History Lessons Playing a Jewish soldier, Adam Goldberg finds special meaning in "Saving Private Ryan." SUZANNE CHESSLER Special to The Jewish News A dam Goldberg had been lazy about studying history in school. He found the infor- mation all too abstract and had a difficult time internalizing what he read. It wasn't until he was cast in Saving Private Ryan and made to go through training in a simulated boot camp that World War II began to have some real meaning for him. The actor says audiences who did not live through the war years will have a similar experience when they watch the movie. The film, directed by Steven Spielberg and starring Tom Hanks, opens today. The powerful history lesson opens with an explicit and bloody depiction of the D-Day landing at Omaha Beach and depicts the horrors faced by eight fictional characters taking on a mission behind enemy lines. Ultimately, viewers will ask them- selves whether it was right to risk the lives of eight fighting men in an effort to save the life of a soldier whose three older brothers have been killed in action. "More than anything, I view the film as a visceral history lesson," said Goldberg, who portrays Pvt. Mellish, a Jewish soldier from New York. "I think that few films have dealt with this war in as graphic and as honest a way. "I think that people should know [this] before they see the film, but I also think it's important for kids to see that war does not mean video games." Goldberg, 27, made his feature film debut as Billy Crystal's brother-in-law in Mr. Saturday Night and went on to star as the neurotic high school student Mike in Dazed and Confused. Other film credits include Higher Learning and The Prophecy. On television, Goldberg had recur- ring parts on "Relativity" and "Friends" and appearances on "NYPD Blue," "E.R." and "Murphy Brown." Raised in Hollywood, Goldberg began dramatic training at 14 and later studied at the Lee Strasberg Institute. He attended Sarah Lawrence College, where he performed in a number of stage productions before returning to Los Angeles. Soon to be seen in ed TV and heard in Pig in the City, Goldberg made his directing and screenwriting debut with Scotch and Milk, a drama he completed as producer, editor and star. It pre- Adam Goldberg, center, and platoon mates learn about their mission. miered at the Los morning. We found this so incredibly Angeles Independent Film Festival. taxing that any second we weren't But Goldberg's role as Pvt. Mellish in shooting we were lying on our packs. Saving Private Ryan has certainly been "We complained about what we had his most grueling. Former U.S. Marine to do much in the same way our char- Corps Capt. Dale Dye put the actors acters complained in the film. There through 10 days of weapons drills, close was a lot of art imitating life and vice combat, maneuvers and tactics. versa, which I think benefits the film." "It was easily the most physically Reading about the war took on a overwhelming experience of my life," whole new relevance, particularly Goldberg said. "I tried to get myself in through a study group formed with his shape before I left for filming, but friend Giovanni Ribisi, who played nothing could have prepared me for it. Medic Wade. I'm thoroughly urban and not the most athletic person on the planet. HISTORY LESSONS on page 82 "It took a lot of physical and psycho- logical self discipline just to ger up in the A Jewish War Veteran Remembers Henry Seligman of Southfield landed in France two weeks after D- Day. He never forgets the devastation. "It looked like a giant bulldozer had gone ahead of us," he recalled. "The only thing left standing in one small town was a church steeple, and somehow that sight strengthened my belief in God." Seligman, 78, is a decorated veter- an who was stationed in Iceland before going on to Europe. Like so many others who actually faced war- fare, he only reluctantly talks about the horrors of day-to-day survival — ducking the bullets, protecting the minimal food supplies and coping with the filth of the trenches. 7/24 1998 80 Detroit Jewish News "I'd never been in battle, and I don't think there's really any way to prepare for it," he said. "One day, I was asked to be a courier and take a message. I crawled all the way so I wouldn't be hit. When I returned to my position, I found two of my buddies dead." After suffering serious injuries, Seligman was treated in the field and ultimately sent to hospitals in France and England. He remembers one instance when the Red Cross brought him hot coffee and a chocolate donut and how he savored that after eating just to survive. Nothing since has ever tasted so good. Without actually seeing Saving Private Ryan, Seligman has a negative reaction to the premise of the film, thinking about his only son, Henry Seligman: "I don't think any movie can really show how ter- David, rifting it is to be in battle." whose ser- made me appreciate whatever I have, vice in Vietnam had been a constant especially things as basic as a daily source of worry. shower. "I don't think any movie can really "I think that everybody should show how terrifying it is to be in bat- really appreciate what this country tle with people shooting at you," means and respect all the people who Seligman said. "Obviously, it's good went to war because war really is to save lives, but I wouldn't risk eight hell." to save one. "I'm so grateful that both my son and I are alive, and I think the war — Suzanne Chessler