metro >> on the cover Everyone gets ready for the filming of the eulogy scene. Extras! Extras! Temple Israel congregants take part as extras in the filming of Mitch Albom's Have a Little Faith. Keri Guten Cohen Story Development Editor T he ornate golden ark in the main sanctuary of Temple Israel pro- vided the perfect backdrop for a very different role for the Reform syna- gogue — movie set. On July 18 and 19, the West Bloomfield sanctuary was transformed by dozens of film production members, who moved in with massive lights, cameras, microphone booms, computers, roving production assistants, two seasoned film stars, an accomplished director and nearly 200 extras, most of them Temple Israel mem- bers who answered a special casting call. This little taste of Hollywood came with the filming of the upcoming Hallmark Hall of Fame movie Have a Little Faith, based on Detroit author Mitch Albom's latest nonfiction book of the same name. The movie, to be aired on ABC before Christmas, is a story about losing faith and finding it again with the help of two special men — Albom's dying 82-year-old rabbi from his hometown synagogue in New Jersey, who asks Albom to write his eulogy, and the late Rev. Henry Covington, a reformed drug dealer and convict, who preached to the poor and homeless in a dilapidated church in Detroit with a hole in its roof. Major scenes shot over two days at Temple Israel included a High Holiday ser- vice, a sermon given by the dying Rabbi Albert Lewis, played by veteran Jewish actor Martin Landau, and Albom's eulogy at the rabbi's funeral. Bradley Whitford, a star of the NBC TV series The West Wing (which ended in 2006), played Albom. Both actors looked pretty convincing on the bimah. So did members of the movie congrega- tion, who filled seats in the lower-center section of the sanctuary. Most were Temple members who'd sat in those seats many times before. This time they were paid $8 an hour for days that stretched from 6 a.m.-8 p.m. Many said they thought it was pretty cool to be earning money and a modicum of fame for something they might normally do during a Friday night service. But there was a catch. Rather than sit through the rabbi's sermon — or Albom's eulogy — once, the extras had to hear and react to the same speeches several times as scenes were re-shot to accommodate different camera angles or flubbed lines. "They'll never complain again about the time they have to sit in services after this:' joked Rabbi Harold Loss of Temple Israel. He and Rabbi Marla Hornsten served as consultants to make sure Jewish elements were true to those in a Conservative syna- gogue, like the one Albom attended into his teen years. Prior to filming the eulogy scene, a production member consulted Hornsten about whether flowers on the bimah are traditional at a Jewish funeral. When she explained they were not, the flowers were removed. Advised to have all men wear a kippah and tallit during services, the crew dashed into Temple Israel's Sisterhood gift shop to buy 20 prayer shawls to make sure there were enough. They were donated back to the temple after filming. Extra! Extra! Hear All About It During a break to change camera angles, Frank Wolff of Farmington Hills stepped out to talk. The financial planner, 68, was dressed in a dark pinstripe suit for the eulogy scene. "I'm grateful for a break," he said. "That's a lot of sitting." Wolff responded to an email Temple Israel sent to its members, all 3,400 fam- Extras! Extras! on page 12 11