arts & entertainment >> editor's picks CLASSICAL NOTES The Juilliard String Quartet opens the 69th season of the Chamber Music Society of Detroit at 8 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 8, at the Seligman Performing Arts Center, 22305 W. 13 Mile Road, Beverly Hills. The quartet, founded in 1946 by then-Juilliard School President William Schuman, will perform two of Beethoven's late string quartets, widely considered to be among the greatest musical compositions of all time. At 8 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 15, duo pianists Christina and Michelle Naughton open CMSD's piano series. $30-$60; student tickets available. (248) 855-6070; chambermusicdetroit.org. The Ann Arbor Symphony Orchestra, under the baton of Maestro Arie Lipsky and joined by four vocal soloists and four Southeastern Michigan choruses, opens its 2012-2013 season at 8 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 15, at Hill Auditorium in Ann Arbor with an all-Beethoven concert. $10-$58. (734) 994-4801; a2so.com . F About POP / ROCK / JAZZ / FOLK Nashville-based Melissa Greener, an interna- tionally touring singer- songwriter-guitarist in the contemporary folk- pop tradition, frequently returns to perform concerts in her native Detroit. She'll present her original songs at 8 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 8, at the Trinity House Theater, 38840 W. Six Mile Road, Livonia. $12-$15. (734) 464- 6302; trinityhousetheatre.org . In support of its new album, Clockwork Angels, Canadian rock trio Rush, includ- ing lead singer/bassist Geddy Lee (ne Gary Weinrib, the son of Jewish refugees from Poland), takes the stage at the Palace of Auburn Hills at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 18. $49.50-$126. (248) 745-3000; palacenet.com. ON THE STAGE Two Muses Theatre presents the world premiere of A Little Work, a play about a writer of self- image help books who gets a little work done, by best-sell- ing authors Anita Diamant (The Red Tent) and Stephen McCauley (The Object of My Affection) at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays and 2 p.m. Sundays, Sept. 7-30, in the theater inside Barnes & Noble Booksellers, 6800 Orchard Lake Road, West Bloomfield. The large cast, including Maureen Mansfield (Maxine) of Farmington Hills and Rae McIntosh (Ruth) of Beverly Hills, is filled with women, supporting Two Muses' mission to provide opportunities in theater for female artists. The authors will discuss the play and read from recent work at Barnes & Noble at 6:30 p.m. Sept. 8, prior to the performance, and will take questions from the audience following the 2 p.m. matinee on Sept. 9. Advance tickets: $18 adults/$15 students and senior citizens/$2 additional at the door. (248) 850-9919; twomusestheatre.org . The Village Players present the Tony Award-winning drama A Man for All Seasons about Sir Thomas More's struggle to balance his life between politics and con- science in the time of Henry VIII, at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays and 2 p.m. Sundays, Sept. 7-16, at Village Players Playhouse, 34660 Woodward, Birmingham. Groves High School senior Brendan Alpiner (Richard Rich) and Birmingham architect Stephen Sussman (Villain) are in the cast. $17. (248) 644-2075; birminghamvillageplayers.com . Northville's Tipping Point Theatre presents Deathtrap, a comedy thriller by Ira Levin (Rosemary's Baby), at 8 p.m. Thursdays and Fridays, 3 and 8 p.m. Saturdays and 2 p.m. Sundays, Sept. 7-Oct. 7. 361 E. Cady St. $29-$32. (248) 347-0003; tippingpointthreatre.com . Stagecrafters kicks off its season with Legally Blonde — The Musical, run- ning Sept. 7-30 at the Baldwin Theatre in downtown Royal Oak. $18-$20/student and senior discounts. Show times and tickets: (248) 541-6430; stagecrafters.org. Out & About on page 33 Playwright from page 31 up and ally himself with the Jews of [Israel], which was still a dream. There is certainly a debate in the play between Hecht, who says people have to wear their Judaism on their sleeves if need be, and Selznick, who was very cautious [about feelings of anti-Semitism among Americans]. There's an exchange when Hecht forces Selznick to find out what non-Jewish Hollywood thinks of the Jews, and he phones Leland Hayward, a writer and a power player. Its in Hecht's book that there was real resentment of Jewish domination in the movie industry by people who had worked closely with those men. I use that, and it's one of the moments when the play gets grounded before the comedy takes over again. IN: Is there something that you did with the comedy lines that you think expresses Jewish humor? RH: Selznick wore English tweed suits, and there were no Yiddishisms in his delivery or his vocabulary. Hecht was not playing up to any archetype of Judaism whatsoever; he was an aggressive reporter in Chicago and an aggressive screenwriter in LA, not falling back on any stereotype. Victor Fleming is as Anglo as they come. I didn't want the play [to incorporate] Yiddishisms because [these three didn't use them]. JN: What does this play express about you and your approach to writing? RH: I hope each play leaves audiences thinking something never realized about the world. In this particular case, it's the discomfort that the early Jewish pioneers of Hollywood felt about being in such an exposed position and fearing that it all would disappear. This was 1938, and people knew what was happening in Europe. It was a terrifying time to be Jewish and an exposed Jew in Hollywood such as Selznick was. ❑ 32 September 6 @ 2012 The 2012-2013 Season C ooped-up Jewish writers - characters frantic with deadlines - should score lots of laughs for audiences watching the first two productions of the 2012-2013 season of the Jewish Ensemble Theatre. The first, Moonlight and Magnolias (Sept.19-Oct.7) by Ron Hutchinson, captures Jewish writer Ben Hecht as he is trapped into doctoring a weak script for Gone with the Wind. The second, Laughter on the 23rd Floor (Oct. 24-Nov.11) by Neil Simon, introduces fictional char- acters similar to the actual writers Simon knew develop- ing weekly programs for Sid Caesar's Your Show of Shows. "Our season showcases Jewish values that apply to the larger community," says David Magidson, JET artistic director, who explains that each of six major pro- ductions will run three weeks instead of four in a schedule that includes touring shows and films. Music - appropriate for JET's New Year's Eve cel- ebration - comes with the production / Do! I Do! (Dec. 5-31) by Tom Jones and Harvey Schmidt. The play recalls one couple's experiences through a 50-year marriage. A straight dramatic tone colors Photograph 51 (Jan. 23-Feb.10) by Anna Ziegler. The true story of scientist Rosalind Franklin's discovery of DNA struc- ture, it calls attention to the recognition given three men for the finding and is part of JET's Women in Science initiative. Back to comedy, End Days (March 6-24) by Deborah Zoe Laufer deals with a woman who con- verts from Judaism in her obsession with being part of the Rapture and achieving eternal life. In her kitch- en, she hangs out with Jesus Christ. Back to drama, My Name Is Asher Lev (May 1-19) by Aaron Posner explores a man's struggle in choosing between his artistic talents and dedication to Torah. Enhancing the longer-running productions will be That Dorothy Parker (Jan.12), with Carol Lempert in a biographical show as the writer/critic; and tentatively, Clutter: I'm Saving My Life and It's Killing Me (April 6), with Nancy Redman as a Jewish woman trying to clean up her life. Two films, in cooperation with the Lenore Marwil Jewish Film Festival, include Kutsher's: The Last Catskills Resort (Nov. 20) and Schmatta (April 13), which is about the Jewish pres- ence in the garment industry. A celebration of the season with "A Behind the Scenes Gala" (Oct.15) will honor Jewish News Publisher Arthur Horwitz, CEO of Renaissance Media. "I will be directing the two dramas because I haven't done that kind of directing as much with JET," says Magidson, a longtime theater professor at Wayne State University. "As we close the season with My Name Is Asher Lev, audiences will have something to think about over the summer and then hopefully think about returning for our 2013-2014 season." El - Suzanne Chessler For information about season ticket subscriptions, go to www.jettheatre.org or call (248) 788-2900.