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2008 Academy Award Nomination: 44f
BEST ANIMATED FEATURE FILM A.-
r
& Entertainment
PERSEPOLIS
FILM BV AR JANE 5ATAP!, 1.;ND ViN.CENTPARONNAU0
Like Father, Like Son
U-M student Jack Stratton joins
dad's klezmer band at Ark concert.
Suzanne Chessier
Special to the Jewish News
T
WINN( R.
BASED ON THE ORIGINAL GRAPHIC NOVEL BY MARJANE SATRAP!
EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT
FEBRUARY 1-2-3
Fri. @ 7:00 & 9:30
Sat @ 4:00, 7:00 & 9:30
Sun g 2:00, 4:00 & 7:00
Prewntee,b .
PMorganChase
www.dia.org/dft
,01
313.833.4005
Phil Tewel
And
Jeffrey L. Rosenberg I
Of Farmington Hills Kosher Catering
here's nothing routine about
Jack Stratton's musical perfor-
mances.
Stratton, 20, a University of Michigan
sophomore in Ann Arbor whose base
is playing drums, easily changes style
and instruments to work with different
groups.
While his next show is with
Yiddishe Cup, a band that combines
klezmer with humor, he also makes
time for others who count on his tal-
ents: Groove, a percussion ensemble;
Proyecto Sabor Latin Jazz Orquestra, a
salsa assembly; New Universal Sound,
a rock collective; and the women's
Basketball Band, a U-M pep troupe.
Yiddishe Cup, scheduled Feb. 2 at the
Ark in Ann Arbor, is a special affilia-
tion for two reasons. It features Jack's
dad, Bert Stratton, on clarinet, sax and
harmonica, and it launched the young-
er Stratton's career interests.
"Yiddishe Cup mixes klezmer with
Middle Eastern sounds and fuses it all
with modern styles from hip-hop to
Latin:' explains Jack, who was raised
in Cleveland, Ohio, where Yiddishe
U-M sophomore Jack Stratton
Cup is based. "We also present some
Yiddish parodies from early in the 20th
cent
Yiddishe Cup will be featur-
ing songs the group has recorded,
such as "Gentile on My Mind" and
"Meshugeneh Mambo:' the title track
of its latest CD. There also will be songs
composed by the younger Stratton,
the only two-time winner of Block M
Records' New Music on the Block con-
test, a university competition.
Stratton, who chose U-M because
Invites you to
A GLATT KOSHER CHINESE
ALL-YOU-CAN EAT BUFFET
SUPERVISED BY THE COUNCIL OF
ORTHODOX RABBIS OF METROPOLITAN DETROIT
Wednesday, February 13, 2008
6-8pm
Adat Shalom Synagogue
29901 Middlebelt Road
Between 13 Mile Rd and Northwestern Highway • Farmington Hills
Please detach and return with your check by Tuesday, February 12
Name(s)
Phone
No. Adults $20.
No. Children ($10)
Make check payable to: ADAT SHALOM
No. Children under 3
Enclosed is our check for $
For further information, please call (248) 851-5100
B12
January 31 • 2008
Meet The Horowitzes
Ronelle Grier
Special to the Jewish News
I
f you've never attended a pro-
duction at the Jewish Ensemble
Theatre, Saying Kaddish with
My Sister is the perfect reason to start
going. And if you've attended plays at
JET before, don't miss this one.
Kaddish is the first play by California
poet and teacher Alison Luterman, who
takes the familiar theme of a family in
conflict and imbues it with creativity,
humor and heart.
When the play opens, Lorraine
(Milica Govich), matriarch of the
Horowitz family, has
just died. Her husband,
Max (Loren Bass),
has been deceased
for several years; and
their two daughters, Rachel (Teri Clark
Linden), an Orthodox Jew living in
Leah Smith and Teri Clark Linden in
JET's Saying Kaddish with My Sister
Israel, and Lydia (Leah Smith), a flam-
boyant New York actress-performance
artist, are making shivah
preparations. When the
funeral music fades away
and the lights reveal a
TV set with Lorraine as
special guest and a familiarly buxom
talk-show host (Rhonda English) as
REV IEW