uoi siv mi umDiiuh& With Fra n ' Jewish actors play Jewish mother and son in new sitcom. GERRI MILLER Special to the Jewish News R eturning to television this month as a woman with two children and a much younger boyfriend hits pretty close to home for Nanny alumna Fran Drescher. In fact, Living With Fran, a new WB sitcom pre- miering Friday, April 8, is a case of art imitating life. Drescher was in a four-year relationship with a man 16 years her junior and was developing a show based on the idea when, in typical Hollywood synergy, she was approached to star in a show with a similar premise. "It was originally a vehicle for the son who comes home to find his mom in the arms of a younger man, but now it spins around me," says Drescher, who as Fran Reeves — last name cour- tesy of a British ex-husband, played by Nanny co- star Charles Shaughnessy in a recurring role — is both playing out and reliving a 40-something's fan- tasy. "She's a woman who is essentially living her life backwards. Her kids are essentially grown, and it's time for her to discover who she is and to do many of the things she felt cheated out of during her youth, when she was raising children. "I got married when I was very young, divorced and needed to find out who I was," Drescher notes in comparison. "I'm also living my life backwards. I started dating when I was 40." Drescher, an executive producer of the show, mines her own experiences for ideas, such as her ex-boyfriend's desire to keep his own apartment. Her TV beau gives his flat up, "but in real life, [my boyfriend] kept the apartment, and now he's back in it," she says in her characteristic laugh. .Jewish Humor For Ben Feldman, 24, who plays Drescher's 21- year-old son, Josh, the show's premise rings equally true. Feldman's mother, long divorced from his dad, 4/7 2005 66 Ben Feldman as Josh Reeves, Fran Drescher as Fran Reeves, Ryan McPartlin as Riley Martin and Misti Traya as Allison Reeves in "Living With Fran" runs a bed and breakfast in the south of France with her 23 years-younger boyfriend. "So the reac- tions all come pretty naturally to me," says Feldman, who bonded immediately with his TV mom and shares her enthusiasm for portraying a Jewish character. "There are no real sitcom Jewish families right now," he points out, noting that Jewish humor is part of the show's fabric. "I can't think of one episode where we don't reference it." Drescher is happy to continue the tradition of Jewish humor she began on The Nanny, where as Fran Fine she "spoke Yiddish, went to temple, went to Israel and didn't apologize for it. I did not grow up religious and I was not bat mitzvah, but I grew up with a very strong sense of my heritage and a pride in Jewish history," she says. "I'm very proud of and very comfortable with my Judaism." Feldman, who grew up in Washington, D.C., and Potomac, Md., was raised in the Jewish reli- gion — though his mother is not Jewish — and currently has an Israeli girlfriend. No stranger to Jewish characters, he has a role in the yet-to-be-released independent film When Do We Eat?, "about a dysfunctional family at a Passover seder." The largely Jewish ensemble cast includes Jack Klugman, Lesley Ann Warren, Michael Lerner, Shiri Appleby and Mili Avital. Also featured in this summer's The Perfect Man with Hilary Duff and Heather Locklear, Feldman is a product of the Ithaca College drama department and the New York stage, where he understudied look-alike Jason Biggs in The Graduate on Broadway. His first Hollywood break was a WB pilot about a teenage mayor that never aired, but it put him on the network's radar and led to Living With Fran. Moving On Drescher has her own independent movie in the can, Santa's Slay. "It's a slasher film about a murdering Santa," says Drescher. "Bret Ratner, a friend of mine, produced