ARTS • calendar A MUSICAL NOTES ON THE STAGE THE BIG SCREEN Tom Jones - Popular rock and pop star. Macomb Center for the Performing Arts, Clinton Twp. 8 p.m. Saturday, April 2. $68, $65, $62. (586) 286-2222 or www.MacombCenter.com. The Hot L Baltimore - University of Michigan Department of Theatre and Drama presents Lanford Wilson's warm and funny tale of lost souls caught up in urban decay. Trueblood Theatre, Frieze Bldg., Ann Arbor. 7:30 p.m. Thursday, March 31, April 7; 8 p.m. Friday-Saturday, April 1-2, 8-9; 2 p.m. Sunday, April 3, 10. $15, $9 students. (734) 764-2538 or www.uprd.umich. edu. USA-Martin Scorsese - Two personal and entertaining documentaries, Italianamerican (1974) and American Boy (1978), from the 1970s. Detroit Film Theatre, Detroit Institute of Arts. 7:30 Monday, April 4. $7.50, $6.50, members, seniors, students. (313) 833-3237 or www.dia.org/dft. Bob Weir with Rat Dog - A rock band with a ja77 trio at its heart; Weir's first band was the Grateful Dead. Royal Oak Music Theatre. 8 p.m. Saturday, April 2. $27.50, $52.50. (248) 399-2980 or www.royaloakmusictheatre.com. Haydn's Creation - UMS Choral Union and the Ann Arbor Symphony Orchestra including conductor Jerry Blackstone, soprano Arianna Zukerman, tenor John Tessier and bass Stephen. Morschec. Hill Auditorium, Ann Arbor. 8 p.m. Saturday, April 2. $10- $28. (734) 764-2538 or www.ums.org . Jazz at the Phil II - Michigan Ja77. Festival presents a repeat of last year's concert showcasing local talent; it serves as a fund-raiser for the admission-free Michigan 77 Festival Sunday, July 17. VisTaTech Center, Schoolcraft College, 18600 Haggerty Livonia. 3-5 p.m. Sunday, April 3. $15. (248) 474-2720. Ellis Paul - Singer-songwriter's folk-pop style helped ignite the folk revival of the 1990s; he appears with Minnesota songwriter-guitarist Justin Roth. The Ark, Ann Arbor. 7:30 p.m. Sunday, April 3. $13.50. (734) 761-1800 or wwwtheark.org . The Return of the Backstreet Boys - Re-introduc- tion to fans before the release of their first new album in five years. State Theatre, Detroit 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, April 5. $45, $39. (313) 961-5451 or www.statetheatredetroitcom. Run for Your Wife - Stagecrafters presents British farce by Ray Cooney about a London cabbie with two lives and two wives. Baldwin Theatre, 415 S. Lafayette, Royal Oak. 8 p.m. Thursdays-Saturdays, 2 p.m. Sundays, April 1-17. $14, $16. (248) 541-6430. Oakland Community College Dinner Theater - Culinary Studies Institute presents a strolling dinner with international cuisines, beer and wine, and Smith Theatre presents the comedy The Nerd. Oakland Community College, Farmington Hills. 6 p.m. Thursday, April 7. (248) 522-3700 or oaklandcc.edu/culinary/. Bus Stop - William Inge's tale of a busload of weary travelers who take shelter in a roadside diner. The Purple Rose Theatre, 137 Park St., Chelsea. $17.50- $32.50. 8 p.m. Wednesdays-Saturday, 3 p.m. Saturday matinees, April 7-June 4. (734) 433-773 or www.purplerosetheatre.org . DANCE FEVER Rimasto Orfano - Italian chorographer Emio Greco and Dutch theater director Pieter C. Scholtenin have worked together in this 2002 creation set against a soundtrack of violins and distant sirens. Power Center, Ann Arbor. 8 p.m. Friday-Saturday, April 1-2. $16- $36. (734) 764-2538 or www.ums.org . THE ART SCENE Ann Arbor Spring Art Fair - Washtenaw Farm Council Grounds, 5055 Ann Arbor-Saline Rd., Ann Arbor. Saturday-Sunday, April 2-3. (734) 995-7281. HATNOT A Conversation With Author David Grossman - Sponsored by University of Michigan Center for Middle Eastern & North Africa Studies and the Frankel Center for Judaic Studies, the Changing Face of Israeli Society lecture series hosts Grossman on the Israeli reality and his view on the daily chaos that plagues the West Bank. Rackham Amphitheatre, 915 E. Washington, Ann Arbor. 8-10 p.m. Monday, April 4. (734) 764-0350. Self-Publishing Workshop - A fund-raiser for Cranbrook Writers' Guild advises authors and poets how to print and circulate their works. Birmingham- Bloomfield Art Center, 1616 S. Cranbrook Rd., Birmingham. 9 a.m.-noon Saturday, April 9. $50. Rick Bailey (313) 845-6498. FAMILY FUN Robin Hood: Thief of Hearts - Cleveland Signstage Theatre presents a special version of this classic story in American Sign Language and English, performed simultaneously by deaf and hearing actors. Millennium Centre, 15600 J.L. Hudson Dr., Southfield. 11 a.m., 2 p.m. Saturday, April 2. $8. (248) 557-7529 or www.youtheatre.org. - Compiled by Bobbi Charnas rated on their first film project, The Ballad of Jack and Rose. Rebecca Miller wrote and directed this strong story about an aging hippie (Day-Lewis) who lives with his teenage daughter on an isolated island, the last resi- dents of a failed commune. The film opened in limited release on March 25, with the critics split - a rave in Newsweek to less kind notices from some others. Day-Lewis (whose mother is Jewish) and Miller (her mother was Arthur Miller's non-Jewish third wife, the late Inge Morath) met in 1996 during the filming of The Crucible, based on her father's play, in which Day- Lewis starred. They married soon after and now have two children. The success of Miller's film Personal Velocity (2001), led to the green-lighting of Jack and Rose. Day-Lewis is very picky about roles, and this is his first film in three years. He even kept his wife waiting several months until he agreed to star in her film. Jack and Rose is scheduled to open April 1 at the The Jewish subtext is not sur- prising when one learns that Holmes' father was a classical Jewish musician. Swing began as a musical If You Like Pifia Colada two decades ago, but Holmes gave up writing and perform- RUPERT HOLMES is most asso- ing music following the death ciated with his mid-1980s novelty of his young daughter in hit song "Escape-The Pina Colada 1986. However, the musical Song." Daniel Day-Lewis and Rebecca Miller origin of the novel found its But he's also the composer of the way into the book in the form Tony award-winning musical The of original song lyrics that serve as mystery clues. Mystery of Edwin Drood. He wrote the hit stage show Holmes told the New York Times that the writing of Goodnight Gracie, about GEORGE BURNS and Swing somehow broke the spell of his self-imposed Gracie Allen, as well. exile from music, and he is now singing as part of his Holmes' just published mystery novel, Swing, com- book tour. ❑ bines his musical and writing talents. This critically acclaimed tale tells the story of a French Jewish dancer Nate Bloom is the Califirnia-based editor of who is murdered just before she is about to be deport- www.jewhoo.com. ed from America to Nazi-occupied France in 1940. Maple Art Theatre in Bloomfield Township. Check your local movie listings. 3/31 2005 37