JN: What is your message when you introduce the film? AK: I say that I'm committed to making films that counter nega- tive stereotypes about Jews. In the first one, Partisans of Vilna, there' were Jews that resisted. In the sec- ond, there is a great role model and hero for American Jews. Greenberg's stand on Yom Kippur (going to synagogue instead of playing Major League baseball), I consider to be a real pinnacle moment in the practice of Judaism in America. JN: How do you feel about the Detroit premiere? AK: For me, opening-in Detroit is a big homecoming. It's very spe- cial for me to have the Detroit premiere at the Detroit Institute of Arts, not far from the new sta- dium. My mother, Helen Covensky, had a one-woman show there, and as a child, I was often taken to the DIA. My mother's my inspiration. She started her work mid-career, and I started During a time of rabid antisemitism, "[my making films after having three father] could go to Tiger Stadium and . degrees, including law, that had watch a strong, tall Jewish New Yorker who hit them out of the park, and that nothing to do with filmmaking. film, and they have been at film showings. I've become very close to the Greenberg daughter, and we were at Tiger Stadium for its clos- ing weekend. I've gotten a lot of the contributions from New York Jews, who really claim Hank. There were some very generous people in Detroit, too numerous to mention. The film could have been made in three years, but it took 10 more to raise the money. I had to stop and start 50 times. JN: How did you reach the people who are in the film? AK: I did research about who [revered] Hank. Walter Matthau was a dear friend of Hank, and there was no problem getting an interview with him. Once I heard Mandy Patinkin - singing "Take Me Out to the Ballgame" in Yiddish, there was no problem with him either. I saw the Levin brothers socially through seemed to make Greenberg the most impor- the years and tracked them tant Jew living in the 30s, "says Kempner JN: How does this film reach down, and they said they'd back to your young years? love to do it because Hank AK: I grew up in a home where I was their hero. The Hank always heard about Hank from my immigrant Greenberg Invitational Golf Tournament held every Jewish father (Harold Kempner), who took my summer in Michigan was very important. I was able brother and me to baseball games. At a time when to interview a lot of the people myself, and I'm real- he was affected by the great antisemitism in Detroit ly grateful to them for letting me do that. The — from Henry Fordpublishing bigoted trash to Tigers also let me film. I go to a chavura in Father Coughlin spouting his demagoguery — he Washington, and Jeffrey Colman came up to me could go to Tiger Stadium and watch a strong, tall, and told me about his mother, Harriet Colman, and Jewish New Yorker who hit them out of the park, that's how I got my groupie. and that seemed to make Greenberg the most important Jew living in the '30s. Every Yom Kippur, JN: What's been most rewarding about taking the I would hear about Hank, and it almost seemed that film around the country? his name was synonymous with Kol Nidre liturgy. . AK What's interesting to me is a line Jay Carr wrote in Boston, and I think it's absolutely true. He said JN: How did you develop such strong religious that you don't have to be Jewish to appreciate the feelings? film, and you don't even have to know baseball. AK.: Although we didn't formally belong to a syna- People are coming out of the film, men and women, gogue, we went to the Jewish Community Center all and they're crying. They're getting it. Through my the time. We always attended the Jewish book fairs, Web site, hankgreenbergfilm.org , I'm finding that and that's where a lot of my Jewish identity stems there are people in my generation and younger who from. I still have very close contacts with the Jewish grew up-with the same stories I did. I wasn't the . community in Detroit, and a lot of friends still are only one with a father who was fanatic about Hank. there. I think Detroit is a great place to grow up in I think people really want to recapture the history, and a great place to grow Jewish in. A lot of journal- and I'm glad to be able to do that. ists have written that this film is my love letter to Detroit, and that's absolutely true. JN: Have you changed since taking on this project? AK Sometimes I feel I didn't choose my life; my life JN: Where did you raise the money? chose me. It's a social responsibility..The film will be AK: The whole film was made from charitable con- out on video next year, and we're talking to people tributions. Hank's family (second wife, Mary Jo about television. There's also a possibility of a fea- Tarola; two sons, Glenn and Stephen; and daughter, ture film. I travel a lot, and I haven't had much of a Alva) were the biggest donors, totally behind the personal life, but I'm glad to bring Hank home. ❑ His People And His Bat . ▪ e was a Moses," says baseball fan Don Shapiro ▪ in Aviva Kempner's The Life and h Tim es of Hank Greenberg. "He wore his J 's ness on his sleeve and he never tried to hide it." Perhaps the reverence that Jews have for the Detroit Tigers' first baseman/leftfielder is best described in a brief on-screen appearance by Harvey Frank, a member of the board of the Michigan Jewish Sports Hall of Fame: "I can remember listening to the [1935] World Series in school," recalls Frank. "Hank Greenberg hit a home run and everyone in the class turned to me. me Hank was a hero and therefore as a Jew] I was a hero. Adds Harvard law professor Al an Dershowitz, "Baseball was a way to show everybody we knew how- to be American. The Li/ and Times of ank Greenberg is aptly named. It is more than a baseball movie, .Q-1 it is a baseball movie. The 95-m inute :rings to life the world of first- and second- teation J ews in r America tkA 1920s, '30s Review an d e of 'ERG SAYS: 'wE ALL LIKE , I,L111.4! T...kAffaih '31 tatiNtzI ; • Cci3tis The Lift and Times of Hank Greenberg will be shown at 7 and 9:30 p.m. Friday, March 31, and 1, 4, 7 and 9:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, April 1-2, at the Detroit Film Theatre, Detroit Institute of Arts. Tickets are $5.50. Aviva Kempner will introduce her film at all the showings on Friday and Saturday, as well as at the 1 p.m. Sunday screening. A panel dis- cussion about Hank Greenberg follows the 4 p.m. Saturday screening. For tickets and infor- mation, call (313) 833-3237. 3/24 2000 81