Entnitabunent Zimmerman and Bill Prady on the"Gilmore Girls" set From Southfield To HOLLYWOOD Old friends reunite on set of "Gilmore Girls." NORMAN PRADY Special to the Jewish News im . ow far is it from a basement playroom in suburban Detroit to Luke's Diner in Stars Hollow, Conn.? Just ask my son, Bill Prady, and his childhood friend Stan Zimmerman, both 44, who recently arrived there at the same time following separate circuitous journeys of 20-some years. They've renewed their friendship, now as writers on the WB's Gilmore Girls, the inventive television show whose fictional town of Stars Hollow, includ- ing the diner, exists on the streets, stages and back lot of Warner Bros. studios in Burbank, Calif. Bill and Stan last worked together in the early 1970s during their days at Southfield's Kennedy Elementary School. Along with another school friend, they were the writers, producers and per- formers in their Five-Star Marionette Theater. "Right," Bill said. "Three boys, five stars." "Stan wrote the plays we did," Bill said. "Fairly involved fairy tales. We had very complicated pup- pets that we made, and the stories all came from Stan's imagination. We'd talk over the outline and then we improvised. "We had a couple of birthday parties come to the basement for the entertainment." That basement was in our four-bedroom colonial on Pierce Street. "Stan lived on Harden Circle, the street east of us," Bill said. The boys' childhood friendship is forever docu- mented in the "Bill's Bar Mitzvah" photo album that shows Stan in the lineup of pals at the celebra- tion. From Kennedy school, down Pierce at Mt. Vernon, Bill and Stan went to Thompson Middle School. After a year there, Bill transferred to Bloomfield Hills Cranbrook and the boys lost daily contact with each other. But both Bill and Stan attended .Cranbrook's summer theater camp, where together they further fueled their creative interests. "Now we're doing puppet shows on a grander scale," Stan said, comparing his work at Five Star Theater to his current work in movies and televi- sion. "I had a vivid imagination but never thought of myself as a writer because I didn't read much as a child. But I had these crazy ideas. I'd drag Bill and others into these shows. "We never wrote anything down. Had the scripts in our heads. We'd record sound effects." Drawn To Show Biz After graduating from Cranbrook, Bill's adventures took him to New York, where a chance meeting with Muppets staff members was followed by an invitation from Jim Henson to work on some mate- rial for Kermit and Miss Piggy. Then, as a full-time Henson Associates writer, Bill worked on the Jim Henson Hour and, among other projects, wrote MuppetVision 3-D, the Muppets movie for Walt Disney World. His other writing credits include "Presidential Inaugural Celebration for Children," a project pro- posed by then President-elect Bill and Hillary FROM SOUTHFIELD on page 33 7/28 2005 29