Arts & Entertainment Abo u t Taste Of Summer After 24 albums, it's not always easy to develop new material, says Jay Beckenstein, the Jewish leader-saxophon- ist-producer of this year's Wrapped In a Dream, a coolly textured jazz-fusion col- lection by jazz pio- neers Spyro Gyra. "We usually try to veer away from what we did on our previous record. But we also try to embrace anything that explores new ground — in any Spyro Gyra way we can." Selections from Wrapped in a Dream, the last album to be recorded at Beckenstein's own BearTracks Studio in upstate New York — he recently sold the state-of-the-art studio he converted in 1981 from a turn-of-the- O century farmhouse — will be performed 5:30 p.m. Sunday, July 2, in a concert that is part of the 18th annual Comerica Michigan Tastefest. The street festival, featuring food, free music, specialty shopping and all-ages family fun, runs 11:30 a.m.-10:30 p.m. Friday- Monday and 11:30 a.m.-8 p.m. Tuesday, June 30-July 4, outdoors along West Grand Boulevard between Woodward Avenue and the Lodge Freeway in Detroit. Nearly 60 national and local music acts will appear on four stages. In addition to Spyro Gyra, headliners on the Motorcity Casino Main Stage include 2006 Grammy winner Common, 1960s pop star Eric Burdon and the Animals, former leader of the Kinks Ray Davies, Southern garage rockers Kings of Leon, Vancouver indie rockers the New Pornographers, punk-pop band the All-American Rejects and alter- native singer-songwriter Cat Power & the Memphis Rhythm Band. Tastefest tickets used to purchase food and beverages from more than three- dozen food establishments run $10 for six tickets (taste-sized portions are priced from two-five tickets, sampler-sized por- tions from six-10 tickets and meals from 11-13 tickets). For more information and a complete schedule of events, call (313) 872-0188 or go to www.comericatastefest.com . Patriotic Celebration The Detroit Symphony Orchestra's "Salute to America" concerts at Greenfield Village, now in their 14th year, celebrate Independence Day with a spectacular fire- works display and the music of America — rousing marches, works by American composers and the "Armed Forces Salute" — surrounded by one of the United States' greatest history attractions. They take place Friday-Monday, June 30-July 3. Each performance will conclude with the largest fireworks display in the event's history, and Tchaikovsky's 1812 Overture finale will feature four authentic Hotchkiss cannons from 1876. Greenfield Village entrance gates open at 6 p.m. The Greenfield Village and Trio and Quartet accompanied by Rob Bourassa will perform a half-hour prelude concert at 7:30 p.m., followed by the DSO concert led by Conductor Thomas Wilkins at 8:30 p.m. Before the DSO concert, audience mem- bers can partake in a variety of "yester- year" activities, participate in a pie-eating 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 gzimmerman@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. _ews personal errands for her and otherwise treats Sachs in a demean- Fashion Wars - ing way. We learn that Lauren Weisberger's best-selling Sachs is determined to 2003 novel, The Devil Wears Prada, stick out a year with has been turned into a movie of the Priestly – because then Lauren same name. It opens Friday, June 30, she will be able to snare Weisberger in area theaters. a great job with a top Prada is loosely based on literary journal. Weisberger's life. The 29-year-old We also learn that the haughty author, a practicing Jew, grew up Priestly, who is played by Meryl Streep, in a Conservative Jewish home and was born Miriam Princhek – to a large, attended Cornell University. Right after poor, English, Orthodox Jewish family graduation, she became an assistant – and, to quote Weisberger, trans- to Anna Wintour, the editor of Vogue formed herself from a "Jewish peasant and a fashion powerhouse. to secular socialite." In the novel and the film, the Weisberger denies that Priestly is heroine, Andrea Sachs, is a small- directly modeled after Wintour, who town Jewish girl and an Ivy League is not Jewish and is not considered a grad. She lands a job as an assistant monster by most fashion observers. to Miranda Priestly, a top fashion edi- In another departure from real life, Sachs is played by Anne Hathaway, a tor. Priestly makes Sachs run trivial Nate Bloom Special to the Jewish News 40 June 29 2006 beautiful Catholic actress who looks "very Jewish." Weisberger, herself, looks like a pretty blonde WASP. Prada is directed by David Frankel, who is best known for his first film, Miami Rhapsody (1995). It starred Sarah Jessica Parker as a young Jewish woman whose parents are both having affairs. This Woody Allen-like comedy got mixed reviews, and Frankel has mostly directed quality TV productions since. (David's father, Max Frankel, was a top New York Times editor-col- umnist until his retirement.) Most Powerful Forbes magazine recently came out with its list of the "Celebrity 100" – the entertainment personalities who are the biggest machers in terms of earn- ings and "sizzle." The Jews on the list, followed by their rankings, are: Steven Spielberg (6); Howard Stern (7); Jerry Seinfeld (23); producer and former Detroiter Jerry Bruckheimer (42); Neil Diamond (47); Adam Sandler (57); Scarlett Johansson (61); Matthew Broderick, as a duo entry with Nathan Lane, (92); Mel Brooks (93); and director Mike Nichols, as a duo entry with Monty Python vet- eran Eric Idle (99). A few notes: Stern earned $300 million last year as his sal- ary/bonus for switch- Howard Stern ing to satellite radio; Jerry Seinfeld still pulls in $100 million a year from his Seinfeld show rights; Diamond's lat- est CD was a best-seller, and his most recent live tour outdrew younger acts