its Entertainment The Prime Of Adrien Brody Actor's Oscar-worthy performance in Roman Polanski's Holocaust film, "The Pianist," hits all the right notes. NAOMI PFEFFERMAN Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles 0 n a bitterly cold day in February 2001, actor Adrien Brody struggled to scramble over a wall into a nightmarish moonscape of a destroyed city. It was the first day of production on Roman Polanski's powerful Holocaust drama, The Pianist, based on Wladyslaw Szpilman's . 1946 memoir, but 30-year-old Brody wasn't acting. Previously slender at 6-foot-1 and 160 pounds,. he'd dieted to 130 by subsisting for weeks on scraps of eggs, chicken and fish. By the time he arrived on the set in an abandoned Soviet army barracks dyna- mited into rubble, he felt he was becoming the Jewish virtuoso who eluded the Nazis by hiding in and around the Warsaw ghetto. When Polanski — himself a Polish Holocaust survivor — ordered him to scale a wall for a complex crane shot, Brody could hardly clamber over. "My muscles had wasted away," he said softly, looking like the dapper, pre-war Szpilman in an ele- gant tweed suit and gray silk tie during a Los Angeles press appearance. The radical weight loss was just one example of the lengths to which Brody went to shoot The Pianist, which won the prestigious Palme d'Or at the 2002 Cannes International Film Festival and is generating Oscar buzz for the actor, who has already been nominated for a Golden Globe for his role. To empathize with a character who loses every- thing, Brody also let go of his Manhattan apart- ment, sold his car, got rid of his cell phone, put his belongings into storage and didn't see friends for six months. "My intention was to feel a longing for these things and not to have a safe place to call home," he said, an earnest expression on his angular face. The drastic measures worked. The success of The Pianist hinges largely on Brody's haunting portrayal of Szpilman — from a dapper, collected musician to a disheveled skeleton cowering alone in bombed- out ruins. Standout Performance "It was mesmerizing to see the little gestures he would make as his character was becoming hungrier 1/ 3 2003 52 and lonelier," said Pianist Co-Producer Gene Gutowski, a Polish Holocaust survivor who pro- duced some of Polanski's earliest films. "I remember his mouth moving at one point as if he were chewing on his own tongue. During anoth- er sequence, he was so compelling that the entire crew was crying." His performance is the centerpiece of a drama that stands out amid the Holocaust-themed fare that has emerged since the 1993 hit Schindler's List, whose set designer, Allan Starski, and costume designer, Anna Sheppard, contributed to the Polanski project. With a script by British screenwriter Ronald Harwood (ne Horwitz), what sets The Pianist apart is its lushly gorgeous depiction of shockingly brutal violence with a dispassionate point of view. It matches the objective tone of Szpilman's memoir. "Roman was always telling me he wanted less," Brody recalled of the shoot. "He wanted me to refrain from any sentimentality." Comfortable On Camera The actor said he related to the subject matter partly because of the Polish-Jewish heritage of his father, Elliot, a retired public schoolteacher (Brody comes from the name of his ancestral town). His Hungarian,born Catholic mother, longtime Village Voice photojournalist Sylvia Plachy, also had Jewish relatives who suffered in the Holocaust. "I was raised with both their heritages," said Brody. But "with the level of suffering [depicted in the film] and the kind of loss you feel — I would feel a responsibility to telling that story whether I had any connection to it or not." Plachy, who fled the Hungarian Revolution in 1956 at age 13, made her only child the subject of many of her photographs during his youth in Woodhaven, Queens. So the teenaged Brody felt comfortable enough in front of the camera to pursue a film career early on. After working in a few Off-Broadway productions, he landed his first television role in the 1988 PBS Adrien Brody as Wladyslaw Szpilman: "The Pianist' is not just a film but a reminden” said the actor. Inset: The real Wladyslaw Szpilman, in a photo taken for his identity card, 1942. Szpilman wrote his memoirs just after the war. "It enabled him to work through his shattering wartime experiences and five his mind and emotions to continue with his life," wrote his son Andrzej Szpilman in a foreword to the 1999 edition that inspired survivor Roman Polanski to make the first Holocaust film of his career.