Arts & Entertainment About David Broza at Masada Blazing Broza He is popularly known as the "Bruce Springsteen of Israel." Over a 30-year career, singing in English, Hebrew and Spanish, guitarist-singer-composer David Broza has mixed Hebrew folk tunes, Spanish flamenco and American rock into melodies filling 23 albums, 16 of them gold, platinum and multi-platinum releases. For a 90-minute PBS special, titled David Broza at Masada: The Sunrise Concert, Broza performed his great- est hits at sunrise atop the ancient Masada fortress in southern Israel, overlooking the Jordan Valley and the Dead Sea. Joining him are American performers Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Jackson Browne and Grammy winner Shawn Colvin; Palestinean artist Ebrahim Eid; and the Neve Shalom/ Wahat al-Salam Israeli- Palestinean School Choir. The concert, co-produced by the Angel Group of London and WTTW National Productions of Chicago, was partially underwritten by Commerce-Township- based HoMedics Inc., Hannan and Lisa Lis of Farmington Hills and Jewish Renaissance Media Chairman Michael Steinhardt. David Broza at Masada: The Sunshine Concert airs 10 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 12, on WTVS-Channel 56. Festival Of Lights The University Musical Society presents a con- cert bringing together iconic acoustic finger- style guitarist Leo Kottke and the Turtle Island String Quartet, an ensemble that fuses the classical quar- tet aesthetic with contemporary American musical styles, 4 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 9, at Rackham Auditorium, 915 E. Washington St., in Ann Arbor. The program of world holiday music, titled "A Solstice Celebration: The Festival of Lights:' showcases music associated with what is referred to in both Jewish and Hindu cultures as "The Festival of Lights." The collaboration between Kottke and the Turtle Island String Quartet honors the musicians' ancestral roots with songs of Chanukah, the music of India's Diwali, old English carols and Scottish reels — traditional music of winter holiday celebrations presented with a hip, mod- ern twist. Drawing on folk, rock, jazz and blue- grass while honing his finger-picking mastery, Kottke, 62, gained an interna- tional cult following thanks to his perfor- mances at folk festivals around the world. His ability to embrace folk idioms and pop melodies as readily as he assimilates jazz and classical influences makes him unique among guitar virtuosi. The Turtle Island Quartet, since its inception in 1985, has created bold, new trends in chamber music for strings through forays into folk, bluegrass, swing, be-bop, funk, R&B, rock and hip-hop, as well as the music of Latin America and India. The quartet's formation was the result of violinist David Balakrishnan's brain- storming explorations and composi- tional vision while writing his master's thesis. Other members of the quartet include Matt Glaser on violin, Mads Tolling on viola and Mark Summer on cello. Tickets to "A Solstice Celebration: The Festival of Lights" are $22-$46. (734) 764- 2538 or www.ums.org . II 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. w s 11114 I Nate Bloom Special to the Jewish News 41 k w Almost A Minyan Margot at the Wedding, a film directed and written by Noah Baumbach, will open in Detroit on Friday, Dec. 7. Margot is a com- plicated tale about a family of East Coast literati divided by conflicts between family members. Noah They come together Baumbach for the wedding and Jennifer of family member Jason Leigh Pauline (Jennifer Jason Leigh) to Malcolm (Jack Black). Nicole Kidman plays the lead charac- ter, Margo, who is Pauline's sister. Baumbach, 38, became well known as the director-writer of 2005's The Squid and the Whale, which earned him an Oscar nomination for Best Original Screenplay. He is the son of a Jewish father (novelist-critic Jonathan Baumbach) and a non- Jewish mother (Village Voice critic Georgia Brown). While he was not raised in any faith, Baumbach told a couple of Jewish papers back in 2005 C8 December 6 • 2007 JN that he identified as Jewish – espe- cially "the people of the book" aspect of being Jewish. In 2005, Baumbach married Jennifer Jason Leigh, 45. The Jewish actress is joined in the cast by other Jewish thespians: Halley Feiffer, 22, the daughter of famous Jewish cartoonist Jules Feiffer and his wife, Jewish writer Jenny Allen (Halley also acted in The Squid and the Whale); Matthew Arkin, 47, the son of Oscar- winner Alan Arkin and the brother of actor Adam Arkin; and Flora Cross, 14, who made her film debut as a young Jewish girl in 2005's Bee Season, based on the novel by Myla Goldberg. Local Connections October Road was an ABC replace- ment series that premiered last spring to surprisingly good ratings and has recently been brought back for a second season. New episodes air Mondays at 10 p.m., and you can catch up with the series via recaps and whole episodes on the ABC Web site, www.abc.com . The program's handsome Jewish lead is Bryan Greenberg, 29, a St. Louis-raised actor whose mom, Denny, is a 1969 graduate of Oak Park High School. It looks like beauti- ful actress Elizabeth Berkley, 35, has finally put 1995's Showgirls behind her. Bryan For the last decade, Greenberg the Farmington Hills native has appeared in quality TV guest shots and in good indie films, and she just landed a plum recurring role on the hit CBS series Talmudic Touring The L.A. Jewish Federation invited a number of Hollywood producers and directors to tour Israel; the group stopped at the Pardes Institute of Jewish Studies in Jerusalem for a bit of Talmud study late last month. Participants included Oscar-win- ning direc- tor Davis CSI: Miami. Berkley will play the ex-wife of CSI: Miami star David Caruso and the mother of the son he didn't know he had until last season. It looks like her first episode will air 10 p.m. Monday, Dec.10, Elizabeth but schedules are in Berkley and flux because of the Greg Lauren writers' strike. Meanwhile, Berkley's personal life has gone well. In 2003, she married the very handsome actor-painter Greg Lauren, a nephew of designer Ralph Lauren, in a lavish Jewish wedding in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico. Al Gore and Davis Guggenheim Guggenheim (Al Gore's An Inconvenient Truth), direc- tor Brad Silberling (Lemony Snicket) and Amy Pascal, co-chairman of Sony Pictures. Each was paired with a Pardes stu- dent for the seminar. Pardes' direc- tor, Rabbi Daniel Landes, who led the learning, said, "The Hollywood group was attuned to both the dramatic and comedic elements of rabbinic stories. It was gratifying to see the dynamic interaction of the seasoned Pardes students with the creative energy brought by the new group. They had a ball." I I