tainment is & F, Looking for something to do over the holi- days? Here are some special suggestions categorized by interest. For Theatergoers AIDS Partnership Michigan, an HIV-AIDS organization serving southeast Michigan, and Broadway Cares-Equity Fights AIDS, the nation's leading industry-based AIDS fundraising and grant-making organiza- tion, will be the recipients of the fundrais- ing benefit The Lion Sings Tonight! 7 p.m. Monday, Dec. 17, at the Gem Theatre, 333 Madison Ave., in Detroit. Doors open at 6 p.m. The cast of The Lion King (including Jewish actor Ben Lipitz, out of his Pumbaa warthog costume), currently entertain- ing audiences at the Detroit Opera House through Jan. 6, will perform their favorite selections from Broadway shows and more. The night includes a silent auction and a post-show reception at the adjoining Century Grille Restaurant. Tickets are $50: (313) 963-9800 or www.ticketmaster.com . Laced with wit, insight, compassion and searing honesty, playwright David Lindsay-Abaire's Rabbit Hole is an intensely emotional play that examines one family's grief. Nominated for five 2006 Tony Awards, it makes its Michigan pre- miere, directed by Leo Geter, Jan. 9-Feb. 3 at Meadow Brook Theatre on the campus of Oakland University in Rochester Hills. About +a The cast includes Chip DuFord (Dr. Watson in MBT's fall production of Sherlock Holmes: The Final Adventure), vet- eran Jewish actress Henrietta Hermelin (in the role created by Tyne Daly on Broadway), Sarah Kamoo, Sean O'Reilly and Inga Wilson. $22-$38. (248) 377-3300 or www.ticketmaster.com . For Music Lovers Performer-composer-arranger-producer Barry Manilow turns 65 in June. But he's nowhere near ready for retirement. He's still recording new albums; in the past two years alone, his three tribute compi- lations of the greatest songs of the '50s, '60s and '70s have reached best-seller status. Manilow appears in concert, in "An Evening of Music and Passion': 8 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 15, at the Palace of Auburn Hills. Tickets are $149, $89, $49 and $9.99. (248) 645-6666. Since making its debut as the Kalichstein Laredo Robinson Trio at the White House for President Carter's inauguration in January 1977, pianist Joseph Kalichstein, violinist Jamie Laredo and cellist Sharon Robinson have set the standard for performance of piano trio literature. In celebration of the trio's 30th - - anniversary, Jewish composer Richard Danielpour (who wrote the music for the opera Margaret Garner that debuted at the Detroit Opera House) has writ- ten a composition for the trio titled The Book of Hours. It represents a 24-hour cycle and was written to be a remembrance that "all things live and die, and live again" The trio will perform The Book of Hours, with violist Kirsten Johnson, along with works by Mozart and Tchaikovsky, in a Chamber Music Society of Detroit concert beginning 8 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 15, at the Seligman Performing Arts Center, 22305 W. 13 Mile Road, in Beverly Hills. Tickets: $43-$75; students, $25. (248) 855-6070 or www.comehearcmsd.org. Opera lovers will enjoy the second season of Metropolitan Opera: Live in High Definition, which kicks off 1 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 15, with Gounod's Romeo and Juliette, starring Anna Netrebko and Roberto Alagna and conducted by Placido Domingo. It is the first of the Met's eight live opera transmissions to movie theaters across the world planned for this season. There will be a new English-language production of Humperdinck's Hansel and Gretel for audiences of all ages 1 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 1. $22 adults, $20 seniors, $15 children. For a complete schedule of operas and to locate the movie theater near you, go to www.metopera.org . Also for the family, favorite scenes from the Barbie Princess movies come to life on a giant screen as the Detroit Symphony Orchestra plays short classical pieces in a concert titled "Barbie at the Symphony" Violinist-composer Arnie Roth conducts 3 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 23, at Orchestra Hall. Tickets: adults, $22.50-$53.50; children, $12.50-$43.50. (313) 576-5111 or www.detroitsymphony.com . For Movie Buffs The Detroit Historical Society's author series continues with Michael Hauser, co-author of Detroit's Downtown Movie Palaces, 6-8 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 19, at the Detroit Historical Museum. Hauser, curator of the "Detroit: The Reel Story" exhibit currently on display at the muse- um, will recount the story of how Detroit was once home to one of America's pre- mier entertainment districts, with down- town movie palaces crafted by renowned architects and rivaling those in New York and Chicago. Free for DHS members; $10 guests. (313) 833-7935. For The Chucklehead Laugh in the New Year with the Ann Arbor debut of popular comic Cash Levy, a fre- quent guest on cable (Comedy Central's 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. 4,ews Nate Bloom ors Special to the Jewish News sg2 Jewish Wedding Julianna Margulies, 41, who's still Cla best known for playing Nurse Carol 11; Hathaway on TV's ER, married lawyer Keith Lieberthal, who is in his mid- 30s, on Nov.17. Her father told People magazine: "It was all traditional ... She was radiant. It was beautiful. We're thrilled for Julianna her, and the young Margulies and man she married Keith Lieberthal is a wonderful person. We're proud to have him as a part of our family." (This is Margulies' first marriage. She is pregnant with her new husband's child, due this winter.) The groom is the son of Dr. Kenneth Lieberthal, a China expert C12 December 13 • 2007 who teaches political science at the University of Michigan. Professor Lieberthal was on the board of direc- tors and is a former vice president of Beth Israel Congregation in Ann Arbor. A personal source tells me the couple had a Jewish wedding cer- emony. With the groom growing up in an affiliated Jewish household, it's a reasonable assumption Julianna now identifies as Jewish despite a very odd background. Her parents were both born Jewish and divorced when Julianna was very young. Her mother converted to Christianity when Julianna was 5. In a 1998 interview, Margulies said she "was not raised Jewish" (leaving unclear if she was raised in any faith) and that she didn't practice any religion as an adult. Margulies had to forego a honey- moon to resume filming of her new Fox TV series, Canterbury's Law, in which she stars as a defense attor- ney. The series debuts in January and co-stars Ben Shenkman (Angels in America). Buddhist Chanukah As I write this, singer-songwriter Leonard Cohen, 73, is a nominee for admission into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame (the entrants will be announced today, Dec.13). Cohen, composer of classic tunes like "Suzanne" and "Hallelujah," continues to be a strong influence on new generations of singer-songwriters. In the mid-'90s, Leonard Cohen Cohen spent five years at a Buddhist monastery to study with the head monk, a man Cohen said he would have studied with no matter what his religion. Cohen said, "I'm not looking for a new religion. I'm quite happy with the old one, with Judaism." Cohen tells a Chanukah anecdote in the 2005 documentary film Leonard Cohen: I'm Your Man. He was startled one night to hear two men outside the but he lived in on the monastery grounds. They were Chasids who had walked up snowy mountain roads to the hilltop monastery because they heard there "was a Jew in trouble." Cohen told them they were prob- ably looking for him and that he was not in trouble, as he pointed to the lit Chanukah menorah in his hut. Then, they just talked and shared some schnapps. Jewsploitation Flicks Adam Sandler has partnered with the red-hot Judd Apatow (Knocked Up) to write You Don't Mess with Zohan. Sandler stars as an Israeli commando who fakes his own death in order to start a new life in New York as a hair stylist. Zohan is now filming. Holy Rollers follows a naive young