arts & entertainment Community Jewel from page 45 "Whether we end in the black or in the red varies from year to year, but its always close." - JET Artistic Director David Magidson cessful," says August, a commercial real estate attorney who volunteered for his high school stage crew. "Surviving was an accomplishment when some theaters went down. People have been reallocating finances to social service organizations instead of the arts because of the economy. "I hope we can develop more youth programs, such as The Diary of Anne Frank, which are affordable for schools." Last year, the Anne Frank production was seen by almost 25,000 students, who gained insight into the Holocaust. In order to keep tickets at minimal prices, JET raised $13,000 from donors. Following Trends David Chack is president of the Association for Jewish Theatre, a now- global community dedicated to helping members produce plays "relevant to Jewish life and values" that counts JET as a member. "Over the last few years, we have seen at least four or five Jewish theaters close, but more have started to replace them so the number of about 30 Jewish theaters remains pretty constant:' says Chack. "Some of the more popular produc- tions in the last couple of years have been The Whipping Man, My Mother's Lesbian Jewish Wiccan Wedding, The God of Isaac and Women's Minyan. A lot of the newer plays deal with intermarriage and intercultural themes. "There also are many performers doing solo, narrative Jewish theater pieces, such as Rebecca Joy Fletcher with Cities of Light, Antonia Lasser with The God Box and Belle Linda Halpern with Cravings: Songs of Hunger and Satisfaction." JET reflects these trends. It has pre- sented three of the four cast productions listed by Chack and has included solo shows in recent seasons. For the 2013-2014 lineup, Tim Newell will recall comedian Jack Benny in New Year's Eve performances of Mr. Benny by Mark Humphrey, and Halpern's show has been slated for March 22. Susan and Dr. Joel Seidman of Bloomfield Hills do not describe them- selves as observant, but they feel a strong connection to the subjects addressed by the non-musical JET productions and have held season tickets for some 20 years. "Our connection to Judaism is emo- tional, and we feel that connection in the plays presented by JET," says Susan Seidman, a retired school social worker. "We have taken our children to shows and meet friends as they attend. "While themes are related to Judaism, they also are universal. I particularly think of Photograph 51, which had to do with issues faced by working women." Pursuing The Provocative Mary Lou Zieve, who has been a broad- caster and appeared in JET productions, has been active with the company since it was founded. She worked closely with Evelyn Orbach, artistic director emeritus, who was at the helm for about 20 years as JET stabilized with Equity status. Zieve will be honored, along with Doreen and the late David Hermelin, at the fall fundraiser co-chaired by Gina and Arthur Horwitz. The event will be held Oct. 14 at Glen Oaks Country Club in Farmington Hills. "We want to bring provocative produc- tions to JET, creating works that make people think and question," Zieve says. "We also want to give experiences that let audiences get lost in something out- side themselves, whether through drama or comedy." Zieve believes the JET board has realistic expectations about engaging younger people as regular members of the audience, which generally tend to include those over 55. It is understood that work and family commitments, as well as budgeting and time constraints, make it hard to buy season subscriptions for those in their 20s to early 50s. The annual "Festival of New Plays" invites audiences — at various times and places — to express their reactions to staged readings of emerging works. Films, such as Joe Papp in Five Acts, will be presented three times on March 19 to draw attention to theater icons through the popular medium of cinema. Suzanne Curtis, who has participated in amateur productions for Hadassah and Tam-O-Shanter Country Club in West Bloomfield, has served on the com- mittee that picks the plays. Hundreds are read before the final selections are made, and committee members want to include projects to attract those who cannot be in the audi- ence for an entire season. On an average, each audience consists of half subscription patrons and half individual ticket holders. Elaine Sturman, former president of the Greater Detroit Chapter of Hadassah, is most proud of the productions that go out to the schools, informing and enter- taining the very young. "I believe these plays that take stands, whether about the Holocaust or bully- ing, help children grow up responsibly:' says Sturman, a longtime subscriber who has brought her own children to see JET productions. "On a larger scale, I have especially appreciated JET because it is professional theater in my own neighborhood, and it gives the community a say in what is produced. "What I have seen is relevant to my life — about the way we live or should live today." Chack remains mindful of the continu- ing impact of the Jewish stage. "The longevity of Jewish theater today is a testament to the ways not only Jewish communities support the arts and culture but also how valuable Jewish ideas, culture and creativity are to the world at large," he says. "The creativity of the Jewish people is at the core of Jewish survival, and theater is one of the oldest art forms to which the Jewish people have contributed, going back to Jewish-Greek plays and reaching through modern Jewish dilem- mas:' affection and perhaps love, the conjurer Schaalman's arrival in New York threatens to pull them apart. It takes a skillful fabulist to successfully mix together the realistic and the fantas- tical, and Wecker casts a spell powerful enough to keep us reading, if not always believing, until the end. At times there is a distracting overlay of 21st-century sensibility in the interactions between characters, and Ahmad's backstory from the Arabian desert of a thousand years ago feels drawn out. Most troubling, the plot complications of the last third of the book can begin to border on melodrama. Still, while Wecker's portraits of Chava and Ahmad could have fallen easily ❑ For more information about JET programming, call (248) 788-2900 or visit www.jettheatre.org . Greenhorns from page 47 flask, dubs him "Ahmad" and employs him as his assistant. Even so, neither mentor can control their proteges or ensure their safety, espe- cially not at night — the hours when most of the city snoozes cozily in bed but when Chava and Ahmad, who have no need for sleep, escape boredom by wandering the streets. It is during these nighttime esca- pades that they first encounter each other, and before long they develop a mutual fascination based on the odd affinities they share as strange beings in a city of strangers. Their nocturnal forays through Central Park, the Bowery, Brooklyn and other 48 July 18 • 2013 parts of New York provide the scenic back- drop to conversations laced with philoso- phy, ethics, even theology. At times, these exchanges take on the earnest sound of late-night college dormi- tory discourses: How do you make sense of the world? What is free will? Can nur- ture reshape our nature? Is there a God? Can you ever really know someone else? What is the responsibility we owe to one another? But their conversations also serve as a means of deepening each other's under- standing of ethics, mentshlichkeit and love. And even as the relationship between the Golem and the Jinni grows into into caricature, she has endowed them with quirky, distinctive personalities that engage us throughout. In the end, these flaws within the magical weave do not take away from the pleasures of the design as a whole. In her debut novel, Wecker has pulled off a trick as deft as any Jinni. ❑ Diane Cole, author of the memoir After Great Pain: A New Life Emerges, writes for the Wall Street Journal among other national publications and is a faculty member of the Skirball Center for Adult Jewish Learning at Temple Emanu-El in New York City.