being taunted because I was Jewish," says Curtis. "This kid, Frank, would push me into • the street hoping I would get hit by a car. There were also Nazi march- es, where German kids would march, and my friends and I would go on the rooftop of the tenements and throw things down on'them. We did every- thing we could to ease our pain." Still, Judaism remained an impor- tant part of the Schwartz family's life. "My father was an Orthodox Jew and my mother kept kosher," recalls Curtis, who went to services regularly with his father until age 13 when he became a bar mitzvah. "My father was raised very religious." In 1990, Curtis visited his father's modest home and dilapidated synagogue in Mateszalka, near the Russian border, where the Schwartz family lost members in the Holocaust. When asked to be the spokesman for a fund that helps renovate Hungarian synagogues, Curtis set up the Emanuel Foundation for Hungarian Culture, named in memory of his father, to rebuild Jewish institutions in his family's homeland. The fund helped repair the central synagogue in Budapest, where his father once prayed. (Simultaneously, Curtis' daughter actress Jamie Lee Curtis served as honorary chairperson of a fund that established the Raoul Wallenberg Memorial Park in Budapest.) When Curtis was growing up, his family spoke only Hungarian at home; Curtis didn't learn to speak English until he started school. However, school wasn't one of his priorities. "It was the 1930s, and we were very poor and lived in the back of my father's tailor store and moved around a lot, so I barely fin- ished elementary and never went to high school," says Curtis: Instead of going to class- es, he delivered clothes for his father and wandered the streets of New York. 'Also, when I was 12 and my brother Julius was 9, he was hit by a truck and killed, and that put a great burden on my family." Curtis was the one wh'O had to go to the hospital to identify his brother. (His parents later had another son, Robert, who passed away in 1992.) Tony Curtis and Janet Leigh with daughter Jamie Lee Curtis during the filming of 1960s "Who Was That Lady?" The couple, who divorced shortly after the filming, was constant fodder for the fan magazines. Tony Curtis plays a New World Jewish gangster, - and Milton Berle is his Old World father, in 1975's "Lepke." Angeles to live near him. He knew it was his face that got him into the movies. "I was the best-looking Jewish kid in the world," he once said, "and that also includes the goyim," he quipped. His screen debut was the movie Criss Cross, with Yvonne de Carlo. Before long, the handsome Curtis became a teen idol. A list of some of his unforgettable films includes The Outsider, Sweet Smell of Success, Houdini, Trapeze, Spartacus, The Boston Strangler and The Defiant Ones, for which he was nominated for an Academy Award. Early on, he knew he'd have to change his name and chose Curtis after one of his Hungarian relatives named Kertesz. He anglicized it to Curtis, then chose That Face At age 17, Curtis joined the Navy and was Stationed in the Pacific. During his two-year stint, he earned his high school diploma. When the war ended, he returned to New York and, dreaming of becoming a movie star, enrolled in acting school on the GI Bill. It didn't take long for his dream to come true. "An agent named Joyce Selznick saw me in a play and sent me to Hollywood and I got a seven-year contract [at Universal. Studios] without even having to kiss up to anyone," says Curtis, who brought his parents to Los Curtis with some of his brightly colored acrylics: "I started painting as a way to express my feelings and ideas when I was a little kid and could speak only Hungarian," says Curtis. Anthony as a first name, later shortening it to Tony. In the 1950s and 1960s, Curtis' personal life made good copy for fan magazines. His marriage to actress Janet Leigh in 1951, and divorce 11 years later, were both well publicized, as was the birth of their daughters Kelly and Jamie Lee. (He had six children in all, two each from three of his four ex-wives, and now has six grandchildren.) There was always a tremendous interest in the suc- cesses and woes of the superstar who, in the early 1980s, battled and then overcame substance abuse. Curtis lost his youngest son, who was 23, to drugs in 1994. Still Vital In 1998, Curtis married Jill Ann VandenBerg, 32, an almost 6-foot-tall blonde equestrian, who helped him learn his lines for Some Like It Hot. They enjoy their life in Las Vegas, where Curtis spends much of his free time painting, a longtime hobby. His bright acrylic canvases with Matisse-like colors are sold on his Web site, www.tonycurtis.com, and at galleries around the country. "I have been painting all my life," says Curtis. "I started painting as a way to express my feelings and ideas when I was a little kid and could speak only Hungarian." Probably more than any other question, Curtis is asked what it was like working with Marilyn Monroe on Some Like It Hot. "She had emotional problems much of the time and was having a difficult time working," he says. "Her life was very strained — she was married to Arthur Miller at the time. But she was a kind and sweet woman." Curtis may be just a few years away from becom- ing an octogenarian, but he wants everyone to know he is "still in his prime." Even now, he is ready to take on new roles. "But there are some things I will never do," he says. "I won't grow old on the screen. I won't play doctors or lawyers or grandfathers or people like that. "I'll only play guys like myself, who are vital and active, and enjoy the living experience." El Some Like It Hot runs 8 p.m. Tuesdays- Saturdays, 7:30 p.m. Sundays and 2 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays, Dec. 3-22, at Detroit's Fisher Theatre. $35-$70. To charge by phone, call (248) 645-6666. JV 11/29 2002 79