Arts & Entertainment Maven With All The Answers Tipping Pointe Theatre stages one-woman play based on the life of advice columnist Ann Landers. Suzanne Chessler Special to the Jewish News D avid Rambo, playwright of the Ann Landers theater piece soon to be staged in Northville, believes his subject would have been pleased to know of the all-female production. Rambo defines the late and legendary advice columnist as a women's rights pio- neer and depicts her as such in The Lady With All the Answers, running Jan. 28-Feb. 28 at the Tipping Point Theatre. "I hope the audience will come to understand what a great humanist she was, how fearless she was and how she helped us understand ourselves',' Rambo says of the single-character play "She took on a very public role as a wife and mother at a time when a lot of women were encouraged not to do that. She spoke her mind and was political. When she (Esther Pauline Friedman Lederer) saw the opportunity to become Ann Landers, she grabbed it." Rambo, a writer-producer for CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, begins the piece as Landers is preparing to write the column that tells readers she is getting a divorce, an option she long had opposed. "The play engages the audience right away:' says Rambo, 54, who canoed in Michigan while visiting his sister, Susan, a Central Michigan University student in the 1970s. "We take polls by asking audience members to raise their hands; and in the second act, Ann Landers talks about hav- ing taken a poll in which she asked each reader about marrying the same person if there was a chance to do it over. Invariably, I notice husbands reach for their wives' hands, and it's a lovely moment." The play, starring Julia Glander and directed by Quintessa Gallinet, touches on Landers' campaign to get cancer research funding from the government and her opposition to the Julia Glander Vietnam War. She told readers how to contact their representatives in Congress, and she visited troops, taking notes and following up by calling some 2,500 family members to relay personal messages. "I love that Ann Landers is shown as Quintessa direct, funny and chang- Gallinet ing with the times," says Glander, who has appeared in numerous regional theaters across the country and in films recently produced in Detroit. "She saw her work as a mission and addressed herself to individuals while being among the first to touch on many subjects, such as homosexuality" As Glander, in her early 50s, is reading milla I Nate Bloom Or Special to the Jewish News I CI Film Notes A t In The Tooth Fairy, a fantasy/comedy W opening Friday, Jan. 22, Dwayne mom ma Johnson ("The Rock") plays Derek MP Thompson, a rough-and-tough minor league hockey player. When Derek tells a little girl there is no tooth fairy, the head of the "Tooth Fairy Council" (Julie Andrews) sentences Derek to work a week as a tooth fairy, complete with wings and tutu. Billy Crystal has a cameo role, and the director is Michael Lembeck, the son of the late comedic actor Harvey Lembeck (Sgt. Bilko). Also opening Jan. 22 is U 36 January 21 • 2010 Extraordinary Measures, co star- ring Harrison Ford, 67, as Dr. Robert Stonehill, an uncon- ventional biologist. When John Crowley's (Brendan Fraser) Harrison Ford two children are diagnosed with a fatal neuromuscular disease, he and his wife (Keri Russell) enlist Stonehill's help to develop a life-saving drug. - Winter Sports Roundup Courtesy of the Jewish Sports Review, here's this season's Jewish National Hockey League contingent: Mike Brown, 24, rightwing, Anaheim and watching appearance clips to prepare to portray a woman of 57, she thinks back to her reading the Playwright David Rambo Landers columns while still a teen- ager. Because of losing a friend in an person show. It just all came to me, and I alcohol-related accident, she appreciates gave it a try" that Landers wrote emphatically about the Rambo, now working on a one-person importance of driving sober. production about Ronald Reagan to be staged on Broadway, brought Judaism into "I love being with another actor on stage,' Glander says. "As I speak directly to the script. the audience, I think of the people as other "While I don't exactly talk about her religious beliefs or support for the state of players:' Gallinet, of the Purple Rose Theatre, Israel, audiences get the sense of it by the relates a family situation to the drama of time the play has ended:' he says. "She was proud of her Jewish faith, and a lot of her Landers' shaken convictions as she faces the uncertain times of a failed marriage. Jewish background comes out in the humor. "This production has an interesting "The play is very funny, but it also reminds us who we were in the second half dynamic:' says Gallinet, 31, publicity and of the 20th century. Life moves and changes programs manager, apprentice chief and resident sound designer at the Purpose Rose so quickly that we really can forget who we were 25, 30 and 40 years ago. I think the Theatre Company in Chelsea. "It's a won- play reminds us of that in the best way, and derful snapshot of who this woman was:' it's kind of fun to rediscover." —I Gallinet, reading two books about Landers, approaches the script thinking about how women of her grandmother's The Lady With All the Answers runs generation would have known the colum- Jan. 28-Feb. 28 at the Tipping Point nist's work. Theatre, 361 E. Cady, in Northville. Rambo got the idea for the play after Show times are 8 p.m. Thursdays, reading about Landers' death and recalling Fridays and Saturdays. Matinees how he had followed the columns in his are at 2 p.m. Sundays and 3 p.m. adolescence. Saturdays. $23-$27. A Celebration "She took on everything, and I thought of Women in the Arts, with refresh- she was a very theatrical character:' ments and gifts, follows the Feb. 7 explains the playwright, whose research matinee and costs $40-$65. (248) led to a friendship with Landers' daughter, . 347-0003; tippingpointtheatre.com Margo Howard. "I'd never written a one- Ducks; Michael Cammalleri, 27, for- ward, Montreal Canadiens (last year, with the Calgary Flames, "Cam" really came into his own as a star player and scored 39 goals, the highest single-season total, ever, by a Jewish NHL player); Jeff Halpern, 33, center; Tampa Bay Lightning; Eric Nystrom, 26, defenseman, Calgary; Mathieu Schneider, 40, defenseman, Vancouver Canucks. Halpern, Brown and Schneider each have two Jewish parents. Nystrom, who had a bar mitzvah, and Cammalleri, who was raised sec- ular, are the sons of Jewish moth- ers/non-Jewish fathers. Last fall, the NBA Sacramento Kings signed Israeli basketball star Jordan Farmar Omri Casspi, 21. He's turned out to be an exceptional player who quickly made the start- ing lineup and is now a serious contender for rookie-of-the-year hon- ors. The other Jewish NBA player is Jordan Farmar 23, the back- up point guard for the Los Angeles Lakers, last year's league champion. Farmar, who was raised Jewish, is the son of a white Jewish mother and a non-Jewish African- American father. ❑