ALICE BURDICK SCHWEIGER Special to The Jewish News Sam Waterston as Karl Koster, a doctor who increasingly becomes in the rescue e.ffilrt when in his hospital takes Jews into biding as -Christian." patients. Says Miterston, who ploys Assistant District Attorney jack McCoy in ".Law and Order": "The most astonishing and puzzling part of the story is that the whole world went nutsfr a while, but somehow, the Danes didn't go crazy." Photos by Frank Ockenfels/D isney T he Wonderful World of Disney" may seem like an unlikely venue for telling a tale from the darkest days of the century, the Holocaust. But at 7 p.m. Sunday, May 17, the series will present "Miracle at Midnight," a Holocaust story with a decidedly uplifting message. It's the harrowing story of how the Danes banded together in an act of extraordinary heroism — opening their hearts, homes, businesses and wallets — to save the lives of thou- sands of Danish Jews during World War II. The two-hour movie, which stars Sam Waterston and Mia Farrow, is based on historical events and takes place in the fall of 1943. The story begins on the eve of Rosh Hashanah, when the Nazis are scheming to round up all the Danish Jews at midnight and deport them to concentration camps. The plan is leaked, word is spread, and immediately the Danes reach out to the Jews in an extraordinary rescue effort. Jews were hidden in Christian homes, in hospitals, even morgues. At midnight, when the Nazis stormed their houses, only 432 of Denmark's 7,500 Jews were captured, says Co- Executive Producer Merrill Karpf. The rest had disappeared, ferried to neutral Sweden during a week-long period as Danish fisherman carried desperate Jewish refugees the two miles across a narrow straight for the approximate sum of $2,000 per head. "Ironically," continues Karpf, "most of [those captured] survived a special concentration camp set up by the Nazis as a 'showplace' where the Red Cross has regular access. A small number — about 50 people — actually died there, mostly of natural causes or old age." It's a story that Co-Executive Producer John Davis knows well, hav- ing heard it firsthand from family members. Davis' father-in-law was among the Danes who risked their lives and hid Jews in their attic. "My father-in-law used to tell me stories about how his family and others pro- tected the Jews," recalls Davis, who is Jewish, "and I thought this was an incredible story that should be told. "The wonderful World of Disney" presents a show about the Holocaust that is suitable even for young children. 5/15 1998 1 6 Alice Burdick Schweiger is an Ann Arbor-based freelance writer. Eirik Knutzen of Copley News Service con- tributed to this story.