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PRESENTS
SUNDAY BRUNCH
Into The Stars
"Tallulah," actress Kathleen Turner's one-woman
show, dissects the secrets, passions and regrets
associated with celebrity.
4
Join us for a relaxing Sunday brunch buffet
that includes all of your traditional favorites like:
T
SUZANNE CHESSLER
Special to the Jewish News
OMELETS &WAFFLES MADE TO ORDER
HAND CARVED ROAST BEEF CHICKEN, BEEF,
AND FISH ENTREES POACHED SALMON AND
ASSORTED SMOKED FISH JONAH CRAB CLAWS
MARINATED MUSSELS EGGS BENEDICT AND
CHEF DENO'S AWARD WINNING DESSERTS.
Adults
$21.95
allulah Bankhead was an
actress on stage,
staae , screen and
television, but the play
with her unusual first name
for a title is not so much about the
person as it is about the aura that sur-
rounded her.
Tallulah, a one-performer produc-
tion starring Kathleen Turner and run-
Children aged six to twelve $7.95
Children aged five & under eat free
Sunday Brunch served 1_ lam till 2pm
and includes LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
FIVE DOLLARS OFF
Present this coupon to your server and receive $5 off on
the price of Sunday brunch for every adult in your party.
Offer good Sundays now through March 25, 2001. Not
chaRteq's erzab
valid in conjunction with other promotional discounts
including "Friends" gifts certificates. Thank you.
5498 Crooks Road (Next to the Northfield Hilton)
248-879-2060
Director Michael Lessac:
"If the ability to laugh and
survive is to be considered
a Jewish trait, then that
element of Jewishness is an
element of [this] play"
PRIVATE BANQUET FACILITIES FOR ALL OCCASION
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IL FOR H 2
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ALL DINNERS INCLUDE: SALAD OR COLE
SLAW POTATOES AND GARLIC BREAD
LGOOD 7 DAYS! ■ Exp. 2-22-2001 JNI
I ALL DINNERS INCLUDE: SALAD OR COLE
1 SLAW, POTATOES AND GARLIC BREAD
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I GOOD 7 DAYS! ■ Exp. 2-22-2001 JNI
Brass PointegAcct),(6
24234 Orchard Lake Rd., N.E. corner of 10 Mile • 476-1377
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SLAB FOR 2
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Includes: 2 Potatoes,
2 Slaws and 2 Garlic Breads
1 Coupon Per Order • Dine In or Cany-Out • Expires 2-22-2001 JN
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INTERNATIONAL DINING
gmilvA
2/9
2001
248-851-7685
With or
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2 Slaws and 2 Garlic Breads
L . 1 Coupon Per Order • Dine In or Carly-Out • Expires 2-22-2001
ORCHARD LAKE RD. SOUTH OF 14 • Farm. Hills •
6676 Orchard Lake Rd.
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political family that served in the U.S.
Congress, began acting after winning a
movie magazine beauty contest and
moving to New York from Alabama.
Her best-known roles were in the play
The Little Foxes, the movie Lifeboat
and the TV show Batman, which cast
her in the cult-following role of Black
Widow. .
In New York and London, where
her acting abilities did not always elicit
critical praise, she drew attention for
her hard-parrying life, which
eventually turned into alcohol,
drugs and many affairs.
Tallulah, written by once
Hollywood journalist Sandra
Ryan Heyward, takes audiences
back some 50 years as the only
Invites you to join us
Wednesday, Feb. 14, 2001
• Great Food! • Live Entertainment!
6:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.
ning Feb. 14-March 4 at the Fisher
Theatre, spotlights the illusions that
merge under the label of celebrity.
"Audiences will have a window into
a very classical case of what celebrity is
all about," explains director Michael
Lessac, who earned a doctorate in psy-
chology from Swarthmore College
long before he thought about pursuing
a career in stage, screen and television.
"Essentially, we're looking at star-
dom and the moment in a star's life
when she wonders what she has creat-
ed of herself and what the world has
created of her. It's highly personal and
gives a glimpse into the life of some-
body who, in many ways, has been
created by her public."
Bankhead (1903-1968), born into a
character is preparing to host a
350-guest fund-raiser for then
incumbent President Harry
Truman. As she fusses and frets
over every detail of the party,
Tallulah sips champagne and
divulges some of the secrets,
passions and regrets of her life.
"We did not attempt to create a
biography," says Lessac, who directed
Turner in a film he wrote, House of
Cards. "I did a lot of research and read
all the books about Tallulah, but much
of what is on stage is a combination of
Tallulah and Kathleen.
"If there's the illusion that celebrity
solves everything and gives confidence,
the play does burst many bubbles. If
the ability to laugh and survive is to
be considered a Jewish trait, then that
element of Jewishness is an element of
the play."
Lessac, who describes his own
Judaism as more of a political than
religious experience, brings that eth-
nic awareness to this project, other-