Arts & Entertainment BEST BETS Gail Zimmerman Arts Ed itor True Bluesman Much has been written about the corn- mon ground between the blues and Jewish culture. A musician since he was barely big enough to hold a guitar, Andy Cohen has known, studied and traveled with some of the legendary early blues musi- cians, including the late Rev. Gary Davis. Once called "the shmendrick of American blues:' Cohen, renowned for his under- standing and mastery of country blues, is considered a scholar of Davis' works and Piedmont/ragtime guitar style. A player of classic American music since the 1960s, Cohen as of late has been teaming up with pianist Andy Cohen Ragtime Jack Radcliffe to deliver concerts combining their ragtime and country blues reper- toires. They throw in some bad jokes and a penchant for silliness in their perform- ances together, too. Jews 40 NateBloom Special to the Jewish News ME Not A Friendly Time Good Night, and Good Luck, directed by actor George Clooney, opens Friday, Oct. 14, in Detroit. The movie, which has great advance reviews, covers the coura- geous decision of CBS newsman Edward Murrow, in 1954, to attack Sen. Joseph McCarthy and his practice of recklessly smearing people as Communists. Clooney, himself, plays Murrow's Jewish producer FRED W. FRIENDLY. Also Jewish in real life and showing up as film characters are CBS news producer DON HEWITT (who went on to create 60 Minutes) and the founder/owner of CBS, WILLIAM PALEY. Fred Friendly Out with a new album, Four Hands, No Waiting, the duo take the stage 8 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 19, at the Ark in Ann Arbor. Tickets are $12.50. (734) 761-1451 or www.theark.org . Public Historian A member of the executive committee of the Society of American Historians, documentary filmmaker David Grubin has won every major award in his field, including two Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University awards, three George Foster Peabody awards and nine Emmys. His subjects have ranged from science (The Secret Life of the Brain), poetry (The Language of Life) and psychology ( Young Dr. Freud) to art Degenerate Art), world history (Napoleon) and public affairs (Koff Annan: Center of the Storm). Grubin is perhaps best known for his series of David Grubin presidential biographies I'm curious to see if the film mentions Paley's Jewish background. There was an anti-Semitic undertone to the McCarthy era. Consequently, Jewish entertainment moguls rarely challenged the employ- ment blacklists, lest their own Jewish background become a public issue. Paley did back Murrow and that took real courage. However, he tolerated a blacklist that barred the employment by CBS of persons "somehow" once associated with the Communist Party. No doubt, Paley's decision to accept the blacklist was based on a fear of los- ing sponsors and a fear of anti- Semitism. Other Premieres Former Detroiter and Hillel Day School of Metropolitan Detroit student SELMA BLAIR stars in a remake of the horror film classic The Fog, opening Oct. 14. Debuting the same day is Domino, for American Experience on PBS (LBJ, FDR, Truman, TR: The Story of Theodore Roosevelt and Abraham and Mary Lincoln: A House Divided) and last year's RFK, for the same series. The four parts of his latest project, Destination America, will air 9-11 p.m. on two consecutive Wednesdays, Oct. 19 and 26, on Detroit Public Television-Channel 56. He is executive producer of the series that tells dramatic contemporary stories to illustrate current immigration issues while putting them into historical context with historic portraits of immigrants who came before. Part III of the series, airing 8-9 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 26, tells the story of D'vorah and Hirsch Spira, Chasidic Jews who never wanted to come here because they felt their religious traditions would be destroyed but were forced to flee Hitler's Europe. Check your local TV listings. Viva Vivace Birmingham Temple's Vivace Music starring Keira Knightley as DOMINO HAR- VEY. The real- life Harvey was a fashion model turned private Keira Knightly as detective. She Domino Harvey died earlier this year of a drug overdose, at age 35. The movie only covers the fashion model-to- detective part of her life. Domino Harvey was the daughter of LAURENCE HARVEY (1928-1973), a handsome Jewish actor whom older film fans will remember as the star of such classics as The Manchurian Candidate and Room at the Top. Sci-Fi/Sci-Fact Opening last week to pretty good reviews was Serenity, a science fiction movie directed by Josh Whedon, creator of Series begins its 2005-2006 season with an encore per- formance by the Bosivert-deMaine- Pashmakova Trio 7:30 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 16, at the Emmauelle Boisvert Birmingham Temple, 28611 W. 12 Mile Road, in Farmington Hills. The string trio is led by violinist Emmanuelle Boisvert, who became con- certmaster of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra in 1988; she is joined by DSO principal cellist Robert deMaine and Bulgarian-born pianist Angelina Pashmakova. The trio will perform Felix Mendelssohn's Trio in D Minor, Brahms' Trio in C Major and Ernest Bloch's Three Nocturnes. "Bloch's music is notable for its strong racial consciousness, and he avowed throughout most of his life that he was a Jewish composer:' writes conductor Charles Greenwell. "All of Bloch's works are Buffy: the Vampire Slayer. The flick has what is probably the first Jewish wedding in space — a scene featuring co-star DAVID KRUMHOLTZ and complete with glass stomping. Inventor/futurist RAY KURZWEIL's new nonfiction book (The Singularity Is Near) seems like s.cience fiction. It pre- dicts the fusion, in the near future, of humans and machines to create power- ful and potentially immortal life forms. Kurzweil says today's cutting-edge tech- nology — computers, software, gene- splicing techniques and nanotechnology — are poised for integration with human biological sys- tems to evolve a hybrid life form (wow!). Kurzweil, 57, is a tech-industry legend who invented the first device to scan text and render it into sound to enable the blind to Ray Kurzweil October 13 • 2005 IT