suspend their disbelief. "When it came down to the logisti- cal problem of the Friday [night] rabbi, we decided it was just more important to have the character than to stick to what's real." Asked if there are any Jewish authors or literary works on his wish list of future film projects, Terrio strains to remember titles. "The Jewish writers whom I most admire tend to be a little bit less com- placent in the way that they think about the world," he says. "They're more questioning of things. Whether it's Tony Kushner or Philip Roth or whoever, there's a sense that things aren't taken as givens." A suggestion that a remake of Portnoy's Complaint might be a good idea gains Terrio's assent. "Possibly, yeah," he responds. " Portnoy's Complaint is actually the one that I always think I could do some- thing with." ❑ For your next function, make it Heights, rated R, is scheduled to open Friday, July 8, at the Landmark Main Art Theatre in Royal Oak. (248) 263-2111. Anchamo. Choose Andiamo Osteria to your next event and add New York City Hitting The 'Heights' Jewish Jewish play • A Touch of New York at Andiamo, Royal Oak Amy Fox pens first screenplay, for a Merchant/Ivory film. than if she had grown up in Special to the Jewish News New York. Her father, rom a one-act play Off-Off who is retired Broadway to a gorgeous from IBM, is an Merchant-Ivory film starring ex-New Yorker some of the best actors in America — ("Everybody told quite a trajectory for first-time screen- me my father writer Amy Fox. sounded like is set among the chic resi- Heights Woody Allen dences and assorted watering holes of George Segal, left, as Rabbi when I was Manhattan's yuppie sophisticates and Mendel counsels Isabel growing up"), their elders. At the film's center is (Elizabeth Banks) about her and her mother, Isabel (Banks), a beautiful young pho- upcoming intrfitith Mar-- also a New York tographer; also with prominent roles riage in "Heights. • native, is a are her mother, a famous actress-direc- national board tor-drama teacher (Close), and Jonathan's "Jewishness" nor the rabbi member of Jonathan, a handsome young Jewish character is in the original play. Hadassah. lawyer who is engaged to Isabel However, Fox said, she added those Fox, who became a bat mitzvah, (Marsden). elements to clue the audience into the went east to Amherst College, where All of the characters, with one fact that Isabel and Jonathan have dif- she studied English and playwriting. notable exception, are not quite what ferences, the extent of which becomes She says she was always drawn to New they seem, and they carry secrets that clear in the last third of the film. She York and plunged into the New York are revealed as the film progresses. The added that her writing mentor was so literary world after graduation even exception is Rabbi Mendel, played by impressed by the, rabbi character he George Segal, to whom the non-Jewish though she hardly knew anyone in suggested she write a film about him. town. Isabel and her Jewish fiancee go for The casting of Elizabeth Banks as She worked in publishing but wrote premarital counseling. bride" is ironic in that the shiksa "the non-stop. As of 2005, she had written Mendel is what he seems — a actress converted to Judaism before five full-length plays that have been mentsh and a wise counselor armed marrying her University of produced by prestigious companies in with a dry wit. The rabbi asks the Pennsylvania college sweetheart Max New York, London and other cities. interfaith couple to draw cards with Heights began as one of three one-act Handelman in 2003; their Jewish wed- questions he has written on them. ding — with a chuppah sewn by the plays mounted by the respected One of the cards Jonathan picks says: bride's mother — was featured in Ensemble Theater Company of New "How would you feel if you came magazine. InStyle York in 2001. A good review in the home to Christmas lights? To a As for future projects, Fox said she is caught the eye of leg- New York Times Christmas tree?" working on a screenplay about the ten- , endary producer Ismail Merchant ants of Stuyvesant Town, a New York (who passed away in May), and he apartment project that was built after commissioned Fox to write a screen- Out Of The West World War II for returning veterans. play based on the play. Fox, 29, is a nice Jewish writer from Her father grew up there. Fox said she had never written a Boulder, Colo., although she now lives The screenplay concerns the efforts screenplay, but with Merchant's sage in Brooklyn. of some leftist tenants, mostly Jewish, guidance, she opened up her play, Growing up in a mostly non-Jewish to end the then-common public added characters and gave them a town like Boulder probably made her housing policy of excluding blacks. "back story" For example, neither more aware of her Jewishness, she said, NATE BLOOM F ❑ With our impeccable service and unparalleled Italian cuisine, you're guar- anteed a \\inner. Call us today. Well make sure every detail is just right for the perfect celebration. Exquisite menus start at just $15.95 per person. L2OSTERIA For reservations please call: 248-582-9300 129 S. Main Street, Royal Oak www.andiamoitalia.com 994930 7/ 7 2005 33