• Please join us for Birmingham's Night on the Town! Friday, July 16th — 12 Noon - 11 p.m. Saturday, July 17th — 12 Noon - 6 p.m. Save on everything in the store! Sydney Pollack in a scene with Tom Cruise in "Eyes Wide Shut." remarks, and there was a pervasive sense of anti-Semitism, even though I had a lot of non-Jewish friends. "One of my first girlfriends had to break up with me because her parents wouldn't allow her to go out with a Jew. It's not that they were bad peo- ple, just uneducated. It was a hard town to grow up in." Pollack says his Jewish upbringing was atypical. "My grandparents were religious, but my parents were second- generation Americans who went to Purdue University and did not prac- tice Judaism," says Pollack. "Sure, we celebrated some of the holidays, but we didn't keep a kosher house like my grandparents, and I didn't go to Hebrew school, which meant I didn't have a bar mitzvah." He regretted not having that impor- tant Jewish rite of passage and took matters into his own hands. "I felt badly that I didn't have a bar mitzvah," Pollack recalls, "and I wanted to please my grandfather. "So I enrolled in Hebrew school, and when I was 15, I had my bar mitz- vah. Since I was older, I felt I had to do a little extra, so I conducted the whole Musafservice [after the Torah reading]. My grandfather was thrilled." By the time Pollack graduated from high school, he was ready to leave Indiana, and its small-town mentality, and head for New York. Although he had always wanted to be a doctor, Pollack had caught the acting bug in school. He decided to put his dream of practicing medicine on hold and study drama. "It was the 1950s and the Korean War was going on and I knew I would eventually be drafted," he says. "We weren't rich and my mother was sick and most of our money went toward her medical expenses. "I knew there was a GI bill, and I felt if I waited a few years, I would be drafted and the government would pay for my college. So after high school I talked my father into letting me go to New York to an acting school. I wasn't planning on making a profession of it — I just wanted to stall until I got drafted." Pollack wound up studying at the Neighborhood Playhouse School under renowned acting coach Sanford Meisner, and fell in love with the the- ater. "I got a scholarship, and at the end of the second year, Meisner asked me to come back as his assistant," says Pollack. "So, basically, I started my career as an acting teacher, when I was 19." He was drafted a few years later, but by then had changed his mind about medicine. Pollack's first professional acting job was with the Yiddish Theater. "I got a small part in [Harold Robbins'] A Stone For Danny Fisher. Zero Mostel also was in it, and the play was done in English," he says. "It was the first English speak- ing production that the Yiddish Theater did, and it was a huge success. That_exposure lead to a role in A Dark is Light Enough, starring Tyrone Power and Christopher Plummer. "We played Pittsburgh, Baltimore, Washington and then came to Broadway for a three-month run," he says. While continuing to perform on the New York stage, Pollack appeared on television and slowly drifted into directing. "I got a job with John Frankenheimer as a directing coach, and thanks to his encouragement, I POLLACK on page 95 Unique gifts, accessories and 340 East Maple Road furniture. Extensive selection of Birmingham, Michigan 48009 books on design, architecture, p: 248.593.9085 art glass and studio pottery. f: 248.593.9087 We also offer bridal & gift registry. w: http://www.unicahome.com "Magnificent gold and silver artifacts...an easy show to appreciate...sumptuous." -The New York Times ANCIENT GOLD The Wealth of the Thracians TREASURES FROM THE REPUBLIC OF BULGARIA Now through August 29 THE DETROIT INSTITUTE OF ARTS A major exhibition of over 200 brilliant gold & silver objects, recently excavated in Bulgaria from 15 royal Thracian sites, dating from 4000 BC to 200 AD. Tickets at the DIA box office: 313/833-4005 Free tickets for DIA members 5200 Woodward Ave: www.dia.org MERITOR_ The exhibition is organized by the Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Bulgaria & The Trust for Museum Exhibitions. It is supported by an indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts and Humanities. In Detroit, the exhibition is made possible by a generous grant from Meritor Automotive, Inc. Additional support is provided by the Michigan Council for Arts and Cultural Affairs and the City of Detroit. ( micbigan council for MI arts and cultural affairs THE DETROIT INSTITUTE OF AIZTS 1 1 Catc4 Me Best Mi4Sie Reviews %ft JAI emtertaimostemt Detroit Jewish News 7/16 1999 81