Arts & Entertainment Kobrin's Keys "I absolutely hate piano competitions:' 27- year-old Moscow-born pianist Alexander Kobrin said earlier this year. "Not only do they create a huge stress for pianists, but they are totally subjective, because what it takes to win is completely up to the whim of the judges. But competitions are a nec- essary evil, since without them pianists would never get careers. Of course, once you win, the real challenge is to prove your victory wasn't a fluke." This observation from the winner of 2005's 12th Van Cliburn International Piano Competition may have been colored by the fact that while he was competing for the prestigious prize in Fort Worth, Texas, his wife was in Israel, awaiting the birth of their first child. And Kobrin's certainly no fluke. He also is the win- ner of the 1999 Busoni Competition, the 2000 Chopin Competition and the 2003 Hamamatsu Competition. As the Gold Medal winner of the Van Cliburn competition, he received three years of inter- Alexander national concert engagements coor- dinated by the Van Cliburn Foundation in the United States, as well as a CD recording of his award-winning per- formances of Brahms and Rachmaninoff for the Harmonia Mundi USA label. Kobrin has toured extensively in Europe, Asia and South America to criti- cal acclaim. When he is not performing, he teaches at the Moscow State Gnessin Academy of Music (he resides in Moscow part time), where he completed his own piano studies. Kobrin will open the Cranbrook Music Guild's 57th season 8 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 16, at Christ Church Cranbrook, 470 Church Road, in Bloomfield Hills. His program includes Haydn's Sonata in C minor, Beethoven's Sonata No. 4 in E- flat major and a series of works by Chopin. An afterglow with refresh- ments and a chance to meet the Kobrin artist follows. Single tickets are $30; sub- scriptions are available for $100. To reserve tickets, call (248) 644- 6352 or go to www. cranbro okmusicguild. org. In The Key Of Life "I have always believed photography teaches us not just to look, but really see writes Metro Detroit award-winning photo- journalist Linda Solomon in new book, The Key: Celebrated People Unlock Their Secrets to Life (Stewart, Tabori and Chang; $17.95). A collector of vintage keys, Solomon, author of the New York Times bestselling book People We Know, Horses They Love, decided to make photographs of these intriguing objects. As she was doing so, she fell upon a revelation: The keys we truly treasure are those that wisely address life's difficulties and bring us peace of mind. So Solomon decided to couple her black- and-white photographs of beautiful old vintage keys with words of inspiration from 56 celebrities who provide wisdom about everything from the "Key To Equality" (Gloria Steinem: "Empathy, the most revo- lutionary of all emotions") and the "Key To Living Each celebrity's Life to the Fullest" insight is accompa- (Dr. Andrew Weil: nied by a key that "Achieving and symbolizes the inter- maintaining opti- viewee. mum health") to the "Key to a Signature Style" (Diane von Furstenberg: "Come to terms with who you are and enjoy it!") and the "Key to Changing Your Life" (Canyon Ranch Founder Enid Zuckerman: "Finding fulfill- ment in service to others and making a dif- ference in people's lives"). Many Michigan celebrities, like Aretha Franklin (the "Key to Respect": 'Acknowledging that the world does not revolve around you alone"), are included. Part of the proceeds of the book will benefit breast cancer research. Solomon will discuss and sign copies of her book 7 p.m. Friday, Oct. 19, at Borders Birmingham, 34300 Woodward Ave., in Birmingham. (248) 203.0005. I1 FYI: For Arts 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. ws Nate Bloom Special to the Jewish News vel tu ca 54 Dylan And Elvis Legendary singer-songwriter Bob Dylan, 66, showed up for Yom Kippur services this year at Congregation Beth Tefillah-Chabad of Georgia, a Chabad-affiliated Orthodox congrega- tion in an Atlanta, suburb. Dylan was in the Atlanta area to play a concert the evening following the conclu- sion of Yom Kippur. Shmais.com, a news service about happen- ings in the Lubavitcher Bob Dylan (Chabad) commu- nity, reports that Dylan arrived at the service with two other men and took a seat at the back of the synagogue. Rather quickly, some of the 900 congregants recognized their famous guest. Dylan was honored with the sixth aliyah and afterward had a number of prayers said for members of his family. He stayed on for the ser- mon and for the Yizkor service. October 11 • 2007 Shmais says that when Dylan was called to the Torah, "the shul was silent, and lots of people changed seats to get a better look." It appears to be Dylan's practice to attend Yom Kippur services at a Chabad-affiliated synagogue. In the '90s, he was spotted at Chabad services in California and Minnesota. In 2005, he attended services at a Chabad synagogue in Oyster Bay, N.Y., where he also was granted the honor of the sixth aliyah. Dylan and his band travel to Michigan for a concert at 7 p.m. Friday, Oct.12, at Eastern Michigan University Convocation Center in Ypsilanti. Also performing — solo, for the first time in 12 years — will be singer-songwriter Elvis Costello. Tickets are $29.50- $69.50. (248) 645-6666. 50 Years This September marked the 50th anni- versary of the premiere of Leave it to Beaver, the long-running TV sitcom. Leave it to Beaver touched a chord with baby boomers and has remained in reruns since the last new show aired in 1963. The only Jewish mem- ber of the regular cast was Frank Bank, now 65, who played Wally's homely friend, Clarence "Lumpy" Rutherford. Lumpy was kind of a dolt, but in real life Bank is a very successful bonds broker. In 2003, Bank wrote an autobiography in which he described his great success with the ladies. This proves, I guess, that fame — even as "Lumpy" — is a surefire aphrodisiac. Film Notes Director-screenwriter James Gray, 38, tries again for a hit with his third film, We Own the Night, co-starring Joaquin Phoenix, whose mother is Jewish. Phoenix plays Bobby Green, the coked-out manager of a Russian- owned nightclub in 1980s Brooklyn who tries to keep his distance from the Russian gangsters who frequent the place. Bobby's brother, Joseph Grusinsky (Mark Wahlberg), is an up- and-coming NYPD cop, and his father, Burt Grusinsky (Robert Duvall), the deputy chief of police. Joseph asks Bobby (who has changed his last name) to inform on Russian Mafia drug dealers who fre- quent the club. Things go wrong, and Bobby becomes enmeshed in a violent struggle between his family and the mob. The film opens on Friday, Oct.12. In 2000, a Jewish literary critic who met Gray described him as "very Jewish-cerebral, funny, brilliant, self- deprecating." Gray also wrote and directed his first two films: Little Odessa (1994), about a young Russian- Jewish immigrant who is a contract killer and his Brooklyn-based family; and The Yards (2000), a gritty tale about New York corrup- , tion, with some Joaquin Phoenix Jewish charac- and James Gray ters. Both films earned good notices but did not set the box office on fire. I