THE NEW HAKATA JAPANESE RESTAURANT (Formerly Nipponkai) PROUDLY BRINGS YOU AUTHENTIC JAPANESE DINING Lunch and Dinner Featuring Elegant Cuisine at Reasonable Prices In An Atmosphere of Gracious Warmth • Private Japanese Booths • Sushi Bar • Cocktails, Including Sake Open 7 Days Lunch: Mon.-Fri. 11:30-2 p.m. Dinner: Mon. -Sat. 5:30-10:30 p.m. Sunday 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. 32443 Northwestern Hwy. Between Middlebelt & 14 Mile 737-7220 Fax: 737-7223 Fine Catering For All Occasions July Special New England Lobster Feast Monday thru Friday $1 995 INCLUDES: 1 lb. Live Maine Lobster, King Crab Legs, Mussels, Clams, Potatoes & Sweet Corn One of Metropolitan Detroit's Most Beautiful and Exciting Restaurants FINE DINING • DANCING ENTERTAINMENT TUES. THROUGH SAT. Now Appearing BILLY ROSE TRIO 28875 Franklin Rd. at Northwestern & 12 Mile Southfield (810) 358-3355 The Olympic Arts Festival: One Fantastic Fortnight JONATHAN GALAIF SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS W hat do Travis Tritt, James Brown, Wynton Marsalis, the Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra, Itzhak Perl- man, the Royal Thai Ballet, play- wright Alfred Uhry, photographer Annie Leibovitz and artist Thorn- ton Dial have in common? They're all coming to Atlanta during the 1996 Olympic Arts Festival, a cultural and enter- tainment extravaganza that promises to be the most spectac- ular, star-studded and wide- reaching event the Southern city has ever seen. Undoubtedly, most people know about the athletic competi- tion of the Olympics. But few re- alize the historical precedent for cultural arts in conjunction with the Games, which celebrate their centennial this summer. The French founder and spir- itual father of the modem Games, Pierre de Fredy, Baron de Cou- bertin, had envisioned the revival of the ancient Games to feature athletic prowess "woven of art and philosophy." The baron's dream became reality when a "Pentathlon of the Muses" was presented at the 1912 Stockholm Games. Each Olympic host city choos- es the scope of the cultural arts festival. Montreal in 1976 and Moscow in 1980 showcased only native artists, while Mexico City (1968), Munich (1972), Los An- geles (1984) and Barcelona (1992) featured international fes- tivals. Atlanta's festival is the largest and most comprehensive scope yet attempted by an Olympic city. There will be 21 exhibitions and 18 works of art, with more than 3,000 performers at nearly 200 ticketed performances. Pro- duced by the Atlanta Committee for the Olympic Games' Cultural Olympiad, most Olympic Arts Festival events are taking place now through August 4, but oth- ers will continue long after the Games end and the world has gone home. Live performances began Wednesday, with more than 1 million tickets for sale. Prices range from $5 for exhibitions to $75 for some of the more popular music concerts. Included in the price of admission is transporta- tion to the event, provided pri- Something Jewish? W hat can the Atlanta Jewish community, not to mention visiting Jewish tourists, see in this myriad of artistic pleasures? Jewish artists scheduled to perform dur- ing the Olympic Arts festival include: overture In Honor of 3,000. • Violinist Itzhak Perlman will join the Gram- my-winning Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, di rected by Yoel Levi, on July 20. Perlman will also join fellow violinist Pinchers Zukerman and several other world-class soloists for a celebra- tion of chamber music July 22. • Classical music puts you to sleep, you say? How about some Jewish comedy? The theater per- formance that has sold the most tickets thus far is the Alliance Theatre Company's presen- tation of Alfred Uhry's latest, The Last Night of Ballyhoo. In this work commissioned by the festival, Uhry, best known for his Driving Miss Daisy, chronicles two college students of Ger- man-Jewish descent in the late '30s just prior to the Atlanta premiere of Gone With The Wind. • The Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra will cele- brate the holy city's 3,000th anniversary with a concert featuring pianist Yefim Bronfm.an on July 30. The concert will include the United States premiere of Menachem Weisenberg's `a Although the Olympic Arts Festival per- formances are sold out, Ballyhoo will have a second run as part of the Alliance's 1996 fall season. For ticket information, call (404) 733- 5000.