Metro SNIPPETS OF HISTORY Close Up And Personal Filmmakers take on the story of Jewish Detroit. Above: "We [Sue Marx, right, and Allyson Rockwell] start dumb. You learn a lot every time you make a documentary." - Oscar winning filmmaker Sue Marx - Right: "It's important to be aware of our past. I didn't know that not that long ago, a Jew couldn't be a doctor in certain hospitals or a lawyer in certain firms or buy a house in certain subdivisions." - Emmy-winning filmmaker Allyson Rockwell Judith Doner Berne Special to the Jewish News W rapping the history of Detroit's Jewish community into the 40-minute documen- tary Detroit Remember When: The Jewish Community "is the hardest thing I've ever had to do:' says Oscar and Emmy-winning filmmaker Sue Marx. The film will premiere at 8 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 9, on Detroit Public Television. The broadcast will feature live in-studio interviews with Jewish histori- ans and contributors who made the film possible. "It is particularly frustrating for me says Marx on a lunch break in an editing room of the DPTV studios in Wixom. "The story is so big — and I want to tell every- thing. I feel like this is my family." Indeed, "We usually fight" about what stays in and what hits the cutting room floor, she says fondly of the 14-year part- 16 December 3 2009 nership she enjoys with fellow filmmaker Allyson Fink Rockwell, a double-Emmy winner in her own right. The two see the age difference between them as an advantage. Marx, a Birmingham resident whose husband, Hank, died two years ago, has three daugh- ters and three granddaughters. Rockwell lives with her husband, Alex, and son Zack, 7, in Grosse Pointe. And the fact that Rockwell grew up in Metro Detroit and Marx moved here as an adult allows different perspectives when making Detroit-based "docs" as they call them. "I was one of five Jewish kids in my Indiana high school',' says Marx. "When I moved here, I was really jealous" of the large, close-knit Jewish community to which she now belongs. On this day, Rockwell is editing and Marx is headed out to pick up one of the remaining puzzle pieces — a photograph to illustrate Jewish high school students in the late 1940s, perhaps from a Detroit Central High School yearbook. The film spans Detroit's Jewish history, which officially began with the arrival of a Jewish fur trader in 1762 and culminates in the importance of Jewish leadership in the political, civil rights, arts, cultural and educational life of today's Detroit. Members of the community, some of whom are still helping to fashion a 21st- century reinvention of this region, tell their stories against a backdrop of photo- graphs and film taken over their lifetimes. "We wanted to interview the role mod- els and the new leadership and take kind of a wide swath:' Marx says. "We ended up with so many great interviews." "None of it is about material things:' Rockwell says. "Everybody had the same traditions:' which revolved around getting together with friends and family for meals, often accompanied by heated political dis- cussions. "And the children remembered sitting and listening to their conversations. "None of this is the comprehensive story:' she cautions. "It's snippets of his- tory. We wanted to present to the whole community how we [the Jewish commu- nity] has enriched the city of Detroit." In a more prosperous era, Rockwell says, it might have been a longer piece. "But in these times, people need homes more than a documentary. So you do what you can:' It was DPTV's new general manager, Rich Hornberg, who came up with the idea about a year ago after viewing the six hours of David Grubin's nationally tele- vised documentary, The Jewish Americans. "The stars lined up," Hornberg says. "PBS had aired The Jewish Americans. We had a series, Detroit Remembers, that needed reviving. And we had these local, established documentarians. "Our hope is to expand this into other communities:' says Hornberg. "Talking about people's history is enriching. People want their story told." The film couldn't have been made in