arts & entertainment >> editor's picks CLASSICAL NOTES www.dso.org . After a memorable residency featuring the music of Schubert last summer, pianist Louis Nagel returns to Ann Arbor's inti- mate Kerrytown Concert House to present his new concert and lecture series, Bach and More, which will focus on the music of Bach and Liszt. Nagel, a U-M professor who also has taught at the Rubin Academy in Jerusalem, will perform concerts at 8 p.m. Thursday, July 12, and 4 p.m. Sunday, July 15 ($15-$30/$10 students), and will deliver free public lectures at 8 p.m. Wednesday, July 11, and 4 p.m. Saturday, July 14. Tickets and reservations: (734) 769-2999; kerrytownconcerthouse.com . Spend an evening lakeside with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra at Ford House on Friday ("A Night in Brazil") and Saturday ("Carmen and Other Favorite Stories"), July 13-14. Grounds at the Edsel and Eleanor Ford House open at 6 p.m., concerts begin at 7:30 p.m. and fireworks are at 9:30 p.m. 1100 Lake Shore Drive, Grosse Pointe Shores. Tickets start at $20. (313) 576-5111; dso.org . New this year, the Avanti Summer MusicFest hosts chamber ensembles of DSO musicians performing at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, July 19, and the Avanti Festival Orchestra, featuring DSO musi- cians and other local performers, taking the stage at 7:30 p.m. Friday, July 20, both at the First Presbyterian Church, 1669 W. Maple Road, in Birmingham. Tickets for each concert are $25-$50 and can be purchased through www.dso.org or at the door. The Avanti Workshop Finale, at 1:30 p.m. Saturday, July 21, will feature approximately 140 high school workshop students coached by DSO musicians and performing alongside them on the stage of Orchestra Hall in Detroit; to reserve your free tickets, call (313) 576-5111 or go to POP/ ROCK JAZZ / FOLK About 41•10 Rock Radio, the first Jewish rock Internet radio sta- tion. See him in concert at 7 p.m. Monday, July 16, at the Berman Center for the Performing Arts, 6600 W. Maple Road, in West Bloomfield. $8 adults/$6 children. (248) 661-1900; www.theberman.org . Tenacious D is on the road in support of a Gail Zimmerman new album, Rize of the Arts Editor Fenix, the duo's first stu- dio album in six years. Jack Black (who's been busy with his act- ing career) and Kyle Gass (Tenacious D's THE BIG SCREEN core duo) take the stage at the Fillmore in Detroit with special guests the Sights on One of the best film musicals ever made, Friday, July 6. Doors at 7 p.m. $25. 1952's Singin' in the Rain, directed by livenation. com . Stanley Donen and written by Adolph See this season's talented top 10 final- Green and Betty Comden, comes to area ists when American Idol LIVE! launches movie theaters at 7 p.m. Thursday, July its 2012 tour at 7 p.m. Friday, July 6, at 12. Preceding the remastered film, one of Detroit's Joe Louis Arena. $29.50-$65. its stars, Debbie Reynolds, takes viewers (800) 745-3000; olympiaentertainment. behind the scenes. For theaters, go to com. fathomevents.com . Yiddish theater/folk music authority and performer Zalmen Mlotek, with spe- FAMILY FUN cial guest Daniella Rabbani, a New York- based actor and singer, will be featured in PuppetArt-Detroit Puppet Theatre Temple Beth El's annual senior concert, presents Kolobok — a Russian 100 Years of Yiddish Theater Music, at 2 folktale incorporating original music p.m. Sunday, July 15, at the temple, 7400 and lyrics and known in America as Telegraph Road, Bloomfield Township. "The Gingerbread Man" — at 10 a.m. Open to all seniors in the community at Thursdays, July 12 and 19, and 2 p.m. no charge. To reserve tickets, call (248) Saturdays, July 7-28. $5 children/$10 851-1100, ext. 3150. adults. 25 E. Grand River, Detroit. (313) One of the top-touring Jewish musi- 961-7777; puppetart.org . cians and family entertainers in the U.S., An all-new stage adaptation of Rick Recht also is elevating the medium the famous French fairytale, Puss In of Jewish music as a powerful and effec- Boots, produced and directed by John tive tool for developing Jewish pride Manfredi (a frequent contributor to JET and identity. He is the national spokes- productions), comes to Meadow Brook man for the PJ Library, which provides Music Festival at 2 and 7 p.m. Thursday, free Jewish books and music to children July 19. $15 reserved pavilion/$10 throughout the country; executive direc- general admission pavilion/$49 reserved tor of Songleader Boot Camp, a national family four-packs. (800) 745-3000; leadership development program; and palacenet.com . founder and executive director of Jewish THE ART SCENE The Detroit Institute of Arts hosts Picasso and Matisse: The DIA's Prints and Drawings, an exhibition telling the story of Picasso's and Matisse's stylistic progression and artistic range through more than 100 prints and drawings, from July 11-Jan 6. The museum also is displaying Puppets of American Dance, some of the best exam- ples of American dance marionettes from its Paul McPharlin Puppetry Collection, from July 11-Jan. 16. Free with museum admission. (313) 833-7900; dia.org. From July 13-Oct. 15, Pewabic Pottery presents Simply By Hand: Architectural Ceramics from Mary Stratton to Now, an exhibition of Pewabic tile work side by side with that of other contemporary art- ists. 10125 E. Jefferson, Detroit. (313) 626- 2000; pewabic.org . Get ready for the two largest art fairs in Michigan: The biggest, the Ann Arbor Art Fairs —actually four art fairs in one — runs Wednesday-Sunday, July 18-21, theannarborartfair.com; downtown Plymouth's Art in the Park hosts more than 400 artists Friday-Sunday, July 13-15, artinthepark.com . WHATNOT Hydroplanes will race up to 200 mph on the Detroit River during the 103rd American Power Boat Association Gold Cup Race, Friday (free for practice), Saturday and Sunday, July 13-15. Info and tickets: gold-cup.com . Out & About will return on July 19. Please email items you wish to have considered for Out & About to Gail Zimmerman at gzimmerman®thejewishnews. com. w s Nate Bloom Oim I Special to the Jewish News A Jewish Spidey Michigander Sam Raimi W Former made a trio of Spider Man films were huge hits. Now comes The 4 1 that Amazing Spider Man, currently in - U 34 - theaters, which bills itself as "another chapter" in the Marvel Comics super- hero's life. It stars Andrew Garfield, 28, in the title role as Peter Parker/ Spider-Man, with Emma Stone, 23, as his love inter- est (they're a real-life couple as Afek well). Garfield's Andrew film breakthrough Garfield came in The Social July 5 e 2012 Network, in which he played Eduardo Saverin, a real-life Jewish Brazilian who aided Mark Zuckerberg (played by Jesse Eisenberg) in the creation of Facebook. Garfield was born in LA and raised in London, where his paternal grand- father, Samuel Garfinkel, grew up. The son of Polish-born Jews; Garfinkel changed his name after moving to the U.S. Andrew's father, Richard, was born here in 1950. Andrew was 3 years old when his parents moved to England in 1986; they opened a small design busi- ness there. Andrew's mother, Linda, is English-born. It isn't clear whether she is Jewish, but the actor has called himself Jewish in interviews, saying he eats matzah ball soup every day he's in New York, where he lives with Stone. Playing Peter Parker's mother, Mary Parker, is Embetz Davidtz, 46, best known for her bravura performance as Helen Hirsch, a real-life Jewish woman who worked as a maid in the home of the concentration camp com- mander in 1993's Schindler's List. In 2002, Davidtz married Jewish attor- ney Jerry Sloane in what brief press reports described as a Jewish wedding (so she may have converted). She and Sloane have two children. Woody Does Roma Opening Friday, July 6, is the new Woody Allen flick, To Rome with Love, a series of vignettes with a light comic air. Allen, 76, acts in this one, playing an American opera direc- tor. One segment features Jesse Eisenberg, 28, as an American archi- tect living in Rome with his girlfriend (Greta Gerwig). Complications ensue when he falls hard for his girlfriend's best friend (Ellen Page). On Father's Day, Allen's only bio- logical child (with Mia Woody Allen Farrow), Ronan (ne Satchel) Farrow, 24, tweeted, "Happy father's day – or as they call it in my family, happy brother-in-law's day." Ronan was 5 when, in 1992, his father left Mia for her daughter Soon- Yi Previn, now 41. Allen is paying a price for his behavior: the contempt of a son who by any standard is an extraordinary person. Ronan gradu- ated from college at 15, studied law at Yale and is now a prominent human rights attorney. Last December, he was named a Rhodes Scholar. E