"I got readdicted [to smoking]. I figured I'd quit again after the show," says Jacobs, who borrowed her integral, simulated-1936 props from her friend and fellow commu- nity theater actress, Linda Rabin Ham- men, who played the same role the year before at Village Players in Birmingham. "For the play, you couldn't just smoke any cigarette," says Jacobs, who first met Hammen when they both were perform- ing in Barnum at Ridgedale Players. "Lin- da found a brown papered cigarette that was filtered — in the play they were called `Wild Woodbines' — and she gave me her leftovers." Stagecrafters member Frederick Shu- lak came to witness Jacobs' method act- ing. After all, the two have been community theater compatriots, friends and dog lovers for years. Shulak, a veteri- narian, was Dr. Shulak to Jacobs' Maltese. All In The Family ome people are born to be Broadway babies. Others are not. "I'm the warm male body," jokes Steve Matz who, three weeks into Fid- dler on the Roof rehearsals, was recruit- ed for a walk-on, nonspeaking role. His 9-year-old daughter, Rachel, the veteran actor in the family — she's performed for the past four years in various Nancy Gurwin productions — was playing Bielke, Tevye's youngest daughter. By opening night, Steve Matz had graduated from being "part of the scenery" to a named speaking role — Sasha, the Russian — and bot- tle dancer to boot. S April. They are temple members. Mar- sha Rofel is producing the large endeav- or. Their daughter Leslie, an eighth-grad- er at O.E. Dunckel Middle School, was in the ensemble of Fiddler when Nancy Gur- win said, "You know, we need a couple more papas for Fiddler." "At first I said 'no,' " says Rofel, a CPA taneously as stage manager and chorus member in Gypsy. What's up next for the Sherlines? Look for Stephanie as an orphan and David on lights for Nancy Gurwin's Annie, running Jan. 26-Feb. 16. ❑ See Curtain Call, page 74 Left: "I'll never forget my first experience in Fiddler," says Rick Sherline, who was Mordcha, the innkeeper. "There was a bomb scare at the JCC during `Tradition,' the opening number ... About 45 minutes after we had evacuated and the police combed the building, we actually started the show from the top again. About two-thirds of the audience stayed and we finished the show." Center: Steve Mat made his debut in Fiddler on the Roof as Sasha, the Russian. His daughter, Rachel, was Tevye's youngest daughter, Bielke. Rachel will play an orphan in Annie in Nancy Gurwin's production, Jan. 26-Feb. 16, at the Maple-Drake JCC. On the JNE Cover, Sam Weiner played Mr. Mushnik, the Jewish flower shop owner, in Little Shop of Horrors at Grosse Pointe Theatre. "It's neat to be known for what your kids do," says Matz, who nev- er dropped his bottle in all seven performances. "In the theater com- munity, I'm known as 'Rachel's dad.' " A novice actor to be sure, Matz had always coached his two sons in basketball, swimming and ten- nis. "It was a wonderful experience, very professional and fun to do with Rachel," says Matz, who'd leave his law practice for the day, swim or work out at the Maple-Drake JCC and just walk down- stairs to rehearsals in the JCC Aaron DeRoy Theatre. "As part of our bedtime routine, we'd go through our lines to- gether. Now, we have inside jokes for each other." "I went from a pirate to a beggar," laughs John Rofel, another warm body recruited for Fiddler. "I'm really mov- ing up in the world." His journey started in 9th grade at Clinton Junior High in Oak Park when he was a pirate in Pirates of Penzance. His wife, Marsha, and he were junior high school sweethearts — a choir romance. The husband-wife duo have been in a number of choral musical groups togeth- er over the years and will be involved in Temple Beth El's Broadway revue in who squeezes in musi- cal performances pre- tax season. "Then I thought it would be a neat father-daughter thing to remember the rest of our lives. It was really, really special. Something we could share together." Rick, Tova, David and Stephanie Sherline feel the same way. In the past six Nancy Our- win productions, at least one family mem- ber has been involved; in Music Man, the father-son-daughter team performed on- stage while mom worked backstage. Typically, Rick and Stephanie, 11, are in the chorus; Tova is the props queen and David, 14, works lights, has musi- cally directed and even pinch-hit simul- PH OTO BY DANI EL LIPPIIT He's been active in community theater since 1978, following his divorce. Single for 18 years, Shulak is an "unattached man, looking for the Adelaide to his Nathan Detroit," he quips, referencing the musical Guys and Dolls. Shulak first got his start at the Wind- sor Light Opera Association in Canada. In 1991, he joined Stagecrafters in Roy- al Oak, a closer drive from his veterinary practice in Southfield and home in Rochester Hills. Since then, musicals have been his forte, with roles in Any- thing Goes, 42nd Street and Gypsy, among others. "I was in the production of Kismet in Windsor. I was a palace guard, and I had to stand motionless with a sword in my hand. There were 1,200 people in the Clearly Auditorium, and four hand- maidens in harem outfits at my feet. One maiden decided to paint my toenails," re- calls Shulak, laughing hysterically. "I knew what was happening, but I couldn't move. So I just stood there with my sword in my hands." The nail polish was red. And so was Shulak. Oh well, that's show biz. ❑ Below: Father-daughter team John and Leslie Rofel in Fiddler on the Roof. "As a novice in the theater, it was great to see all these people from different walks of life come together and create the atmosphere, time and place of Anatevka," says John Rofel, who played Nacham the beggar.