tertainment Cover Story RISING STAR from page 59 Top left: Celebrating her bat mitzvah at Congregation Beth Abraham Hillel Moses. "I still remember the beginning of my Haftorah," says Berkley. Top right: Elizabeth Berkley and her brother, Dr. Jason Berkley "She's known [in the business] as being a genuine, nice person," he says of Elizabeth, whom he calls "his best fiiend." Congregation Beth Ahm — in West Bloomfield, both Conservative congregations in the Detroit suburbs. "People say to me, 'Why is that?' And I say, 'Because I've had to sing it for people to prove to them [I'm Jewish]. I don't know why. It's just a funny thing. That or the Four Questions or 'Dayenu; which I'll go into rounds of" Now that she lives in California, Berkley attends L.A.'s Reform Stephen A. Wise Temple with her parents, Fred and Jere Berkley, who moved to the West Coast when Elizabeth was 15. "I've taken singing lessons [there] from Cantor Nathan Lam for quite a few years, so that's where we've gone for the High Holidays," says Elizabeth. "I love the services there." She's also attended services at Bottom: Elizabeth Berkley Synagogue for the Performing in her roles in Arts in Los Angeles, where she "Showgirls," finds Rabbi Joseph Telushkin far left, and pretty inspiring." "The Real But it was back home in Blonde." Michigan that Berkley developed her strong family values and a love for Judaism that guide her. "Not only am I grateful for my family, but there's a real love I have for growing up Jewish, and where I grew up, because there's a foundation that it's given me in these crazy kind of worlds that I might come across," says the actress. "And I have to say, it doesn't ever leave me. I could be sitting next to someone and be in conversation or see that [the person] has a Jewish star on, and instantly, it's just a comfort. You can go anywhere in the world, and it's an immediate, immediate feeling of home." " more like a fresh-faced college student than any one of the seductresses she's played in the movies. She is, perhaps, best known for her role as Nomi Malone, a topless Las Vegas stripper/lap dancer, in the NC-17-rated Showgirls, which launched her fea- ture-film career among a swirl of controversy and poor reviews in 1995. It followed a more than three- year stint as Jessie, the girl-next-door, on the popular Saturday-morning TV sitcom Saved by the Bell. "One thing I'm very grateful [for] is that Woody — along with certain other filmmakers whom I hold in high esteem — was willing to see something more than what was in [Showgirls], or in Saved by the Bell," says the 20-something Berkley. "Some of the roles I've played were a bit more aggressive or tough. [Woody] wanted to show a little bit more of who I really am in this role. "I think he wanted to show the sweeter side, which, let's say, is the girl from Farmington Hills, Mich. I've felt truer to [Jill] than most characters I've played. Which is r 't to say I don't love to play characters dif- ferent from me. But it's been a while and it just felt good to be more myself. Just kind of refreshing." What Allen also saw in the young actress, he tells the Jewish News, was a flair for comedy. When asked why he cast Berkley in the role of his new film's demurely dressed "good girl," Allen's voice turns "Woody-esque": "Because I saw her in that T a. s Vegas movie, and I couldn't turn my ,.)7 -es off her," he jokes. But in a serious tone, he adds, "I thought she could be funny, that she had the ability. This is a girl who's got a very sort of perky quality, and she's sexy 8/10 2001 62 and she's got a lot of energy, and if she's used cor- rectly, she can be a very funny actress. All she needs is a couple of chances to show that. "I only had a small thing to offer her in this film, but perhaps along the line, I'll have something more substantial for her, and I wouldn't hesitate for a sec- ond to cast her because she's got that energy." While Berkley, who actually writes her goals and plans down in a journal, doesn't want to limit herself to comedic roles — an action flick and a period piece are high on her list of dream parts — she'd love to do more comedy. "I'm willing to be the Lucy and be real silly," she says. "I think a lot of leading women don't want to show themselves that way, but I'm a willing party. I like to have fun and I like to poke fun. I take my work seriously, but I like to see the humor in things. I think it's a healing thing." Who A Jew? Experienced filmmaker that he is, Woody Allen may be fully cognizant of Berkley's acting potential, but it's doubtful he realizes she's Jewish. "He doesn't know," Berkley admits. "Not that I know. He probably thinks I'm a [non-Jew]." As do most of the Jewish filmmakers and produc- ers in Hollywood. "I still remember the beginning of my Haftorah," says Berkley, who, growing up, attended Adat Shalom Synagogue in Farmington Hills and celebrated her bat mitzvah at Beth Abraham Hillel Moses — now Hometown Girl Berkley grew up in a Jewish area of Farmington Hills, where, from a very early age, she dreamed of becoming a star. "Luckily, my parents didn't take it as a joke because I was serious and I wanted to do the work necessary," says Berkley; whose grandparents the late Adolph and the late Ruth Gottfurcht ferried her to and from danc- ing and acting classes. Another grandmother, Celia Berkley, still lives in the Detroit area. "A lot of people where I grew up thought it was rather funny what I was dreaming of doing," says Berkley, whose dance recital song-and-tap number, "Hey Look Me Over," convinced her she "had to do this my whole life." She's grateful for her parents — big Woody Allen fans who played his movies at home (Berkley's favorite is Annie Hall). They let her go to New York and model, travel to L.A. and take classes "instead of going to sum- mer camp I really didn't want to go to. I wanted to train in L.A., and they let me have these opportunities." She gives special credit for her success to her danc-