100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

May 15, 2008 - Image 72

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 2008-05-15

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Arts &
Entertainment

$2.00 OFF

RIBS OR BBQ CHICKEN FOR TWO

All dinners include salad or coleslaw. potatoes and garb,: bread.

Exp. -V; I/08

th

2

Israeli Music
Strikes A Chord

g7-iie Brass Pointe p ---aoidep99

24234 Orchard Lake Rd., N.E. corner of 10 Mile • 476-1377
Open 7 Days a week for lunch & dinner

::;a1a1111111 ■ 111/111111.111111111111.111111111.E.

Uriel Heilman
Jewish Telegraphic Agency

SUSHI SiMURI)1

New York



Japanese Restaurant

Beer

now
availabl

Ph: 248-737-4408
Fax: 248-737-5032
• Catering and Carry-out Available
• Gift Certificates Available
4157 Orchard Lake Road, Orchard Lake, MI 48323

1096 OFF Total Bill

N

Pontiac Trail

(with ad only) 5/15/08 through 5/28/08

Business Hours: Mon-Sat 11:30am - 10:00pm
Sunday 4:30 - 9:00pm

lone Pins (17 mile)

La Bistecca
proudly features:

• Certified Piedmontese Beef
• Live Entertainment
Tuesday-Saturday in our cozy piano bar
• Over 400 wine selections

"A Distinguished Restaurant of North America" Award Recipient
Wine Spectator Award of .Excellence

Open 11:30 am Mon-Fri 5:00pm Sat
39405 Plymouth Rd (Between Haggerty & Newburgh) I Plymouth

734-254-04001www.labistecca-net

1375350

141.€41..?,

Banquets

Niels

Bar/Bat Mitzvahs

Showers
lamas Anniversaries

Birthdays

Etc.
WE CATERAT MOST SYNAGOGUES,
TEMPLES, HOTELS AND THE HALLS OFYOUR CHOICE

WEL

ieat— pvic*:

CLASSIC CUISINE

Approved by Council
of Orthodox Rabbis

KOSHER
CATERERS

PEP TRU, food & Sclerotic Director

C16

May 15 • 2008

iN

S

inging in unintelligible gib-
berish as her hands strike the
darbuka drum with frantic
intensity, the short, pretty brunette
at center stage holds the audience
transfixed as she reaches the song's
crescendo.
When she sounds her final note,
the audience at the Museum of Jewish
Heritage rises for a standing ova-
tion. Though it is her New York debut
concert, Israeli singer-songwriter Din
Din Aviv is no stranger here. The per-
formance hall is packed with Israeli
fans of Aviv who live in New York and
American Jews clutching her CD.
It's the kind of scene that brings a
smile to the face of David Borowich,
the founder of the American-Israeli

248-661-4050 formington Hills

group that organized the concert, Dor
Chadash.
The point of staging Israeli musical
performances like these, he says, is
to bring Israelis and American Jews
in New York closer together — and
closer to Israel.
"Music is a natural bridge
Borowich says. "People are looking for
ways to connect to Israel. If you can't
bring them to Israel, then bring pieces
of Israel to them:"
Whether out of hunger for a con-
nection to Israel or mere interest in
the music, increasing numbers of Jews
in America — both Americans and
Israelis — are turning out for Israeli
music performances.
For Israel, cultural events like con-
certs are a way to showcase a "softer"
side of the Jewish state beyond the
political, religious and ideological
conflicts many American Jews — and
Israelis — find alienating. It's also

A Blossoming
Israeli Cinema

George Robinson
Special to the Jewish News

of the Film Society of Lincoln Center,
writes via e-mail that "the work of
Amos Gitai ... more and more looks
here have been films made
to have been a beacon for the new
in Eretz Yisrael since 1896,
generation. Gitai's films are more rig-
starting with
orous, more formally inventive
silent filmmakers, Jewish
and radical than the work of
and not, who continued
any other Israeli director before
to film the Holy Land.
him or alongside him, and it is
To speak, however, of an
only in the past decade or so
indigenous national Israeli
that anyone has emerged who
cinema with any accuracy,
is willing to take as many risks."
one must really wait until
One thing that set Gitai apart
the 1960s, albeit a period
from other Israeli directors
when would-be Israeli
was that he received most of
filmmakers — many with Amos Gitai:
his arts education in the U.S.
narrow, inward-looking
and Europe. Given that Israel
Beacon for a
interests — were ham-
didn't
really develop an indig-
new generation
pered by a small popula-
enous
theater tradition until
of Israeli film-
tion, an exclusive language makers.
the 1960s, Gitai wouldn't have
and an inherently limited
learned much about working
audience for their films.
with playwrights or actors in
Commenting on the more recent
Tel Aviv or Jerusalem, and other Israeli
resurgence in the Israeli film industry, filmmakers were as much newborns
Richard Pena, the program director
as he.

T

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan