GROUP SHOW PAINTINGS, WORKS ON PAPER, PRINTS AND SCULPTURE desk job and was writing radio shows out of New York," explains Sabellico, who was assistant director to Laurents on Gypsy, starring Tyne Daly, and has worked with him on other occasions. "It seems he saw a photo of four guys on a South Pacific island and all of a sudden this story came to him. About two weeks later he wrote the play. It has nine scenes and he wrote it in nine nights. A big-time producer read it, and after only three previews, it opened on Broadway." In 1949, Home of the Brave was adapted by another screenwriter into a movie, but, says Sabellico, the theme was changed from anti-Semitism to racism. 'Arthur v,rasn't happy about the changes," the director says. "Not only did Laurents want to keep it about anti- Semitism, but the film was inaccurate. During World War II, the troops were segregated, and a black man would not have fought alongside white men." For the Jewish Rep's production, Laurents, \\rho also wrote such movie classics as The Way We Were, Anastasia and The Turning Point, is the creative consultant, and has been very involved. "Although the plot is the same, Arthur changed some of the language to make it more 1990s," Sabellico says. "But he wouldn't put in any four-letter words. To add such harsh- ness wouldn't be appropriate." Actor Robert Sella, who portrays the Jewish soldier, says that doing the play holds special meaning for him. "My father was stationed in Europe during World War II and was at Dachau right after the liberation," says the actor, who was most recently seen on Broadway in Sideman and played the emcee in the current Broadway revival of Cabaret. "He helped some of the Holocaust survivors. I saw pictures he had taken at the camp and even took them to school when I was younger. I feel doing this play is another way to con- nect to my father and his experiences during the war." Sella, who was born in Phoenix and lived in the Lincoln Park area of Detroit from 1963-1970, says this play also helps the younger generation understand what the soldiers during World War II endured. "People who are too young to remember can gain a whole new per- spective," says the actor, who appeared in touring companies of My Fair Lady at the Fox Theatre and Angels in America at the Fisher Theatre. "The play is so well written that everyone seeing it is in for a real treat." While the play is scheduled to run through Dec. 26, there is a possibility it could be extended, or it .could wind up in another New York venue. "Arthur certainly knows many people in the theater today," Sebellico points out. "So you never know where Home of the Brave will wind up next." The Jewish Repertory Theatre production of Home of the Brave is scheduled to run through Dec. 26 at Playhouse 91, 316 E. 91st St., New York. Performances are 8 p.m. Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays; 7 p.m. Sundays; with 2 p.m. matinees on Wednesdays and Sundays. Tickets are $35, except for Saturday and Sunday, when they are $40. (212) 831-2000 The mission of New York's Jewish Repertory Theater, which is now in its 26th season, is to foster works about the Jewish people. Coming up Feb.19 is Syncopation, a new play with dance by Allan Knee, about a middle-aged Jewish man who hopes to add meaning to his life by advertising for a ballroom dance partner, and Funny Girl, scheduled for April 29. Berenice Abbott Suzanne Caporael Richard Diebenkorn Gunther Forg Sam Francis Jane Hammond Al Held David Hockney Hans Hofmann Roy Lichtenstein Stephen Magsig Will Mentor Joan Miro Robert Motherwell Philip Pearlstein Sharon Que Robert Rauschenberg Sean Scully Kiki Smith Frank Stella Wayne Thiebaud Tom Wesselman Terry Winters through Jan 29 N N LEMBERG GALLERY 538 N. Old Woodward Ave Birmingham, MI 48009 Tuesdays - Saturdays 11 am to 5 pm T 248.642.6623 F 248.642.6628 www.lemberggallery.com N Adam Baum And The Jew Movie' ollywood in 1946 is the setting for Adam Baum And The Jew Movie, a comedy by playwright Daniel Goldfarb. Performed at the McGinn/Cazale Theater in New York through Jan. 2, the play, which stars Ron Leibman, confronts being Jewish in America. Jewish movie mogul Samuel Baum wants to do a movie about anti- Semitism in America, and he's com- peting with other studios to be the first to release such a film. He hires a gentile writer to pen the script, hoping he'll keep the movie light, but the writer wants to explore the historical background, religion and suffering of the Jews. Baum decides to invite the writer to his son Adam's elaborate bar mitzvah, in hopes that it will shift the writer's focus to show how American Jews have prospered. Adam's bar mitzvah has the opposite effect. The writer wants to concentrate on the religious ceremony. THE GALLERY RESTAURANT Enjoy gracious dining amid a beautiful atmosphere of casual elegance BREAKFAST LUNCH ' DINNER 7 OPEN 7 DAYS: MON.- SAT. 7 a.m.- 9:30 p.m. SUN. 8 a.m.- 9 p.m. West Bloomfield Plaza • 6638 Telegraph Road and Maple • 248-851-0313 OUR, GREAT DINNER SPECIALS! $9.95 FILET MIGNON TIPS W/Burgundy Wine Sauce $6.95 W/onions, green peppers, mushrooms CHOPPED SIRLOIN $7.95 SHORT-RIBS or WHITE FISH SICILIANO $8.95 over rice SAUTEED SCALLOPS $7.95 WHITE FISH (Duratee, Broiled or Siciliano) $7.25 CHICKEN MARSALA $8.95 SATURDAY.. VEAL MARSALA $6.95 ROAST CHICKEN SHIVA DINNERS DELI & GOURMET RESTARANT PARTY TRAYS 21754 E. 11 Mile Rd. • Harvard Row AND FREE DELIVERY 248-352-4940 Fax: 248-352-9393 MONDAY . TUESDAY. . WEDNESDAY . THURSDAY.. FRIDAY y TWI 12/10 1999 89