. Before filming Yentl he studied Talmud at two yeshivot. In The House On Carroll Street, Mr. Patinkin played a McCarthy-era lawyer; he studied tapes of the hearings to prepare for the part. To create the role of George in the Pulitzer Prize- winning musical Sunday In The Park With George, for which he won another Tony nomination, Mr. Patinkin spent days studying the painting of the artist George Seurat. He has also worked with the New York Shakespeare Festival in The Winter's Tale, The Knife, Henry IV, Part I, Leave It To Beaver Is Dead and Hamlet. The actor and singer often manages to juggle several projects at once. Mr. Patinkin currently is starr- ing on Broadway as "Uncle Archie" in The Secret Garden. In between shows, he performs his solo concert. In the recently released film Impromptu, he plays poet Alfred de Musset; in True Colors he plays a crook. In August, his latest film, The Doctor, will be released. He's also planning his third album, but "I don't know what's going to be on it yet." His dedication to perfec- ting his craft, as intense as it may be, barely compares to the devotion he feels for his family. He and his wife, ac- tress Kathryn Grody, have two sons. They have, he said, worked very hard at keeping their family first. "Anyone who has a family knows it is tough enough. With two careers it's tougher," he said. And with two careers in show busi- ness, it's tougher yet. "We're Many Patinkin: More than an "Irish tenor." blessed in terms of having learned how to deal with the business. " For one thing, competition doesn't seem to get in the way. In fact, he said, "I'm trying to get her to be more competitive." Mr. Patinkin is enthusiastic about his wife's most recent work, a one-woman play she wrote and is now performing. A Mom's Life is a story about the struggle of parenthood in which Ms. Grody plays herself and her two children. The play has recently been published as a novel by Avon Books, Mr. Patinkin said. There was a time when self-doubt weighed heavily on the 38-year-old actor. In the mid-'80s he was dropped from the cast of Heartburn and replaced by Jack Nicholson; a period of critical self-examination followed. An introspective, thoughtful man with a tendency toward perfec- tionism, Mr. Patinkin has been known to "worry himself sick." He said he has learned to take things a bit less seriously. He credits the growth to being married and raising children. That and age, he said, have made him wiser. "You realize life is too short." He and Kathryn are now shopping Hebrew schools for their oldest son, Isaac. They are considering taking the family to Israel for his bar mitzvah. "It's important to me that my two boys have a strong sense of heritage," he said. "I want my sons to have that connection with timelessness. That's the greatest gift, the history and the teaching, and that you're not alone and part of the human race." That heritage, he said, "is very much a part of my makeup." He grew up on the south side of Chicago, the son and grandson of scrap metal dealers. He began singing at age 9 in his temple's choir and attended Hebrew school and Hebrew- speaking camps. He was also active in community theater during the years he attended pri- vate school. After two years at the University of Kansas, he went to Juilliard to study acting. For several years he con- centrated on dramatic roles, displaying a marked reluc- tance to let anyone know he was a gifted singer. In 1977, when his agent sent him to audition for Evita he almost refused. In a few years he became one of the most sought-after musical actors on Broadway. In his concerts he draws from that background, selec- ting show tunes that range from Jolson to his favorite contemporary composer, Stephen Sondheim. ❑ TUC ncT173/11T_ICIAIICU AIMAIC A RTS Fr FNTFRTAI NMF NT Mandy Patinkin, with a little help from the DSO, brought his solo act to the new Pine Knob.