Dicals inside gAT a h l Goa/2/s 2ND STREET PARK from page 129 The Trowbridge wishes our family and friends a very happy, healthy and prosperous New Year D At The Trowbridge senior retirement community, we offer the full range of high-quality services that you have come to expect, including: • Gourmet Dining, including "Spa Cuisine" • Chauffeured Transportation • More than 200 Monthly Activities • Personal Care Assistance • Weekly Housekeeping/Linen Service In addition, The Trowbridge and Providence Hospital offers: • On-site Full-time Physician • Full-time Nursing Staff • On-site Podiatrist • On-site Rehabilitation Center The Call (248) 352-0208 for a personal tour and additional information liK(. Z Michigan's LifeCare Community with Providence Hospital S 24111 Civic Center Dr., Southfield, MI 48034 • TDD for Hearing Impaired (800) 649-3777 • www.thetrowbridge.com JAGUAR `r would like to wish all of our friends and customers a very happy and healthy New Year! Jaguar of Troy 1815 Maplelawn Drive Troy, Michigan www.jaguaroftroy.com ❑ Boys of 2nd Street Park debuts 8 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 28, on Showtime and repeats 7 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 30. Check your local listings. 248-643-6900 9/26 2003 130 Since founding Dan Klores Associates in 1991, his assignments have included representing Sean "Puffy" Combs after his infamous arrest and Rudolph Giuliani during his prickly divorce. But eventually, his past caught up with him. Around the time Satin phoned in 1995, Klores was diagnosed with hepatitis C, contracted as a result of his youthful drug use, he said. He began an excruciating, yearlong drug therapy that, at the end, left him bedridden with pneumonia. It was that brush with mortality — plus Satin's haunting story — that helped push Klores to pursue more fulfilling work. To make Boys, he turned to anoth- er park friend, Ron Berger, a promi- nent advertising executive with ample production experience. The co-directors put up their own money for the summer 2001 shoot, when Klores traveled to nine states to interview 25 subjects, ultimately narrowing the major characters down to six. "While we were editing the film, Dan would be dealing with his high-profile clients and taking calls from Giuliani," Berger said. "Meanwhile, I would be dealing with my hith-profile corporate clients. But then at the end of the day, we'd be in this small editing room, working on stories from our childhood and making them come to life, which was so fulfilling." Satin said telling his life story on camera was "cathartic and healing." For Klores, who's now working on his second documentary, the process was also transforming. "What's amazing for me is how the movie has resonated with people all over the country," he said of film festival experience. "At the outset, the movie appears to be about Brooklyn and basket- ball, but then it becomes something much more universal. A lot of peo- ple of our generation have taken a parallel kind of journey. It's about what happens to people." 760390