I Arts & Entertainment BEST BETS al• Gail Zimmerman Arts Editor Israeli Rock Established in 1993 and out with a new CD, V'sham Nashir (There We Will Sing), Israeli rock band Reva L'Sheva's style corn- bines the influence of the late musical and spiritual leader Rabbi Shlomo Carlebach, traditional music and the Grateful Dead; its mission is to "unite the Jewish people and bring them closer to their Jewish souls." Reva L'Sheva ("Quarter to Seven" in English) is composed of native Israelis and American, East Indian and Argentinean immi- grants — observant and secular Jews. The band's members include Yehudah Katz, Members of Reva L'Sheva vocals, gui- tar and mandolin; Eliezer Blumen, vocals, guitar and harmonica; Chanan Elias, key- board and vocals; Brian Levine, bass; Danny Roth, drums; and Nitsan Chen Razel, violin. Congregation Shir Tikvah of Troy, Congregation Beth Shalom of Oak Park and the Detroit Jewish News present Reva L'Sheva in concert 8 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 10, at Congregation Beth Shalom. General admission tickets are $18; $8 for students under 22 with ID and senior adults. Donors of $50 and up will receive a ticket to the concert and reserved seating. • The group's visit to Detroit is to promote a prograM called Israel: Visions of Peace, which encourages songwriting, ensemble performance, creative writing, photogra- phy and painting, all around the theme of Israel. While in the Detroit area, the band will meet with rabbis, students at Detroit area Jewish schools and with Jewish col- lege students. Co-sponsors of the band's Detroit visit are Federation's Alliance for Jewish Education and Aish HaTorah. Tickets may be purchased in advance by mail or at the door the evening of the con- cert. For more information, call Congregation Shir Tikvah, (248) 649-4418, Ext. 11. Whispers among them — he also has been a stage actor for more than 50 years and recently starred in Bergman productions of plays by Strindberg and Schiller at the Royal Dramatic Theatre in Stockholm, where he served as director from 1966-1975. In the Bergman films of the 1970s, the Jewish actor,.according to French director The Detroit Film Theatre at the Detroit Francois Truffaut, "engendered the neurotic, Institute of Arts presents Ingmar Bergman's post-war 20th-century Saraband (2004) 7 and 9:30 man: aloof, introspective p.m. Friday and Saturday and and self-centered." 5 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 2-4. Josephson also has Filmed in high-definition appeared in English pro- video by one of the cinema's ductions by Peter Brooks, great masters, Saraband films by Soviet filmmak- revisits, 30 years after er Andrei Tarkowsky and Bergman's film classic Scenes in many Italian films. In From a Marriage, the charac- addition, he is the author ters Marianne (Liv Ullmann) of eight novels and sever- and Johan (Erland Josephson) Erland Josep hson al books of memoirs. as they meet for the first time His fourth novel, A in decades. Story About Mr. While Erland Josephson, 82, is best Silberstein, was translated into English in known as an actor in Bergman films — 2001 by Roger Greenwald and is an unset- Fanny and Alexander and Cries and Bergman Favorite , FYI: For Arts and Life related events that you wish to have considered for Out & About, please send the item, with a detailed description of the event, times, dates, place, ticket prices and publishable Phone number, to: Gail Zimmerman, JN Out & About, The Jewish News, 29200 Northwestern Highway, Suite 110, Southfield,' MI 48034; fax us at (248} 304-8885; or e-mail to gzimmerrnan@thejewishnews.com Notice must be received at least three weeks before the scheduled event. Photos are appreciated but cannot be returned. All events and dates listed in the Out & About column are subject to change. Jews Nate Bloom Special to the Jewish News II I '. `Songwriting Duo On Nov. 20, an envelope John Lennon used to write down some of the lyrics of 41) his 1969 anthem "Give Peace a Chance" n, was pulled off the auction block and sold Ma to a private buyer for around $400,000. (Some speculate his widow, Yoko Ono, may have bought it.) The lyrics on this previously unknown envelope didn't include the title of the song, but written on the envelope was the name and telephone number of Toronto Reform rabbi Abraham Feinberg (1899-1986), a well-known advocate of liberal social causes, includ- ing racial equality. London's Sunday Times cited the enve- lope and other evidence to strongly assert what some sources have said go 66 before — that Feinberg must be given credit for giving the song its title. In 1969, Lennon called Feinberg, who came over to Lennon's Toronto hotel. The two hit it off. By chance, the rabbi said, "John, we really have to give peace a chance." Voila! Lennon had his famous title, which did double duty as most of the song's chorus. puppet she calls "her sister." Just as Mallory often traveled with her mother, Mallory's 6- year-old son now often travels with her. On Nov. 20, Mallory Lewis and Lamb Chap appeared in Las Vegas to kick-off the Nevada Jewish Book Festival. Mallory Lewis with Lamb Chop Lewis told a Las Vegas newspaper that, among other projects, she is working on Larnbchop Lives a combination live action and animation Baby-boomers and some Gen-Xer's (as TV series starring -- of course — Lamb well as their parents) will remember Chop. puppeteer Shari Lewis and her memo- rable hand puppet Lamb Chop. Shari Lewis died in 1996. About a year later, her daughter, Mallory Lewis, decided not to let the joy of seeing Lamb Chop end. She tours the world with the Reed In The Surf You may remember Nikki Reed, 17, as the pretty co-star and co-writer of the acclaimed 2003 film Thirteen. In the flick, she and budding actress Evan Rachel Wood, now 18, played troubled teenagers. Now, Reed will play a surfer-type girl on The 0.C., the hit Fox TV show. Reed's character will be the focus of a four- episode arc of shows airing next year. In recent inter- views, Reed said she was "mostly raised" in her father's Jewish faith. She describes her mother as Italian Nikki Reed and Cherokee. As for Wood, only her mother (a theater teacher) is Jewish, although the actress is sometimes simply describedas "Jewish" (including by Nikki Reed on the Thirteen DVD commentary). . December 1 2005