Our Annuai Summer
Reading Roundup

In "Sunshine,"
Hungarian film director
Istvan Szabo depicts
the Jewish struggle
for acceptance.

Ralph Fieiiizes plays three generations — grand/caber (Ignatz), son (Adam) and grandson (Ivan) — of the Hungarian Jewish Sonnenschein finnily in Istvan
Szabos "Sunshine." Clockwise from top left: Fiennes, left, as Ivan, a Communist interrupt:0i; and Deborah Kaye Unger as the conflicted Caroler. Fiemtes,
as Ignatz, a man who wants to be accepted as a member of tbe establishment. John Neville as older Gustave, the rebellious Sonnenschein brother who
becomes a revolutionary; Fiennes as kan; and Rosemary Harris as older Valerie, the Sonnenschein matriarch. William Hurt, 1tf1, is /Ozort;
the conscientious Communist official whose destiny changes Ivan's (Fiennes, right) vietv ofpolitics and the world James Frain, 141, as young Gustave;
JennU'r Ehle, center, as young Valerie; and Fiennes as Ignatz. Jennifer Ehle and Ralph Fiennes on the set of "Sunshine."

