ERTAINME Photos by Glenn Triest ENTERTAINMENT Liz Walters as Golde and Sue Carson as Tzeitel. FIDDLER in The Bloomfield Players are set to stage a 'tradition.' STEVE HARTZ Special to The Jewish News I Jac Cortes brings a Spanish background to Tevye. t's been quite a few years since Steven Victor last performed on stage. As a matter of fact, it's been half a century. The year was 1934 when, at age 8, the young Detroiter last heard the roar of the crowd. He performed in amateur contests. Now, 57 years later, Mr. Vic- tor, an attorney who resides in Bloomfield Hills, will once again smell the greasepaint. This time, he'll be playing the rabbi in his favorite musical, Fiddler on the Roof, which opens March 6 at An- dover High School. The show runs through March 15. This will be the fifth musical production for the Bloomfield Players, which formed three years ago. The Players are headed by June Hamilton, the executive pro- ducer, who is also the director of Bloomfield Hills recreation and community services, an advisory board made up of Bloomfield Hills residents. No stranger to Fiddler is Keego Harbor resident Jac Cortes, who will be playing 'Thvye for the fifth time in the past 12 years. He's been per- forming on stages all over Detroit. He was last seen as Tevye at the Jewish Corn- munity Center three years ago. Mr. Cortes, a structural engineer by day, grew up in Mexico. Although he is not Jewish, he doesn't feel in- timidated portraying a Jewish character with a sup- porting cast of Jewish actors on stage beside him. "When I was about to per- form the role of Tevye for the first time, I made it a point to read the book, Tevye, The Dairyman, in order for me to understand what a Jewish person is like," Mr. Cortes said. "I come from Spanish parents. The traditions were the same; the father was the law. "The man (Tevye) has all his heart on his children," Mr. Cortes explained. "Inside, he's at peace. He works by tradition; all of his life has been built by the Jewish tradition, the tradition of 1905. He's a lovable person who tries to do everything for his children. "I understand his problems, and that's why I like playing Tevye," Mr. Cortes said. "The nuances of the character be- come better and better as I do the show again and again." Playing opposite Mr. Cortes as Golde is Liz Walters of Southfield. She, too, is repris- ing the role. "Golde is a liberated woman in a time when women were not supposed to be liberated," Mrs. Walters said. "She lets Thvye think he's running the family, but she really runs him." As far as any similarities she shares with her character, Mrs. Walters admitted to one. "I let my husband, Jerry, think he's running every- thing," she joked. Making his theatrical debut in the production is Mark Bello, who plays Jessel, the hatmaker. "This is my first anything. I was a shower singer before I did this," said Mr. Bello, an attorney. "It's a very in- teresting, hard experience; I'm having a lot of fun." A senior at Andover, 18-year-old Lawrence Shy looks forward to playing Fyedka, the Russian who falls in love with Thvye's daughter, Chava. Mr. Shy, fresh from his per- formance as Moonface Martin in Andover's production of Anything Goes, also played the evil Bill Sykes in Oliver this past summer in New York. "Evil people, like Bill Sykes, are hard roles for me to play," Mr. Shy said. "But this guy (Fyedka) is not as evil as Sykes, so he's not as tough to portray." Fyedka's foil is Motel, the tailor, played by Farmington Hills resident Stuart Pinsky. "I play a wimp," Mr. Pinsky said. "I have to be pushed by the eldest daughter, Tzeitel, to confront 'Ibvye, her father." What does tradition mean to a 43-year-old like Mr. Pin- sky? "Tradition is very impor- tant to my family," Mr. Pin- sky said. "My family has liv- ed the role I play. I have grandparents who came from Europe. They used to tell us THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 67