arts & entertainment From The Heart Elizabeth Applebaum I Special to the Jewish News H is name was Harold Kean, but everyone called him "the Sunshine Boy." He was blind, he loved movies and he played the mandolin and sang, becoming one of WJR's most popular guests in the 1920s and '30s. Later in life, Kean became a vocal coach, and among his students was a 10-year-old named Elaine. It was a long bus ride from her home in Detroit to the Fisher Building, but it also was "a fabulous beginning" to a life of music, Elaine Serling says. "I still remem- ber standing there [in Kean's studio], sing- ing my heart out" Serling is still singing her heart out, performing throughout the world, writ- ing her own songs (both words and music), recording, teaching and work- ing as a Jewish music educator. She will appear at the Jewish Community Center of Metropolitan Detroit's Stephen Gottlieb Music Series, performing in concert at 8 p.m. Saturday, May 10, at the Berman Center for the Performing Arts in West Bloomfield, and at 1 p.m. Tuesday, May 13, at the JCC in Oak Park. Among Serling's fans is the event's Set to appear at the JCC Stephen Gottlieb Music Series, Elaine Serling is one of Metro Detroit's most beloved singers and educators. founder, Harold Gottlieb, who said: "In addition to having such a beautiful voice, she has been so dedicated to the Stephen Gottlieb Music Festival, the JCC and our community over the years." Serling, of Orchard Lake, will star in From the Heart, performing favorites from Broadway, film and pop, and some of her own songs. "Music is a two-way steer she says. Whether teaching or asking others to join with her in song or simply entertaining, Serling seeks to connect. While on stage, she often looks into the eyes of audience members, and she can see when she has expressed something in song — perhaps a hope, or longing or compassion — and those listening have felt it, and in those few seconds there is a kind of closeness between two people, a quiet but magical human con- nection for which everyone yearns. And to think — Serling began her career as a tap dancer. "My parents offered me one of three lessons; one was all we could afford; she says. "I could take piano, dance or sing- ing" After one tap lesson, "I announced: 'I think I want to take singing:" So she signed up with Harold Kean, and only five years later she was performing with the USO. At 18, Serling was asked by Rabbi A. Irving Schnipper of Congregation Beth Moses to perform for the synagogue's holiday concerts. "I didn't know what to sing for Chanukah:' she says. "'I Had a Little Dreidel' again?" No. She did not want to talk about mak- ing a dreidel out of clay. So she wrote her own song, beginning a long and award- winning career as a composer of Jewish music. In her writing, Serling was often inspired by one of her favorite genres: folk music. She loved Gordon Lightfoot, Judy Collins and Peter, Paul and Mary, and she was haunted by the seeming dichotomy of sorrow and beauty. "I never understood; she says, "how the melodies were so gor- geous but the messages were so tragic." She was asked to teach at Jewish day schools throughout the city, using music to help students understand religion and cul- ture. To Serling, Fiddler on the Roof isn't just entertainment — it's a tool that helps children experience history, like life in the shtetl or the pain of a pogrom. These days, Serling devotes most of her time to writing and singing, and she calls the voice "an instrument that has to be practiced" — and certainly not just with "Music is a two-way Elaine Serling street." - rehearsals in the shower. "My family calls it lock-down:' she says of those days just before a live appearance. She avoids crowds, meditates, does a lot of walk- ing and stays focused on a positive perfor- mance — and overcoming her stage fright. Serling, who has won awards from ASCAP (the performing rights organiza- tion) and received the Jewish Women of the Arts Award for original educational music, is also the mother of two daughters and is married to Michael, all of whom, along with her mother and late father, have always encouraged her passion for music and who "have supported me my whole life' ❑ Elaine Serling performs From the Heart at 8 p.m. Saturday, May 10, at the Berman Center for the Performing Arts (reserved seating), $15/$10 JCC members and seniors; and at 1 p.m. Tuesday, May 13, at the Oak Park JCC (general admission), no charge. (248) 661-1000; www. jccdet.org/elaine-serling. Jews Nate Bloom New Black; Tom Steyer, 57, is a very Special to the Jewish News rich hedge-fund manager who backs "green" candidates and bankrolls a community bank and a climate change center at Stanford; and Janet Yellen, 67, is an economist and the first woman head of the Federal Reserve System. Jews With Influence The May 5 issue of Time magazine includes its list of the "100 Most Influential People in the World." Here, in alphabetical order, is a list of the 2014 Jewish listees: Anat Admati, 56, born and raised in Tel Aviv, is a Stanford economist and the co-author of The Bankers' New Clothes, a book that has become a worldwide rallying point for those inter- ested in reforming our financial system; Megan Ellison, 28, film producer and daughter of Larry Ellison, 69, the uber- rich head of Oracle software, has prov- en her taste and courage, bankrolling such recent artistic/ box-office hits as Zero Dark Thirty, American Hustle and Her; Jenji Kohan, 44, is the pro- Kohan 54 May 8 • 2014 ducer and head writer of the Showtime series Weeds and the Netflix series Orange Is the Amazing Story Last year, I wrote about how actress Ginnifer Goodwin (TV's Once Upon a Time), 35, appeared before her home- town Memphis, Tenn., Reform congre- gation, where she was a bat mitzvah, and recounted how she had recently seriously returned to Jewish religious practice. Goodwin recently appeared on ABC's Jimmy Kimmel Live! and talked about her pregnancy (she's six months along) and her April 12 wedding to Josh Dallas, her TV co-star. Their Jewish wedding had only 10 guests and was conducted by Micha Greenstein, her bat mitzvah rabbi. While Dallas isn't Jewish, Goodwin made it clear to Kimmel that their child would be raised Jewish. Then she shared an amazing wedding story. Her wedding planner, Goodwin told Kimmel, called her the morning of her nuptials and, in a frantic voice, told her that the planner's car had been robbed of some its contents, including Goodwin's ketubah, or wedding con- tract. Goodwin told the planner that it would be OK. Her rabbi was at the hotel: "I'm sure that there is statio- nery there," she said, implying the rabbi could write up a replacement ketubah. Then, right after she got off the phone, Goodwin received mes- sages from her agents. She told Kimmel: "This sounds like a joke: Two Jews were walking down the street in Hollywood [and] found a piece of paper in the middle of the street, read Hebrew, knew that the 13th of Nisan was like the 12th of April, and therefore it might be important that they get this piece of paper back [to me] since my name was on it. They googled who represents me, found my reps at home on Saturday and got us back our wedding ketubah." At The Movies Neighbors, opening Friday, May 9, boasts an incredibly tribe-heavy cast and crew. The plot: Seth Rogen, 32, and Rose Byrne play a nice couple with a young baby who try to be friendly when a wild fraternity takes over a house next to their home. But the couple quickly lose their patience with the frat's all-night "rages," and a war-of-sorts ensues. Zac Efron, who has a Jewish grandparent, plays the head of the frat. During one party scene, he lays a kiss on a coed played by Halston Sage (NBC's Crisis), 20. Meanwhile, Dave Franco, 28, and Sage Christopher Mintz- Plasse, 24, play the other big frat boy parts. And then there's Lisa Kudrow, 50, as a college dean trying to tame the fra- ternity. The director, Nicholas Stoller, 38, writer of the recent Muppets mov- ies, is Jewish, too. ❑