arts & entertainment Pop/Jazz Princess Canadian singer-songwriter makes area debut. Marvin Glassman Special to the Jewish News C anadian Jewish pop/jazz singer Nikki Yanofsky, famous for sing- ing "I Believe" before millions of viewers to open the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, will make her Detroit-area debut May 18, opening for Il Divo at the Colosseum at Caesars Windsor as part of a four-month North American tour. Yanofsky, now 17, has received praise from other musicians and critics for her four-octave range and vocal style, which has been compared to a cross between Ella Fitzgerald and Judy Garland. Although the classical and opera reper- toire of Il Divo is different from Yanofsky's preference for jazz and popular music, Yanofsky hopes her fans will come to the Windsor concert. "It's a wonderful opportunity to open for Il Divo, and there will be an opportunity for fans to enjoy the best of what we both do',' said Yanofsky in a phone conversation from her hometown of Montreal. Yanofsky will perform many songs at the Windsor concert in tribute to Ella Fitzgerald, taken from the young vocalist's Nate Bloom Special to the Jewish News *MI ISM bestselling 2008 live recording, Ella . . . of Thee I Swing. That CD, like 2010's studio- produced Nikki, propelled the young singer- songwriter to Juno Award nominations (the Canadian equivalent of the Grammy). Young Nikki knew she wanted to be a professional singer at age 11, ever since she sang with her father Richard's jazz band in Montreal for a Jewish hospital fundraiser. "There is nothing better I could think of doing in my life than singing and immers- ing myself into my songs',' she said. Yanofsky's dream began to take shape at age 13, when she headlined the Montreal International Jazz Festival. She made her American television debut starring in the PBS special Nikki: Live In Montreal in 2010. Her second studio CD will be released later this year. Along the way, Yanofsky has been men- tored by many other artists, including Marvin Hamlisch, who featured her at age 14 at a Carnegie Hall performance in New York. Along with her performances at the Winter Olympics, another memorable night for Yanofsky took place when she performed "On A Clear Day" and "Lazy Afternoon" in honor of her idol Barbra New Flicks ‘112 Four films with a Jewish connection (11) open in the Detroit area on Friday, May 18. (10 First Position is a documentary about the Youth America Grand Prix. Thousands of aspiring ballet dancers, ages 8-19, perform in this competi- tion, but only a handful of the very best win prized scholarships and contracts. Jewish filmmaker Bess Kargman focuses on six dance competi- tors from very diverse backgrounds. One of them is Michela, who was adopted from an orphanage in the African nation Bess Kargman of Sierra Leone by an elderly Jewish couple. A very different documentary, Mansome, by filmmaker Morgan Spurlock (Super Size Me), is, in the words of the film's publicity release, "a hilarious look at men's identity in the 21st century." Famous people and not-famous people weigh in with their definition of masculinity, with special attention to men's grooming habits. The always very witty actor Paul Rudd, 43, is among those giving their views. 40 May 17 • 2012 Darling Companion, directed by U-M grad Lawrence Kasdan, 63, and co- written by Kasdan and his wife, Detroit native Meg Goldman Kasdan, stars Diane Keaton as Beth, a woman who suffers from empty-nest syndrome when her youngest daughter (Mad Men's Elisabeth Moss) is on the cusp of leaving home. Her husband, Joseph (Kevin Kline), is a busy physician who isn't super-sensitive to Beth's needs. Beth finds a stray dog, and for a time that makes her happy. But the dog goes missing, and Beth blames Joseph. Finally, they enlist a gypsy psychic (Israeli actress Ayelet Zurer, 42) to help find the dog. The strong cast includes Richard Jenkins and Diane Wiest in supporting roles. Ayelet Zurer What to Expect When You're Expecting is a romantic comedy about five couples with inter- twined lives; all of them are facing the challenges of impending parenthood. Fourteen actors and actresses are given co-star billing, including Jennifer Lopez, Chris Rock and Dennis Quaid. The only Jewish thespian in the bunch is Elizabeth Banks, 38. The title, of course, is familiar: First published in 1984, the pregnancy guide (and its Streisand at the 2011 Grammy Awards. "To perform for Barbra Streisand, well that is a dream come true,' said Yanofsky. "My mother and I saw all her films, from Funny Girl to Yentl, and to share the stage in her honor with Herbie Hancock, Barry Manilow and Stevie Wonder was a special moment for me. There is no singer alive than can be as perfect as Barbra Streisand:' Yanofsky comes close to perfection Nikki Yanofsky: Tony Bennett called her "the best singer to come along since Judy Garland." herself. Tony Bennett called her "the best singer to come along since Judy Garland" after seeing her in concert. She has helped raise money for the Israel Yanofsky's star power has blossomed Cancer Research Fund and the Montreal beyond Canada and the U.S. She has per- Children's Hospital, among other not-for- formed in Europe and Asia, with the Red profit organizations. ❑ Sea Jazz Festival in Eilat, Israel, in 2010 remaining a highlight. "Performing in Israel was so moving',' Nikki Yanofsky opens for II Divo said Yanofsky. "How can anyone — Jewish at 9 p.m. Friday, May 18, at the or not Jewish — not feel connected to the Colosseum at Caesars Windsor, 377 people there? I enjoyed not only performing Riverside Drive East, in Windsor, there but also seeing all the landmarks in Canada. For ticket information, Tel Aviv and Jerusalem. I definitely want to call 800-991-7777 or go to www. come back to Israel as often as possible' caesarswindsor.com . Yanofsky has a heart as big as her voice. updated editions) of the same name consistently tops the New York Times paperback best-seller list and has sold more than 15 million copies. The guide's co-authors, Heidi Murkoff and Sharon Mazel are executive producers of the film, as is Erik Murkoff, Heidi's husband since 1982 and the father of their two children. The reality-show star Whitney Port (The Hills), 27, a fashion designer and author, has a cameo in the flick as herself. a corrupt town councilman. Rubinek was born in 1947 in a refu- gee camp in Allied-occupied Germany. He grew up in Toronto. His parents survived the Holocaust because a fam- ily of Polish Catholic farmers hid them for more two years. Rubinek's 1987 book, So Many Miracles, and the PBS/ CBC documentary of the same name, chronicled his parents' reunion with their saviors. Jesse/Hasty Return "I'm pretty Jewish.... When I'm in New York, I become super-Jew. When I'm in LA, I'm like a California surfer girl." So said actress Mila Kunis, 27, in an interview she gave, a decade ago, to JVibe, a now-defunct Jewish young people's maga- Mila Kunis zine. This quote and other parts from the JVibe interview (includ- ing Kunis talking about anti-Semitism in the Ukraine, where she was born) were published in the Brit tabloid the Sun last week. The Sun didn't credit JVibe and made the Kunis quotes look brand-new. The Sun's article was a sidebar to a recent poll of Sun readers in which they voted Kunis "the hottest woman in the world." ❑ The Robert B. Parker mystery novels featuring Police Chief Jesse Stone (Tom Selleck) have been turned into eight CBS television movies since 2006. The newest one, Jesse Stone: Benefit of the Doubt, airs 9 p.m. Sunday, May 20, on CBS. In this one, Stone finds himself strug- gling to get his police chief job back. He's also attempting to work through a thicket of clues to solve a shocking mob-related double homicide. Veteran actor Saul Rubinek returns as Hastings (Hasty) Hathaway, a charac- ter he has played in five Stone movies. Hathaway is Stone's unlikely friend: a car dealer who once was Saul Rubinek A Non - Interview