Howard Kaye: "The theater chose me." A Cincinnati actor finds that age has its privileges. Growing Role oward Kaye gets a personal bonus as he plays All Hakim in the Birmingham Theatre's produc- tion of Oklahoma! With his family liv- ing in Cincinnati and Passover start- ing Monday night, he can use his day off to drive home and celebrate the holiday. SUZANNE CHESSLER SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS Mr. Kaye also appreciates the proximity of his parents, brother and sister because it's easy for them to take the four-hour drive to be part of his audience. Midwest relatives and friends saw him in two recent Bir- mingham productions, The Wizard of Oz and Annie Get Your Gun. "I don't think of Ali Hakim as being at all like me, which is probably why I enjoy playing him," said Mr. Kaye, who began studying performing arts in junior high school. "He's the comic relief, a peddler claiming to be from Persia. He's involved with a love interest, and the last thing he wants is to be married. He wants to travel and be by him- self." For this production, which marks the 50th anniversary of the open- ing of the musical, Mr. Kaye is reviving a song deleted from the movie — "It's a Scandal, It's an Outrage." This song also is omit- ted from stage versions when the character is played by a non-singer. "It's a wonderful role that I've been looking to play for a while so I'm I excited about having the chance to do that," said Mr. Kaye as he takes on"',0,Aa his first Rodgers and Hammerstein musical. "Making the character my own is what it's about anyway." Mr. Kaye brings a strong academic back- ground in theater arts to owar his performances. When he was in the sixth grade, he entered Cincinnati's School for Creative and Performing Arts. A teacher recommended him based on his singing with the All-City Boys Choir. His studies continued at the University of Cincinnati, where he con- centrated in musical the- ater, and the Juilliard Theater Center in New York, where the program was non-musical. Both offered four-year curricu- lums and were taught from an ensemble point of view. During his time at Juilliard, he worked with the same 16 people, including Gayle Cohen, who is from Michigan. Her parents, Florence and Sidney Cohen, are two people Mr. Kaye looks for- ward to visiting during his stay here. "I think the theater chose me," said Mr. Kaye, who also was active in Jewish Community Cen- ter productions in his hometown. "I didn't con- sciously make the deci- sion to pur- sue it. "Even though I was in junior high school and high school, I always was a part of a real theater pro- gram. I never had to go through the dilemma of having to choose a career. I always knew what I wanted to do because I'd always been doing it." His professional debut acre ht age for kla GROWING ROLE page 86