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May 11, 2001 - Image 96

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 2001-05-11

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

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ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL

OFF

DINE IN OR CARRY-OUT
GOOD AT ALL 5 LOCATIONS

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I

Offer not valid between the hours of 71 a.m. and 3 p.m.
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• •

Mt Lit-de Daddy's Locations Now Feature

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1.Nt - MIDNIGHT, ..SEVEN -DAYS .1 WEEK

MOTHER'S
DAY
GIFT

SUZANNE CHESSLER

Special to the Jewish News

E

ugenia Zukerman has had a
celebrated career as a con-
cert and recording flute
player, television arts corre-
spondent, music festival artistic direc-
tor and fiction and nonfiction author.
But the work that brings her the most
joy is when she performs with her
daughter, soprano Arianna Zukerman.
Their relationship will take on spe-
cial meaning and expression when
they appear together for a Mother's
Day concert at the Wharton Center in
East Lansing.
"It is one of the greatest pleasures of
my entire life to make music with my
child," says Eugenia Zukerman, 55, who
recently \ vas a featured player with the
Flint Symphony Orchestra and will join
its conductor for a concert in Mexico.
"I look over [at this person] who
happened to flow through my body
and who had an awful lot of my
attention for many years and see
this butterfly who has grown up
and flown. It's very thrilling.
"The hardest thing for me is
not to get emotional when I per-
form with her. Sometimes, I just
look at her and hear the most
gorgeous sounds coming b from
b n
her mouth, and it moves me
to tears. I really try not to
do that."
For their afternoon at
Wharton, where they will
be joined by pianist
Rachelle Jonck, the
Zukermans have chosen

Eugenia Zukerman:
"The hardest thingfor me is not
to get emotional when I perform
with lAriannal Sometimes, I just
look at her and hear the most
gorgeous sounds coming from her
mouth, and it moves me to tears.
,
I really try not to do that.

what they consider a varied and
charming program they both love.
There will be a Vivaldi cantata, Italian
and French medleys and Bach arias.
Eugenia Zukerman, who entered
Barnard College as an English major but
soon transferred to the Juilliard School
to study flute, has built her performance
credits over 25 years of international
engagements from Israel to Russia.
This season's many scheduled
appearances include time with the
National Symphony Orchestra and the
Hong Kong Philharmonic as well as
with kevboardist Anthony Newman at
the New York Public Library's Celeste
Bartos Forum, presenting a series that
has become a long-running tradition.
Among her recent recordings is one
that features American composer

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