Arts & Entertainment Home of Michigan Opera Theatre Aockhalit Side Order from page 45 ("hoir A Hand-Clapping, Soul-Stirring Holiday Rapture "One of the 12 best ways to salute the holiday season! The Detroit News The Rackham Symphony Choir and The Detroit Opera House Present TICKETS ON SALE NOW! Featuring Alfreda Burke, Victor Trent Cook and Rodrick Dixon Conducted by Suzanne Mallare Acton Arrangements by Gary Anderson and Robert Christianson This Production Sponsored By Detroit Opera House Ticket Services Office (313) 237-SING (7464) or Ticketmaster (248) 645-6666 Real TimeTicketing 24/7 at www.michiganopera.org Let us light up your on Broadway. Music- by Jewish composer Richard Rodgers and his daughter Mary Rodgers also creep into Side by Side to accompany Sondheim's lyrics. The cast also does a 15-minute medley of snippets - of songs from other Sondheim shows not covered individually by the performers. "Ifs really a sophisticated production — and our scenic designer, Christopher Carothers, has come up with a real work of art as a backdrop depicting most of Sondheim's shows," said Jurkiewicz, who once toured the country as a performer in Hair. Naz Edwards Music Man Regional performances of Side by Side culminate a year of musical tributes to ' Sondheim in honor of his 75th birthday. Born into a prosperous but nonreli- gious Jewish family on New York's Upper West Side, he didn't have a bar mitzvah and was pretty much neglected as a youngster; his biographers note. He was 10 when his father, Herbert, a business- man, abandoned the family; and his mother, Janet "Foxy" Sondheim, reported- ly became an emotionally abusive hypochondriac. The intense love-hate relationship with his mother re-emerged in his later works, where he treated love and commitment as claustrophobic and smothering, most notably in Company. Sondheim gave words and music to several strong, manip- ulative, somewhat unstable female charac- ters, such as Mama Rose in Gypsy, Mrs. Lovett in Sweeney Todd (now playing in a revival on Broadway) and the Witch in . Into the Woods, all of whom are obsessive about biding on to their child or lover. Around the time of his parents' divorce, Sondheim moved to Pennsylvania with his mother and befriended the son of well-known lyricist and playwright Oscar Hammerstein II, who became a surrogate father to him and designed for the young Sondheim his own course on the con- struction of a musical. Sondheim received a more formal education at Williams College in -Massachusetts. At the age of 25, Sondheim got his big break when he became part of the quartet of "Jewish geniuses" who created West Side Story, one of the most successful Broadway musicals of all time — although the show's popularity received a strong boost from the movie version. Sondheim wrote most of the lyrics — to music by composer Bernstein, book by Arthur Laurents and .choreography by Jerome Robbins. Like his collaborators on Story Sondheim is gay, although he did not acknowledge his homosexuality pub- licly until 2000. Sondheim went on to win many Tony . Since 1905 48 New York's Famous December 8 • 2005 jw f Available at your neighborhood store. Peter Kevoian Shannon Nicole Locke Brian Thibault Awards and honors, including a Pulitzer Prize for Sunday in the Park With George in 1985. - After the success of West Side Story, Bernstein, who had written only two lines of the lyrics, offered to reapportion the royal- ties from the songs to 2 percent each for himself and Sondheim, instead of 3 percent for Bernstein and one percent for Sondheim. "Like an idiot:' Sondheim once recalled, "I said, 'don't be silly. I don't care about the money. I just wanted to work with you."' Sondheim said he shudders when he thinks of the amount that single remark has cost him over the years. Fl JET's production of Side by Side by Sondheim opens 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Dec.13, at the Aaron DeRoy Theatre in the Jewish Community Center, 6600 W. Maple, West Bloomfield. After opening night, performances are 7:30 p.m. Wednesdays-Thursdays; 5 and 8:30 p.m. Saturdays; 2 p.m. Sundays (except Dec. 25), with -special 2 p.m. matinees Wednesdays, Dec. 28 and Jan. 4. Tickets: $27-$37, with discounts for seniors and students. Information and tickets: (248) 788-2900. ❑