7 . ••:.•ik• • ••••• N..m. • "MaMge&MV...1.4.32.17M,Sa . 'WM ",:*.WE OUR SECOND ANNIVERSARY GIFT TO YOU! nce (Delight DINNER$-In95 FOR TWO 17 1 Includes: Your choice of 2 soups or 2 salads, 2 lamb chops, 1 skewer of Kabob (choice of chicken, beef or lamb), 2 skewers of Kafka, rice or homemade fries, 2 glasses of house wine, and dessert • Available Mon. - Thurs. Open for Lund) ono L inner 7 -Days 4189 Orcbaro Coke lioati OrcbaCo [the 248 -8.65-0000 2/26 1999 82 Detroit Jewish News 248- 863 - 0020 e-mail to the magazine's publisher, Kim Hastreiter. "I used to e-mail Kim about all the places I went to," she says. She asked me to do a column exactly like one of my letters." Sarko's peer group includes what she calls the "literary brat pack," authors like Tama Janowitz, Jay McInerney and Bret Easton Ellis. Ellis pays tribute to Sarko in Glamorama, his new book about New York's rich, famous and fashionable. Her name appears amongst various other glitterati mentioned in the novel. "We've got calls in to everyone from Anita Sarko to Sister Bliss to Smokin Jo," writes Ellis. "It's happening." Glamorama details the life of a young New York celebrity, a topic with which Sarko is very familiar. "In order to be a celebrity in New York, your photo has to be taken, you have to be written about and your name has to be in boldface," says Sarko. "The way that you're recognized as 'somebody' is when your face and your words are reflected back by the media." Sarko's dual role as DJ/journalist has put her on the most exclusive of guest lists. She counts Vanity Fair magazine parties and the Shakespeare In Love pre- miere as some of the glitziest. All of this elbow rubbing with the stars easily could jade someone, but, Sarko says, "for me, a great night is going out to the movies or to get a burger — or sit- ting at home naked in front of the TV eating Chinese takeout." Although Sarko doesn't get back to Detroit much, she stays close with her family. In fact, she credits them with making music such a driving force in her life. "When I was young [my par- ents] gave me the money to go out and buy the music, but they also gave me the feeling of how wonderful it is," says Sarko, whose father and stepmom are Harold and Mary Sarko. Her mother, Eleanor, died in 1989. "Since the time I was 5 years old, my parents took me to night clubs. Every spring and fail, they would always take me to New York to see all of the musicals. From the time I was 14, they took me to Las Vegas. And I was given total freedom. I was never given a curfew." Other than family, Sarko keeps in close touch with her best friend from childhood, Linda Dorfman Feldman of West Bloomfield, who remembers that "at least once a week, we'd go to Mumford Music, and Anita would buy every record that came out. They'd have them ready for her. Music has been her passion since she's been a child. She'd have parties in her basement every weekend. "She's a wonderful friend," adds Feldman, who recalls the time Sarko N took her to one of the New York clubs. "Mick Jagger and Cher and Drew Barrymore were there. Anita knew everybody, and she's done par- ties for everybody, including Donald Trump. She always wanted this kind of life." Sarko also stays in touch with her Motor City roots by surrounding her- self with other natives who have relo- cated to the Big Apple. She attends dinners with other Michiganders, including fashion designer Anna Sui and comedienne Sandra Bernhard. Manhattan's former Michiganders have a bond, it seems. Take the notori- ously aloof Paul Schrader, director of the recently released Affliction. "I was at this party at Elaine's [restaurant] and director Paul Schrader was there," Sarko recalls. "I had just seen a film of his so I went over and introduced myself, and I told him I was from Detroit. He immediately asked me to sit down. It turns out he is from Grand Rapids." In fact, adds Sarko, "being from Detroit automatically gives you credi- bility in the music world. It's consid- ered a very hip city." Sarko used to study Kabbalah, although going to synagogue is not a major part of her life. She takes what is important to her from Judaism. "I take whatever there is in anything I find and if it feels good I'll accept it and if it doesn't I won't," she says. "It really comes down to the golden rule of treating people how you want to be treated." Currently, Sarko's career path is tak- ing her more into the production side of the music business. She is working on a dance remix for Petula Clark. (Clark opens in Andrew Lloyd Webber's Sunset Boulevard March 2 at the Detroit Opera House. ) This woman's voice is outra- geous," says Sarko. "It is such a thrill to deal with a voice — an instrument — that is so magnificent. When we isolated the original '60s tracks, my engineer called me up and said, 'This woman's voice is so strong. I'm hearing where these modern singers like Madona are coming from." When asked where she will be 10 years from now, Sarko replies, "I hope I'm doing something I never imagined." That shouldn't be too hard. After all, remember what Frank Sinatra, her parents' favorite singer, had to say about New York: "If you can make it there, you can make it anywhere." 1