FATHER from page 77 The Jewish characters include Mr. Sheinkopf, the music teacher who rep- resents a European tradition; Serena Katz, an aspiring actress from Brooklyn; and Schlomo Metzenbaum, a violin student who carries the soul of the production. Actual Jewish stars who graduated from the New York school, which opened in 1936 and moved to a nine- story building in 1984, include singer- actor Hal Linden, the late puppeteer Shari Lewis and legendary choreogra- pher Jerome Robbins. The school each year provides 2,400 students with lessons in drama, dance, voice and instrumental music and houses a 1,100-seat concert hall and a 500-seat theater. "The play recognizes the movie, which came out in 1980, but there are new characters," says De Silva, a native New Yorker who studied to become a high school teacher but instead went on to work as an actor, agent and assistant to the late produc- er-director Otto Preminger. "I like characters who are following their dreams, and I think magnet schools are important because they bring tal- ented students to special schools where they have a chance to excel." The stage version was developed in not-for-profit theaters in Miami and Philadelphia, but the real break came when Music Theatre International published it. As a result, the China Theatre in Stockholm put on a mil- lion-dollar production and had a record-breaking run of two seasons. "What came across the footlights was music, dance, energy and pas- sion," says De Silva, who then fol- lowed the production to other coun- tries. "It was unbelievable to me to not understand a word and yet be caught up in the power and the pas- sion of the young talent involved." De Silva, a consulting producer of in its second year in Poland with Polish kids doing it, and Spanish kids are doing it in Buenos Aires. Australian kids open in July, and it's become a huge cult thing in Britain. "It's amazing how many kids are attracted to the arts, and it's nice to see that. When Fame first came out, Above left: "Fame - The Musical" features a cast of 25. Right: A mix of strongly motivated students — rich and poor, black and white, Christian and Jewish — was planned to give the story its passion and dramatic tension. The Detroit cast of Fame will offer a master class to performing arts students throughout Detroit and sub- urbs. The Wayne County Regional Educational Service Agency (RESA) will broadcast a one-hour ses- sion, 10-11 a.m. Thursday, April 29, over closed cir- cuit television to school districts in the tri-county area It is expected that 60,000 students — some in atten- dance in RESA's studio— will see the Distance Learning Program. Performing Fame songs as exam- ples, cast members will demonstrate the ways songs become both a personal expression of character and a vehicle for moving along the plot. the early '80s TV series, uses his travel to promote art studies and the estab- lishment of performing arts schools. "The Swedish press gave me the handle of "Father Fame" because I cre- ated Fame, and I get to see a grassroots global expression that celebrates American musical theater," explains De Silva, who will be going to see a South African production in May. "It's "Father Fame" David De Silva: "Unless kids are educated in the arts, they don't learn about the spirit of things." all of a sudden 10,000 kids wanted to audition for the New York school. When they did the show in London for the first time, kids started lining up at 6 a.m. to audition, and there were 5,000 on the first day." • While De Silva hopes that teen- agers aspiring to performing arts careers brace themselves for other opportunities in the many cases where they are not successful, he also envi- sions more jobs using the skills neces- sary for the stage. The rise in the number of performing arts schools, including a new facility for the one in Detroit and the Liverpool School for the Performing Arts founded by for- mer Beatle Paul McCartney, will help train people for what he terms the communications revolution." Ground was broken for Detroit's new facility, the High School for the Fine and Performing Arts, last Wednesday on land adjacent to Orchestra Hall and donated by the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. The $35-million dollar facility will be paid for with proceeds from a $1.5-billion school bond measure. An 800-seat auditorium, a 200-seat music hall, acoustically correct practice rooms and rehearsal space are planned for the school. "Unless kids are educated in the arts, they don't learn about the spirit of things," De Silva says. "I'd like Fame to be an introduction to the theater for young people, and my dream is to do a production in New York every summer with 100 kids from the schools to ben- efit arts in education." 7 Fame — The Musical will be performed 7:30 p.m. Tuesday- Thursday, April 27-29; 8 p.m. Friday, April 30; 2 and.8 p.m. Saturday, May 1; and 1 and 5 p.m. Sunday, May 2, at the Music Hall in Detroit. $25-$50. (248) 11. 4/23 1999 Detroit Jewish News 89