CALL (248) 334-7878 FOR RESERVATIONS ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED words got bigger and bigger Tony Gillan and French and the Spanish and the characters got small- before there ever was a Judd Hirsch in er," Gardner explains about his Hitler," says Gardner, whose "Conversations artistic transition. wife, Barbara, is chairman of with My Father;" A Thousand Clowns, which religious studies at Hunter the 1991 opened in 1962, was nominat- College. Broadway ver- ed for a Tony Award for Best "[Anti-Semitism] is always sion that won a Play and resulted in his being breathing warm air at us Tony Award for chosen Outstanding New from somewhere, and Best Play. Playwright in the Variety although things have Critics Poll that year. improved in the United Gardner, recipient of the 2000 States, I think it's always lying there, Lifetime Achievement Award from the waiting. Writers Guild of America, went on to "Two months ago, someone wrote Goodbye People (1968), Thieves (1974), hn Not Rappaport (1985) and Conversations With My Father (1991), the runner-up for the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1992. "All the characters, including the girls, are some part of me," Gardner says. "Charlie, the younger boy in Conversations With My Father, may be [most] like whatever kind of trouble- maker I am." As far as trouble goes, Gardner has no reservations about stirring it up for anyone who tries to mask the anti- Semitism he strives to expose. When French producers tried to write out that one character was Jewish in IM Not Rappaport, he threat- ened to close the show. His objections noted, the show stayed open and had a successful run. Although there have been many successful incarnations of Conversations With My Father and Rappaport in Germany, he did close a version of the latter in which an actor refused to speak the lines the French opposed. "People tend to think that Hitler was some mid-20th century aberra- tion, but [anti-Semitism] was a grand tradition for the Russians and the `dirty Jew' all over the French monu- ment put up in memory of the 20,000 Jewish children that Parisian police were responsible for sending to the camps. "A friend of mine went back every morning for three weeks, but no one took it off. I got hold of the French version of the Anti-Defamation League. I haven't heard back so [I think] they cleaned it off or perhaps it was gone by the time they got there." Gardner, who was in Detroit years ago to promote A Thousand Clowns in its film version, finds lots of sympa- thetic audiences in Israel, where reper- tory productions of his plays are pre- sented in Hebrew and Yiddish. "I think writing is fun, but it's also torturous," he says. ❑ www.thepikestreet.com • Baked Potato • Rice Pilaf • Roney Glazed Carrots • Corn-Off-The-Cob • 8 CD ct. THE INTELLIGENT CHICKEN 02 1/2 WHERE SMART PEOPLE EA Sinn • TRAYS CD 01. AVAILABLE 4 0 ai ns 3 charbroiled I • chicken breasts I 1 • 4 side dishes one • Two Wheat rolls II 0 k ons I No Exception n couPon. 00 pm. Limit 1 order per tter 3: o n. ouppo ocu anwl ioth o l o/d17w/itOrlO th:r Ejleprizst ig I 11. olk C2 CD • CB CB a eD (248) 855-4455 w 32431 Northwestern Hwy. (between 14 & Middlebelt, Farmington Hills) M-F: 11 am-8:30 pm; Sat: 11 am-3 pm; Sun: 4 pm-8:30 pm 0 0 • Cole Slaw • Garden Salad • Chicken Noodle Soup • Minestrone Soup • JET's production of Conversations With My Father runs Oct. 25- Nov. 26 in the Aaron De Roy Theatre at the Jewish Community Center in West Bloomfield. Times vary by date of performance. $16- $26. (248) 788-2900. 10/20 2000 89