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Benn Perry rePri"lc 41 =n Arkin r
" If Until Dark
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Suzanne Chessler
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Voices Raised In Song
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The Cantata Academy Chorale
presents Jewish choral concer
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OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK FOR LUNCH AND DINNER
Open 7 Days
for Lunch
& Dinner
enn Perry, who has won roles
in independent films and
community theater, never
played a villain until he went after the
part of Harry Roat in Wait Until Dark.
Produced by the Village Players, the
thriller runs May 11-20 at the Village
Players Playhouse in Birmingham.
It follows the action of Suzy
Hendrix, an innocent blind woman
who is victimized in her Greenwich
Village apartment by sinister con
man Roat and two accomplices in
pursuit of a doll whose insides have
been stuffed with packets of heroin.
Suzy's unsuspecting husband has
transported the doll over the Canadian
border for a strange woman who has
subsequently been murdered.
The 1966 play, written by Frederick
Knott, featured Lee Remick as Susie
and Robert Duvall as Roat. The popu-
lar 1967 screen version starred Audrey
Hepburn and Jewish actor Alan Arkin
in the lead roles.
"This is my fifth show with the
Village Players:' says Perry, who has
appeared in The Scarlet Pimpernel,
Working, The Last of the Aztecs and
1776. "Since I learned we were staging
the drama last year, I've really wanted
to have this role. Roat is a really meaty
character and presents me with the
opportunity to be an absolute baddie."
Perry, a Commerce Township
resident, is a member of the theater's
board of directors and finds the group
warm and closely knit. He decided to
audition for the company after mov-
ing back to Michigan from Florida in
2005.
"I got into theater and film after
winning a singing contest in Florida,"
Perry explains. The people running
the contest encouraged me, and I have
enjoyed participating in many produc-
tions with different groups!'
FEATURING AUTHENTIC
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ewish choral music, sung in
English and Hebrew, is the
focus of an upcoming con-
cert at Temple Beth El.
The 40-member Cantata Academy
Chorale, with guest appearances by
Cantor Rachel Gottlieb and members
of the Detroit Chamber Winds and
Strings, will perform the program.
The Jewish Choral Music Concert,
with traditional and newer works,
begins at 8 p.m. Saturday, May 19. For
the pieces performed in Hebrew, there
will be translations in the program.
"I feel that in the world of choral
music, Jewish selections are often
neglected:' says Michael Mitchell,
music director and conductor of the
Cantata Academy. "That's why we
decided to do this concert!'
The program includes Leonard
Bernstein's Chichester Psalms, Eric
Whitacre's Five Hebrew Love Songs and
Robert Convery's Songs of the Children.
"The Chichester Psalms were written
in the 1960s, and the work is a master-
piece says Mitchell, who explains that
the group learns the Hebrew pronun-
ciations with the help of Jewish mem-
bers. "Rachel Gottlieb, who is affiliated
with Temple Beth El, will have a solo
part in this segment of the program!'
The psalms to be presented (Nos.
2, 23, 100, 108, 131 and 133) corn-
municate messages of joy and peace.
Bernstein was commissioned to
compose the piece by the Cathedral
of Chichester in England, where there
have been regular music festivals.