arts & entertainment >> editor's picks Abo u t CLASSICAL NOTES Music Director Leonard Slatkin leads the Detroit Symphony Orchestra in an all- Rachmaninoff program at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday and 3 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 19-21, at Orchestra Hall. Selections include Piano Concerto No. 3 (with piano soloist Olga Kern), Caprice Bohemian and Isle of the Dead. Tickets start at $15. (313) 576- 5111; dso.org . New York-born, London-based concert pianist Murray Perahia — regarded as one of the world's finest pianists — is the son of Sephardic Jewish immigrants from Greece. He'll perform in a University Musical Society recital at 8 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 20, at Hill Auditorium in Ann Arbor. The pro- gram includes works by Haydn, Schubert, Beethoven, Schumann and Chopin. In 2009, Perahia was appointed president of the non- profit Jerusalem Music Center, established by violinist Isaac Stern; it is a national resource for music and music education communities in Israel, encouraging the country's finest talents. $10-$75. (734) 764- 2583; tickets.ums.org . The Birmingham-Bloomfield Symphony Orchestra opens its 38th season, titled "Virtuoso Nights," at 7 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 21, in the auditorium of Birmingham's Seaholm High School. Replacing pianist and former Detroiter David Syme, who was originally sched- uled to perform Rachmaninoff's Piano Concerto No. 2 in C minor, will be Russian- born Ivan Moschuk, a 2010 Gilmore Young Artist and the first GYA from Michigan. The graduate of Grosse Pointe South High School currently studies at Peabody Conservatory of Music at Johns Hopkins University. In addition, the BBSO will perform Felix Mendelssohn's Overture to A Midsummer Night's Dream and Mozart's Symphony No. 36 in C ("Linz"). Adult tickets: $22 in advance and $25 at the door. A four-concert subscription is available for $80 and a three-concert subscription for $63. Those 18 years and younger may attend BBSO concerts free of charge. (248) 352-2276; bbso.org . POP / ROCK / JAZZ / FOLK Pop/jazz quartet the Manhattan Transfer — with vocalists Tim Hauser, Alan Paul, Jews Nate Bloom Special to the Jewish News TV Notes A new. scripted 12-episode MTV drama, Underemployed, which debuted Oct. 16 and airs 10 p.m. Tuesdays (with many encore show- ings), follows the lives of five friends coping with the problems our current economy poses for new 52 October 18 • 2012 Janis Siegel and Cheryl Eastern Michigan Bentyne — is celebrat- University Theatre presents ing its 40th anniversary; William Shakespeare's The hear the group at 8 Merchant of Venice — the p.m. Saturday, Oct. 20, Bard's controversial and at Macomb Center for most famous Jewish char- Gail Zimmerman the Performing Arts in acter, Shylock the money- Arts Editor Clinton Township. $42- lender, is both villain and $52. (586) 286-2222; victim of anti-Semitism macombcenter.com . — at EMU's Quirk Theater (Ford Street, The Detroit Symphony Orchestra's off Lowell at Jarvis) in Ypsilanti at 7 p.m Lerner & Loewe program, originally sched- Fridays and Saturdays, Oct. 19-20 and uled to feature the late Marvin Hamlisch as 26-27; 10 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 25; and 2 conductor, will now present Pops conduc- p.m. Sundays, Oct. 21 and 28. $7-$15. tor Jeff Tyzik and vocalist Ann Hampton (734) 487-2282; www.emutix.com . Calloway in a Hamlisch tribute: The Way Based on P.L. Travers' stories and the We Were — A Tribute to Hamlisch er classic 1964 Walt Disney film, the stage Streisand. Calloway will perform her tour- version of Mary Poppins features the ing program, The Streisand Songbook, Academy Award-winning music and lyri cs while Tyzik will lead the DSO in A Chorus of Richard M. Sherman and Robert Line medley, an arrangement of some of B. Sherman, a book by Julian Fellowes Hamlisch's most treasured compositions (Downton Abbey) and additional songs and more. Performances are scheduled at and lyrics by George Stiles and Anthony 10:45 a.m. Friday and 8 p.m. Saturday, Nov. Drewe. The musical returns Oct. 23-28 to 2-3, at Detroit's Orchestra Hall. All tickets Detroit: 7:30 p.m. Tuesday-Friday, 2 and for the Lerner & Loewe concert are valid for 7:30 p.m. Saturday and 1:30 and 6:30 p.m the Hamlisch tribute (call the box office to Sunday at the Fisher Theatre. Tickets star t exchange tickets for another performance if at $34. (313) 872-1000; broadwayindetro it. you do not wish to attend the Hamlisch trib- COM. ute). $19 and up. (313) 576-5111; dso.org . Meadow Brook Theatre's Michigan premiere production of The Haunting ON THE STAGE of Hill House, based on the 1959 horror novel by Shirley Jackson and co-starring Wayne State University's Studio Theatre, Leslie Ann Handelman as Theodora (th e in the lower level of the Hilberry Theatre native Detroiter's other MBT roles includ e on WSU's campus, stages Arthur Miller's Reunion: A Musical Epic in Miniature Broken Glass, directed by Bilha Birman- and Enchanted April), runs through Oct Rivlin, at 8 p.m. Thursdays-Saturdays, 28. Show times and tickets: (248) 377- Oct. 18-27. The drama is set just after 3300; mbtheatre.com . Kristallnacht when Sylvia Gellburg, after reading about the events in the newspaper, THE BIG SCREEN collapses without explanation and becomes paralyzed from her hips down. The family The Penny W Stamps Speaker Series hires Dr. Hyman, who embarks on a painful of the U-M School of Art and Design yet persistent investigation into the buried presents controversial Hollywood film secrets of the Gellburg family. $10-$12. director Oliver Stone at 5:10 p.m. (313) 577-2972; www.wsustudio.com . Thursday, Oct. 25, at the Michigan The Dexter Community Players pres- Theater, 603 E. Liberty, in downtown Ann ent the musical gore-fest Evil Dead: The Arbor. He'll discuss his current project, Musical, an amalgam of Sam Raimi's the 10-part TV documentary The Untold cult-classic 1980s low-budget horror-film History of the United States, which focuses trilogy, at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays on the last 60 years of America's history, and 7 p.m. Sundays, Oct. 19-21 and 26-28, debunking some heroes while crediting at Copeland Auditorium, 7714 Ann Arbor those previously lost to history. Free of St., Dexter. $15-$20. (734) 726-0355; charge and open to the public. (734) 936- dextercommunityplayers.org . 0671; art-design.umich.edu . college grads. Jared Kusnitz, 21, plays Lou, an aspiring environmen- talist. Kusnitz recent- ly tweeted: "My mom just compared me to [singer] Adam Levine. Her main comparison being that we're both tall, skinny and Jewish." Kusnitz Night of Too Many Stars: America Comes Together for Autism Programs airs at 8 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 21, on Comedy Central, hosted by Jon Stewart, 49, with the following set to appear: Seth Rogen, 30, Jerry Seinfeld, 58, Bob Saget, 56, Matthew Broderick, 50, and Robert Smigel, 52. Briefly Noted Actress Mila Kunis, 29, was named THE SMALL SCREEN Relationship adviser Dr. Terri Orbuch of West Bloomfield, a professor and marriage and family therapist known as "The Love Doctor," will appear on Katie, the new Katie Couric talk show airing 3-4 p.m. weekdays on ABC, on Monday, Oct. 22. She is scheduled to appear in a segment beginning at 3:30 p.m.; Susan Sarandon appears in the show's first half-hour. FAMILY FUN Wild Swan Theater presents Frog and Toad, an adaptation of author Arnold Lobel's humorous and compassionate stories about two animal friends who stick together through thick and thin, at 10 a.m. Thursday, 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. Friday and 11 a.m. Saturday, Oct. 18-20, at Washtenaw Community College, Morris Lawrence Building, Towsley Auditorium, 4800 E. Huron River Drive, in Ann Arbor. $8-$12. (734) 995-0530; wildswantheater. org. THE ART SCENE Arts Minds, a lecture series at the Detroit Institute of Arts featuring fresh views and candid conversations on art, culture and history, takes place in the DIM Marvin and Betty Danto Lecture Hall. At 7 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 24, David Kraemer, the Joseph J. and Dora Abbell Librarian and Professor of Talmud and Rabbinics at Jewish Theological Seminary in New York, will speak on Jewish Creativity Under Islam. In the year 1,000, an estimated 90 percent of all Jews lived in Muslim lands, where they remained an important presence for years to come. Kraemer will explore the flowering of Jewish cultural creativity during good times and bad. There will be a reception at 6 p.m. with light hors d'oeuvres (dietary restrictions will be observed) and an open bar hosted by the DIA auxiliary Asian and Islamic Art Forum (AIAF). The lecture is sponsored by the Jewish Theological Seminary and MAE The reception and talk are free, but reservations are required; (248) 258-0055 or toclouser@jtsa.edu , or go to http://www. eventbrite.com/event/4379424978#. the "Sexiest Woman Alive" in the November issue of Esquire. The magazine describes her as "the most beautiful, opinion- ated, talkative and funny movie star that we've all known since she was 9." E Kunis