Arts & Entertainment ON THE COVER MusicFest Schedule The JCCs in West Bloomfield and Oak Park bring to the stage a slew of perfomers. Elizabeth Applebaum Special to the Jewish News SUNDAY, FEB. 22 Family Day at MusicFest 2 p.m.: Kids & Strings Oak Park This is an interactive concert for families and children ages 3-6, featuring the Ambassador Quintet with Detroit Symphony Orchestra members Marian Tanau, Hai-Xen Wu, Caroline Coade, Paul Wingert and Larry Hutchinson. Tickets: $5 JCC mem- bers and seniors in advance; $4 children 3 and older; $18 for the whole family; $7 non- members and at the door. MOT Tickets: $12 JCC members and seniors in advance; $5 children 3-16; $15 non-members and at the door. THURSDAY, FEB. 26 7:30 p.m.: A Night of Opera West Bloomfield Michigan Opera Theater General Director Dr. David DiChiera will speak on famous Jewish opera divas, divos and Jewish composers of the 20th century. His presentation will be interspersed with the signature arias of the art- ists, performed by members of the Michigan Opera Theater. General Tickets: $12 JCC Directo r Dr. David 7 p.m.: Safam members, students DiChiera and seniors in West Bloomfield advance; $15 non-members and Famous for their Jewish- American sound, Safam has at the door. been part of the music scene SATURDAY, FEB. 28 since 1974. The group's music, lyrics and arrangements all are 8 p.m.: Melissa Manchester original, and its songs reflect West Bloomfield the struggles and dreams of the Manchester began singing when just a teen; she was discovered by Jewish community. (For more on Safam, see page C10) Bette Midler and Barry Manilow, who had hired her as a backup singer. In 1973, Manchester released her first album. In 1979, she became the first artist in the his- tory of the Academy Awards to sing two nominated movie themes in the same year: "Through the Eyes of Love" (from Ice Castles) and "The Promise' Manchester, who five years ago observed her bat mitzvah celebration at the Stephen S. Wise Temple in Los Angeles, will perform "V'al Kulam" during her appearance at MusicFest. (For more on Melissa Manchester, see page C7.) Tickets: $25 JCC members, stu- dents and seniors in advance; $30 non-members and at the door. SUNDAY, MARCH 1 7 p.m.: In Concert: The Cantors and Cantorial Soloists of Michigan — Up Close and Personal West Bloomfield Guest cantors (scheduled to appear) Earl Berris, Meir Finkelstein, David Gutman, Samuel Greenbaum, Kat Hastings, Frank Lanzkron- Tamarzo, Jen Roher, Pamela The Fleur de Lys Chamber Ensemble Schiffer, Darcie Naomi Sharlein, Michael Smolash and canto- rial soloists Rachel Gottlieb Kalmowitz, Neil Michaels and Penny Steyer perform some of their favorite songs and present a concert that pays tribute to can- tors who have shaped the Metro Detroit Jewish community. Tickets: $12 JCC members, stu- dents and seniors in advance; $15 non-members and at the door. TUESDAY, MARCH 3 7:30 p.m.: Fleur de Lys Chamber Ensemble West Bloomfield The Fleur de Lys Chamber Ensemble comprises Andrew Wu, Melody Wootton, Caroline Coade and Una O'Riordan, who combine works by popular and lesser-known classical composers in a concert filled with extraordi- narily graceful, exciting and gentle music. The ensemble's MusicFest performance will include works by Mozart, Sholom Secunda, Gershwin and Bernstein. Tickets: $12 JCC members, stu- dents and seniors in advance; $15 non-members and at the door. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4 1 p.m.: An Afternoon of Broadway and More with Elaine Serling Oak Park Singer-songwriter Elaine Serling has been charming audiences with her enthusiastic performances and music for more than 35 years. Her concerts have inspired and cap- Detroit native tivated audiences Elaine Serling of all ages in cities throughout Canada, Israel and the United States, including her hometown of Detroit. Tickets: There is no admission charge for this concert. THURSDAY, MARCH 5 7 p.m.: Lenore Marwil Film Festival showing of Fiddler on the Roof, starring Topol. This is a sing-along version of the movie. Oak Park From Israel to Japan, Fiddler on the Roof is one of the most ews *al I Nate Bloom Special to the Jewish News Oscar Time The Academy Awards will be pre- sented 8 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 22, on ABC. A highlight will be the presentation of the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award to comedy legend Jerry Lewis, 82. Here, our annual roundup of Oscar nominees with a Jewish connection. Acting Nominees Sean Penn, 48, earned his fifth best- actor nomination for playing the title role in Milk, the story of Harvey Milk, the gay-rights activist and San Francisco supervisor who was murdered in 1978 by fellow supervi- sor Dan White. Penn's father, the C8 February 19 • 2009 late actor/director Leo Penn, was Jewish. His mother is Catholic. Sean was raised secular and calls himself agnostic. Anne Hathaway is up for best actress for her performance as a troubled Jewish woman in Rachel Getting Married. Writers & Composers Brit Peter Morgan (Frost/Nixon) and American Eric Roth (The Curious Case of Benjamin Button) compete for the Oscar for best-adapted screenplay. Frost/Nixon is based on Morgan's original stage play. Morgan, 45, who is secular, is the son of a German Jewish refugee father and a Polish Catholic mother. He earned a 2006 Oscar nomination for best screenplay for The Queen. Roth, 63, won a 1994 Oscar in this same cat- egory for Forrest Gump. In a sad side note, Roth recently told reporters that he suffered heavy losses in the Bernard Madoff scandal. Mike Leigh, 65, is among the most respected of British writers and directors. He's been Oscar nominat- ed six times. This year, he is up for best original screenplay for Happy- Go-Lucky, which he also directed. Composers Danny Elfman, 55 (Milk), and James Newton Howard, 53 (Defiance), are up for the Oscar for best original score. Both began as rock musicians before switch- ing over to film composition. This is Elfman's fourth nomination for best original score while Howard has earned eight such nominations. Howard said in a recent interview that he identifies as Jewish even though his late father's Jewish ori- gins were unknown to him until he was about 35. He added that work- ing on Defiance, a film set during the Holocaust, had special meaning for him. Foreign, Shorts & Docs Waltz with Bashir, an Israeli animated film about the 1982 Lebanon War (opening Feb. 20 at the Maple Art Theatre), directed and written by Ari Folman, 46, is a heavy favorite to win the best foreign-language film Oscar. Folman served in the Israeli army during the conflict. Nominated for best live action short film is German director/co- writer Jochen Alexander Freydank's Spielzeugland (Toyland), about what