Arts Entertainment REBELS OF COMEDY from page 58 Leonard Berman), pioneer of self-confes- sional humor; Nichols (ne Peschkowsky) and May (nee Berlin), who developed comic self-analysis and a study in male- female relationships; Bruce (born Leonard Schneider), who conducted his own sexual, drug and language revolu- tion; Brooks (ne Kaminsky), who invented the Yiddishization of American comedy; Frye (ne Shapiro), who helped stretch the boundaries of mimicry; Allen (born Allan Konigsberg), comedy writer, standup star and movie director; and Rivers (nee Molinsky), who won acclaim by mocking celebrities and delivering bitchy, comic gossip, then becoming a fashion maven. Jordan, who became famous imitating newspaper columnist and TV show host Ed Sullivan, wouldn't divulge his real name to Nachman, who believes Jordan may be Jewish. Nachman said a number of celebrities prefer to keep their Jewish identities secret. "Phyllis Diller isn't Jewish, though a lot of people think she is — and she just lets them do so," he added. "There was a misconception that the late Stan Freberg, who mainly did parodies of hit records and commercials, was Jewish because of his last name, but he wasn't." Among the other comedians men- tioned by the author are such "members of the comic Jewish Mafia" as Milton Berle, Jack Benny, George Jessel, Henny Youngman, Joe E. Lewis, Jack Carter, Buddy Hackett, Jack E. Leonard, Sam Levenson, Myron Cohen, Alan King, Joey Adams, Shecky Greene, Phil Foster, Selma Diamond, Jan Murray, Freddie Roman, Mal Z. Lawrence, Jackie Mason, Jerry Lester, Rodney Dangerfield (born Jacob Cohen) and Gary Morton (Lucille Ball's husband after Desi Arnaz). Also cited are some of the more mod- em comics —Jerry Seinfeld, Robert Klein, Paul Reiser and Rita Rudner. "I made the latter group part of the book because I wanted to get their slants on their rebel counterparts of the mid- 20th century," said Nachman. Some comedy buffs might quibble that Caesar, who descended into a life of alcohol and pills when TV's Your Show of Shows was canceled, and Brooks, the "2000-Year-Old Man," shouldn't be in the book because their material was more in line with the comics who preceded them. In extolling the virtues of the rebels, Nachman says it's not his intention to put down" the veteran comics. But "they just did machine-gun-type jokes, some impressions and some singing," he says. "The great comedians [in the book] changed comedy forever. " 7/ 4 2003 64 "They caused a revolt, if not a takeover, and they left behind a satirical legacy distinguished by its social and political awareness, literacy, ingenuity and theatrical flair. Even now, as comic elder statesmen and women, they remain revered names in comedy." Nachman gives 46 pages to Lenny Bruce, whom he labels "the Elvis of Stand-up" and a "legendary folk hero." He was a "complicated person, and it takes a lot of room just to describe his arrests and trials on obscenity and drug charges," said the author. Ironically, Bruce's pioneering act of vulgarities pales in comparison to what is heard in some of the movies and cable TV programs of today. Bruce died at age 40 in 1966. "It's a marvelous book, very interesting and extremely accurate," commented Shelley Berman from his home in Bell Canyon, Calif., near Los Angeles. "Nachman was sort of tough on Mort Sahl, but he was very kind to me — although I came off sounding a bit like a kvetch. He doesn't really demean the old comedy era. He just tells why he thinks the later era was better." Berman's career was almost ruined by a 1963 TV documentary that showed him blowing his top backstage when a phone rang to interrupt his most famous routine. Now in his mid-70s and married for 56 years, he still plays Las Vegas and other clubs around the country and has a recurring role in Curb Your Enthusiasm, the hit comedy series on HBO featuring new "rebel comedy writer" Larry David. Nachman, 65, a California native, whose father was a Sunday school teacher and a local actor, wanted to be a cartoonist but got a journalism degree instead at Santa Fe (Calif.) State College. "My family wasn't too religious, but we observed all of the traditions and holidays," he said. For more than 40 years, Nachman has covered theater, movies, cabaret and TV for magazines and such newspapers as the Los Angeles Times, the New York Times and the San Francisco Chronicle. He also is the author of the book Raised on Radio. "Ultimately, there is a kind of perform- ing heroism in the personalities profiled [in Seriously Funny]," Nachman asserted. "Many of these comedians led lives of noisy desperation, often full of drama, damaged dreams, even tragedy. Their sto- ries were packed with the rich, raw mate- rial of comedians who refused to be denied and demanded to be heard. "The laughter they left behind in all of those little underground clubs is long gone, but their legacy still smiles brightly, warmly and merrily." II Kristin Davis as Charlotte York: Converting? FINDING NACHAS from page 62 KOSHER 'SEX' from page 63 But he has to start getting ready for his bar mitzvah — even if four years away seems an eternity. Is the most popular fish in this sum- mer's watershed movie Jewish? "Yes, I guess Nemo is," says Alexander. In its saga of a father searching for his son, what Disney and Pixar have cast is a timeless tale that tugs at the heart. "Nemo taught me that if you put your mind to something, you can do it," says the well-schooled son of Tom and Valerie Gould. "I have special feelings for them," he says of his aquatic buddies, but he "loves animals," and his household holds quite a menagerie: a dog, a cat, three frogs and a thousand worms in a bin in the garage. "They're for compost," says Alexander. While he'd like a bar mitzvah project involving marine biology, this is one kid who can see the forest for the trees. "I'm working on Bambi II," he says of the video for which he is supplying the title character's voice. "It has a whole different feel to it," says Alexander of going from the water to the woods. Fl Cindy Chupack, the show's co-execu- tive producer and one of its writers. Chupack, who is Jewish, said that Charlotte (the only member of the quartet to have walked down the aisle) was more likely for this storyline than her friends: Carrie (Sarah Jessica Parker), Miranda (Cynthia Nixon) or Samantha (Kim Catrall). "Charlotte always had the most fairy-tale vision of love, and, when she married Trey, it was a 'be careful what you wish for' situation," Chupack said. "Last season, we loved the idea of putting someone in Charlotte's path who was the opposite of what she thought she wanted. The problem was not that Harry was Jewish, it was that he was loud, crass and hairy — every place but on his head." Chupack is mum on if there is a chuppah in Charlotte's future (producers have said there will be two weddings at the end of the season). All she will say is that "this is not a season to pass over." The first 12 of 20 new episodes debuted June 22 and are currently air- ing 9 p.m. Sundays on HBO; the rest will air beginning in January 2004. _1