The Week's Best Bets CLASSICAL Nur Fs Pops conductor Charles Greenwell and the Birmingham-Bloomfield Symphony Orchestra present The Ballet Goes Pops 7,p.m. Sunday, Feb. 4, at Temple Beth El. The program includes excerpts from Tchaikovsky's Swan Lake, symphonic dances from Bernstein's West Side Story and Copland's Billy the Kid. $20/students free when accompanied by an adult. (248) 645-2276. Accompanied by pianist Gilbert Kalish, opera star Dawn Upshaw, also renowned as a proponent of new music, performs songs from her upcoming CD 3 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 4, at the Wharton Center for Performing Arts in East Lansing. $22-$36. (517) 432-2000. Singled out around the world for its technical brilliance, the Brentano String Quartet performs 8 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 3, in a Chamber Music Society of Detroit concert at Seligman Performing Arts Center on the campus of Detroit Country Day School in Beverly Hills. $15-$67; (248) 645-6666. At 4 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 4, the quartet performs a sec- ond concert at Ann Arbor's Rackham Auditorium. $14- $30; (734) 764-2538. Crazy and other shows, 3 and 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. Saturday and 1, 4 and 7 Sunday, Feb. 4. $31-$35. (810) 286- p.m. Sunday, Feb. 9-11, at the Detroit 2222. Film Theatre. (313) 833-3237. The Theatre Company stages Keith Reddin's Brutality of Fact, a painfully funny comedy about a terminally dys- THE SMALL SCREEN functional family, 8 p.m. Thursdays PBS's Nova presents Nazi Prison Escape, Saturdays and 2 p.m. Sundays, Feb. 8-25, a documentary about what really hap- at the McCauley Auditorium on the pened at Colditz Castle, Germany's ulti- Outer Drive Campus of the University of GAIL ZIMMERMAN mate escape-proof prison for the Nazis' Detroit-Mercy $10-$12. (313) 993-1130. Arts L Entertainment most troublesome Allied prisoners, 9 p.m. Oakland University's Department of Editor Tuesday, Feb. 6. Check your local listings. Music, Theatre and Dance stages Eric Bogosian's SubUrbia, an examination of life's mean- FAMILY FuN ing by a group of young people who feel alienated, Feb. 8-18. Call for show times. $5-$10. In conjunction with Detroit's 300th birthday, Reservations: (248) 370-3013. Youtheatre presents Michigan jazz master Harold Host of WDET's Backstage Pass, Ann Delisi joins McKinney and his troupe of musicians, dancers and singers, who will create a living history of the cast of The Vagina - Monologues through Feb. 4,- jazz, sprinkled with notes on Detroit's illustrious jazz history, 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. Saturday and 2 and community activist p.m. Sunday, Feb. 3-4, at Southfield's Mary Lou Zieve will perform Millennium Theatre; $8 advance/$10 at the door. Feb. 6-11, at the Second City (248) 557-7529. Theatre. Call for show times. $45. (313) 965-2222. - Chicago's renowned Hubbard Street Dance Company combines theatri- cal jazz, modern and classi- cal ballet in its repertoire representing world-class and emerging choreographers. The troupe performs 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday, Feb. 9- 10, at Ann Arbor's Power Center. $18-$38. (734) 764- 2538. PoP/RocKIJAzz To make up for appearances cut short by illness and missed due to a snowstorm, Detroit's own Marshall Crenshaw takes the stage at Ferndale's Magic Bag 8 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 4. $5. (248) 544-3030. Master jazzman Marcus Belgrave and his band pres- ent 100 Years of Satchmo, the story of the great musical innovator Louis "Satchmo" Armstrong, Saturdays and Sundays during the month of February at 12:30, 2 and 3:30 p.m. at Henry Ford Museum. Free with museum admission. (313) 271-1620. ON THE STAGE Macomb Center for the Performing Arts performs Crazy for You, including hits from George Gershwin's Girl FYI: DANCE FEVER . THE BIG SCREEN Top: The Brentano String Quartet, with, clockwise from left, violinist Serena Canin, cellist Nina Maria Lee, violist Misha Amory and violinist Mark Steinberg,. perform two concerts this weekend Above: Marcus Belgrave brings the story of Louis "Satchmo" Armstrong to Henry Ford Museum. Twenty-five-year-old David Gordon Green's directorial debut, George Washington, in which a group of kids wrestle with universal issues of belong- ing, first love and spiritual restlessness, has been hailed as one of the most auda- cious American movies in years. It will be screened 7 and 9:30 p.m. Friday; 4, 7 THE ART SCENE The Detroit Society of Women Painters and Sculptors exhibit their works at the Oakland County Galleria in Pontiac. Feb. 2-March 16. Opening reception: 6-8 p.m. Friday, Feb. 2. (248) 858-0415. The Southfield Centre for the Arts hosts the pho- tography show World Religions in Metropolitan Detroit through Feb. 28. Part of the Pluralism Project at the University of Michigan-Dearborn, it reflects a wide array of traditions, including Judaism. (248) 424 9022. "Everyone - men, women and children of every culture - can relate to this exhibition," says President and CEO of the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History Christy S. Coleman of Hair in African Art and Culture. "That's because what we do with our hair makes a definite statement about what we think of ourselves and what we want others to think about us." The exhibit opens Feb. 8 and runs through April 15. (313) 494-5800. - WHATNOT The Harlem Globetrotters, founded by Abe Saperstein, a 24-year-old immigrant from London, in . 1926, when black players were not allowed to play in professional basketball leagues, bring their 75th anniversary world tour to the Palace of Auburn Hills 1 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 4. $10-$20. (248) 645-666. to: Gail For Zimmerman, Arts and Entertainment related events that you wish to have considered for Out & About, please send the item, with a detailed description of the event, times, dates, place, ticket prices and publishable phone number, Out & are About, The Jewish Franklin Road, Southfield, MI 48034; fax us at (248) 354-6069; or e-mail to gzimmerman@thejewishnews.com the scheduled event. JN Photos appreciated Nit News, cannot 27676 be retumed. All events and dates listed in the Out & About column are subject to change. Notice must be received at least three weeks before 2/2 2001 66