arts & entertainment Song By Song Pianist-composer Robin Spielberg shares the soundtrack to her life. Suzanne Chessler Contributing Writer Ann Arbor R obin Spielberg will be playing her original piano music in the city where the University of Michigan is based, but her audience will include many fans with closer ties to the area surround- ing Michigan State University. Spielberg, who attended the East Lansing school, has been posting news about her upcoming Ann Arbor concert on the Web and has heard from enthusiastic former classmates about their planned attendance. "Thanks to technology I've stayed in touch with a number of friends in Michigan, and fin hopeful we'll get a nice group together and have a reunion',' says Spielberg, 48, whose program begins 8 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 27, at the Ark. "As I perform my piano show, I'll share the stories behind the songs. It will be a glimpse into who I am as an artist. I've been composing the soundtrack to my life for a very long time, and that's what I pres- ent in concert:' Spielberg, who also brings standards into her repertoire, makes her Ann Arbor debut after recent Michigan programs near Lexington and Douglas and in Roscommon County. For those who want to linger with the sounds, there are some 16 recordings, each with a special focus — romance, sea- sons, lullabies, Chanukah. ews "I grew up like all kids taking piano les- sons and studying the classical repertoire,' says Spielberg, in a phone interview from her rural Pennsylvania home. "My parents would take me to see my piano teacher in musical theater, and I was mesmerized. "My paternal grandfather played flute in the NBC Symphony Orchestra, and that was a hard life for his family. Although I had the music and acting bug, my parents wanted me to go into law or medicine. "When I went to Michigan State, I audi- tioned for The Diary of Anne Frank and was cast. I loved doing that more than any- thing else. The director encouraged me to go back to New Jersey because everything I wanted was in my backyard." Although too late that semester for music auditions at the Juilliard School, Spielberg was in time for drama auditions at New York University and was accepted. After completing the academic program, she was able to win roles on and off Broadway. "To support myself during those years, I started playing piano in the hotel lobbies and piano rooms in New York," she says. "I played at the Plaza when it was owned by the Trumps, and Ivana Trump was my boss. "I brought my own compositions into the sets and was getting compliments. That encouraged me. If I played for 40 minutes, I'd make sure that 10 minutes had my own music. "In 1993, I made my first recording of original piano solos, Heal of the Hand, Nate Bloom Special to the Jewish News On Nobel Prizes r The 2011 Nobel Prizes have been awarded. Two out of three physics lau- wise reates are Jewish (Saul Perlmutter, 51, and Adam Riess, 41) as are two of the three medicine winners (Bruce Beutler, 53, and Ralph Steinman, who died at age 68 just a couple of days before his award was announced). Also Jewish is the sole win- ner of the 2011 chem- istry Nobel, Israeli Dan Schechtman, 70. Nobel Prizes have been awarded since Saul 1901 in five fields: Perlmutter medicine, chemistry, physics, literature and peace. An eco- nomics prize was added in 1969. Most prizes are given to individuals. However, 23 out of 121 Nobel Peace Prizes have been given to organizations. The number of Jewish winners this 44 October 20 • 2011 year is higher than in most years. But it isn't a shocking number. Out of 815 Nobel Prizes given individu- als, 181 of those win- ners have been Jewish or "half-Jewish." Bruce Beutler (Persons with one Jewish parent are about 10 percent of the 181). In other words, Jews, who represent less than one-tenth of 1 percent of the world's population, have won 22 percent of all the Nobel prizes given individuals. One can quibble about a handful of the winners: A few of the "half-Jews" were raised Christian, and four Jewish winners converted away from Judaism before World War II (three for career reasons). By the way, one chemistry winner was a Christian-born convert to Orthodox Judaism. Lucky Lerman The Three Musketeers 3D, now in the- aters, is based on a famous 19th-cen- based on my own research of what people liked best:' Recordings led to a demand for concerts in and out of the United States, and act- ing was left behind. As she wrote music, Spielberg also published the songbooks, which brought more attention and invita- tions to be included on 40 compilation recordings. "I wrote 'West Bank Serenade' after 9/11',' explains the composer-pianist. "The world went so dark, and I learned about how Israelis handle terrorism by just carrying on. "The song starts with the motif of some- one walking and then facing an eruption. There's an Eastern European sounding waltz in the middle to represent the freedom and peace people always want. At the end, there's a happy triumph of good over evil. "I hope to play that song one day in Israel. I'll be going there in December for my daughter's bat mitzvah." Spielberg, who also assists her husband in running a talent agency, is active with Temple Beth Israel in York, Penn. Her hobby is gardening, and the yard becomes a calm setting for mental music practice and corn- posing. Recently doing some work with other musicians, she also has seen choreography developed to go along with her original pieces. Dances to her music have been done by the West Florida Youth Ballet and for Great American Ballroom Challenge, a PBS program. "I'm the spokesperson for the American tury French novel. The oft-filmed story takes place in 17th-century France. This new film version's D'Artagnan (Logan Lerman,19) goes to Paris to join the famous guards of the king, the Musketeers. He joins forces with three of them to stop the evil Cardinal Richelieu (Oscar- winner Christoph Walz). The rest of the action-filled plot is very involved. Major characters include a roguish English Logan Lerman noble, the Duke of Buckingham (Orlando Bloom), and Milady, a beautiful but treacherous woman (Milla Jovovich), whom D'Artagnan fancies. Lerman's Hollywood stock is so high now that he didn't even have to audi- tion for the lead in this big-budget film. He has the tools to become the biggest Jewish film heartthrob since Tony Curtis. He is very good-looking – if not Robin Spielberg: "As I perform my piano show, I'll share the stories behind the songs." Music Therapy Association',' reveals Spielberg, whose family has geographic and other reasons for believing that filmmaker Steven Spielberg is a distant relative. "I think there's a wonderful connection between music and wellness. "I got involved when our daughter was born very prematurely. She had to stay in an intensive care unit for over four months. It was very noisy, and I got permission to play my CDs by her incubator. The nurses noticed that her vital signs improved when my music was playing. "I went on the Internet and found the AMTA. I told them what I had experienced and became interested in other work being done by the organization. When I'm on tour, I try to stop at nursing homes and other facilities to do concerts:' Robin Spielberg performs 8 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 27, at the Ark, 316 S. Main, Ann Arbor. $20. (734) 761- 1451; theark.org . shockingly beautiful like Brad Pitt. Plus, he has shown he can act effectively in smaller budget comedy-dramas (like the underappreciated but quite good 2009 film My One and Only) and carry an action picture (last year's box-office hit Percy Jackson and the Olympians). Lerman's background is almost a cross-section of American Jewry. His paternal great-grandfather, a German Jew, along with his family, fled the Nazis and settled in Shanghai, China, just before World War II. There, he and his son, Logan's grandfather, founded an orthotics and prosthetics manufacturing company. They moved to the U.S. in 1948 and successfully re- founded the company in Los Angeles. It is still run by Logan's grandfather – who married another European Jewish refugee – and father. Logan's mother's father is a post-war Polish Jewish immigrant. His maternal grandmother was born in California, the daughter of Canadian-born Jews. Logan grew up in Beverly Hills in what he calls a "very stable family." [7 _1