• Gift Baskets • Sweet Trays • Muffins • Soups 0 • Cookies RtA DA OM PA NY ES 0 THE occ Everything Made Fresh Daily Voted Best Challah Bread! $1.00 Off Any Bread Order 1 coupon per order Expires 1/31/03 The re-created devastation of the Warsaw ghetto in "The Pianist" mirrors the childhood experience of director Roman Polanski, pictured, who escaped the Krakow ghetto during World War II. one sequence, the director caught them and put the books back. "Then he scolded us for half an hour," Brody said with a laugh. Polanski also didn't flinch when his star — "skinny, freezing and nervous" — claimed he had no energy to repeatedly scale that wall back in February 2001. He told me, 'What do you need energy for? Just do it!" the actor said, perfectly mimicking a Polish accent. The performance seems so real, Brody admits, "because I wasn't acting." Lingering Effects The grueling experience toughened Brody up, though the melancholy he felt as Szpilman lingers. "My friendships have suffered, and unfortunately my relationship with my girlfriend did not survive the movie," he said with a sigh. "You find yourself in places you didn't know existed. I don't know how you can go back to a place where you were prior to this experience." To make matters worse, Brody returned from the European shoot and the re-created scenes of a devastated Warsaw that "made me cry" to New York City, only to witness the events of Sept. 11. It prolonged, or reawakened, what he was already feeling, said the actor, who accompanied his mother to Ground Zero to take photos. "It made me appreciate what I have — food, shelter, friends and loved ones; eating when and what I want; things I don't know how we take for granted but we do." Other than a light cameo role in the upcoming Robert Downey Jr.-Mel Gibson film The Singing Detective, a part he took "to escape the weight I carried around," Brody hasn't worked for a year, he said. "Many projects seem superficial compared to The Pianist. I'm sitting back and waiting for something inter- esting to come." And while he finds the positive buzz for the film and his work "exciting," Brody admits that it "actually tor- ments me to see myself in the film because physically and emotionally, I was destroyed." "Of course," he said, "any suffering I `THE PIANIST' from page 53 ness, isolation and alienation. Although he is tall, Brody portrays Szpilman as a small man, whittled by starvation and dwarfed by the might of the German occupation. One of the vacant flats where Szpilman is concealed has a piano, but he dare not play lest he alert the neighbors to his presence. The idea that he was — and someday may be again -- a concert pianist seems like a grim joke, a pipe dream. Not good with any other discount or special offer. Not valid on holiday orders. 24-hou• notice please on specialty items endured was miniscule compared to Szpilman's. But I felt a tremendous responsibility to go to extremes in Szpilman's memory and because I knew how personal the film was to Roman." — Arts er Entertainment Editor Gail Zimmerman contributed to this article. . The Pianist, rated R, opens Friday, Jan. 3, in Detroit. But a German officer, who foresees the imminent demise of the Third Reich and, perhaps, realizes that Europe will need every available artist, subsequently aids Szpilman. It is ambiguous whether it is Szpilrnan's talent that saves his life. What The Pianist makes clear is that the Nazis could not snuff his soul, European Jewry or Western culture. Szpilman lived and worked in Warsaw, adding to the contributions of Jewish artists to Polish culture, until his death in 2000. (sonic exceptions) 6879 Orchard Lake Rd. in the Boardwalk Plaza 248-626-9110 604270 MICHIGAN'S Fo 03-7 / voted by The Detroit News Best Thai Food Come in and Sample some of the most Delicious Thai Food around! r 0/ 0 OFF TOTAL BILL I THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY Expires 1/31/03. Not good with any other offer. r 0 /rt OFF 1 1 TOTAL BILL ❑ SUNDAY THRU > WEDNESDAY L I Expires 1/31/03 Not good with any other offer. Hours: LUNCH DINNER Mon. Fri. II am -2:30pm - Mon. - Thurs. 5pm-9:30pm Friday-Sat. 5pm- I0:30pm Sun. 5pm- 10:00pm Siam Spicy II 32425 Northwestern Hunt. • Farmington Hills 24S-626.1 092 • 248-626-0270 • FAX: 248-626-3744 The • Szpilman family in happier times in "The Pia nist . " 1/ 3 2003 55