TERROR from page 73 MICHAEL ELKIN Special to the je wish News - sraeli-born actress NIB Avital says trising was among the most affecting of er film and theater experiences. The 29-year-old Avital won the Israeli equivalent of an Oscar for her work in the movie Over the Ocean. Moving to the United States in 1993, she has appeared in films such as Stalgate, Polish Wedding, Arabian Nights and Kissing a Fool, as well as on television's Law Order: Special Victims Unit. In Uprising, she exchanges her usual sultry persona for the role of Devorah, a devoted freedom fighter armed with one primal ambition survival. As an Israeli, Avital had already experienced a life scripted in sur- vival maneuvers. "When I thought about this movie, I was in pain,' she said. "It connected to my memories of nay childhood in Israel, where I saw and knew so many survivors of the war." Part of her preparation was returning to Israel and conduct- ing interviews with survivors. "When we were rehearsing, I turned to Simha "Kazik" Rotem, one of the actual Holocaust sur- vivors serving as an adviser on the film, who had been in the ghetto. I asked him, quietly, in Hebrew, whether Devorah was his love interest in real life and what she was actually like," Avital said. Expecting to hear a harrowing tale of hell and torment, the actress was told something entirely differ- ent "He said she was happy" Michael Elkin u entertainment editor of the Jewish Exponent 7. 1 1 1 / 2 2001 76 Not even the Nazis could elimi- nate the need to see sun through the ash-filled haze of the Holocaust, she realized. "That's when I knew what I had to do with the charac- ,, ter, she said, "when I really got it." Since Sept. 11, Avital has faced many questions about how peo- ple in her native land survive under the stress of terror and war. Her advice is to appreciate what you have when you have it. "I hear people saying, 'Now I understand how strong you [Israelis] are." Joining-Avital on screen as the young Warsaw Ghetto firebrand Totha is Leeke Sobieski. The New York-born actress has amassed a long list of film credits in her 19 years, including Angie 2 jungle, Never Been Kissed, Eyes VVide Shut and Joyride. She plays the lead in the recently released My _First Mister. Despite the macabre and mur- derous themes of some of her earlier films, Sobieski still found the horror depicted in Uprising "incomprehensible." In the miniseries, Tosia watch- es as her parents are carted off to a concentration camp. To the great benefit of her compatriots, and at risk of her life, she is able to pass for a gentile. "She has nothing left to lose." Sobieski said. "In a life or death sit- uation, once people you have loved disappear, you want to disappear yourself or do them honor." The actress, a student at Brown University, said she feels honored to take part in the .miniseries, since it hits somewhat close to home. "My grandfather was Jewish, although my grandmother was riot," Sobieski said. She remembers growing up celebrating Chanukah and taking part in other festivities in a pan-religious atmosphere. "I have always been in contact with my Gra.ndpop; I'm proud of my Jewish roots," she said Could she see her way through the atrocities faced by her onscreen character? Sobieski offers a strong performance that is a study in true grit and honesty. But she wonders if she herself could have survived Warsaw "I don't know if I would have the strength," she said "There should be a story about the Holocaust told every year if not every month," said actor David Schwimmer, best known as Ross Geller on the TV show Friends., (He and Avital recently ended a real-life romance) "There are many other stories of resistance in the Holocaust and in different ghettos. I hope many sto- ries continue to be told," he said The Jewish actor poi trays Yitzhak Zuckerman, chief lieutenant and friend to Mordechai Anielewicz (Hank Azaria). The role is a far cry from Schwirnrner's caffeinated char- acter on Friends-, whose perk this season is once again being involved with Jennifer Aniston's Rachel. A graduate of Northwestern University, Schwimmer, 35, was born in New York City, and grew up in Beverly Hills. Aside from Friends and many other TV roles, he can be seen in numer ous films, including Kissing A Fool and Six. Days, Seven Nights. "I love playing [Ross]," ScIrwimmer said, "and I love doing that show. But I also like to think I'm trying to grow as an actor and as a person. And I think I'm more interested in sto ries in general that have some- thing to say, a moral, some sto- ries that illuminate, that edu- cate." 0 During the next few weeks, the surprised Germans were repeatedly beaten back, until they systematical- ly leveled every ghetto building and flushed out holdouts with gas and fire. The last organized stand came at a bunker at Mila Street 18, although some fighters escaped to the "Aryan" side through Warsaw's sewers and lived to fight as partisans, and to tell their story later. On May 16, 1943, German Gen. Jurgen Stroop declared Warsaw Judenrein, Jew-free, although a few Jewish snipers remained to harass the Nazi soldiers. The dominant figure in Uprising is ZOB com- mander Mordechai Anielewicz, a 24-year old teacher who was killed in the final battle at Mila 18. He is portrayed by Hank Azaria (The Birdcage), up to now mainly known for his comedic roles. (An exception: his portrayal of Mitch Albom in the TV miniseries Tuesdays With Morrie). Here, Azaria displays a force- fulness and intensity that is central to the credibility of the miniseries. Other resistance fighters are played by Leelee Sobieski as Tosia Altman, Stephen Moyer as Simha "Kazik" Rotem, John Ales as Marek Edelman, as well as Sadie Frost, Radha Mitchell, and Israeli actress Mili Avital. Donald Sutherland gives a finely nuanced per- formance as Adam Czerniakow, the conflicted head of the Judenrat, while Jon Voight commendably avoids playing General Stroop as a one-dimensional villain. The only miscasting appears to be David Schwimmer of Friends fame, who portrays Yitzhak "Antek" Zuckerman. Even with a willing suspension of disbelief, it is difficult to imagine the well-fed and neatly combed Schwimmer as the ZOB's chief oper- ative on the 'Aryan" side and the organization's commander after Anielewicz's death. Uprising has moments of sheer elation, as when the ghetto fighters raise a hand-made flag with the Star of David over one building, in the teeth of Nazi artillery. In counterpoint, educator Janus Korczak, head of an orphanage, tells his charges that they are going on a picnic, and they climb into the cattle cars on the way to Treblinka, singing "The Sun is Shining." Among the most harrowing scenes are those of German soldiers pumping water into the rat-infested sewers to flush out the remaining fighters. Uprising is likely to raise protests from Polish- American organizations for its unsparingly harsh view of the Polish people. In one particularly damn- ing incident, an Easter mass is celebrated in a Warsaw cathedral, while the smoke of the ghetto's burning buildings and bodies drift into the church. The priest's response is to close the windows and continue the service. At other dramatic points, the Polish underground refuses to aid the embattled Jews, and a Polish work- er, paid to guide the Jews through the sewers, tries to renege on his bargain. Avnet remains unfazed by possible negative reac- tions. "I wasn't nearly as tough on the Poles as I could have been," he says. Without Polish collabora- tion with the Germans, he said, "many thousands of Jews could have been saved, and we can say the same of the Ukrainians and Latvians." Avnet has directed and produced more than 50