arts & life Patricia Arquette Graham Moore At The Oscars A Jewish "Who's Who" of the 2015 Academy Award nominees. The 87th Academy Awards are being presented on Sunday, Feb. 22 (8:30 p.m. on ABC), hosted by Neil Patrick Harris. Nate Bloom Special to the Jewish News W hat do we love most about watching the Oscars (besides the films, of course)? The dresses. After that, it's guessing which nominees from the Hollywood tribe are members of our tribe. So we've compiled a list to enhance your viewing pleasure. Here, the Jewish nominees in all but the technical categories: Best Supporting Actress: Patricia Arquette, 46, for Boyhood. A little insight into Arquette's background, as reported in 2011 by the Brit paper the Telegraph: "The classic middle child, the mother hen, was brought up to question authority, to believe that anything was pos- sible, even religious harmony: Her father was Muslim [by con- version], her mother Jewish and she was sent to a Catholic school. She was harshly disabused of that idea when, at the age of 5 or 6, a teacher told her that she couldn't take communion because `your mother is Jewish and she's going to hell. `You know what?' responded the young Arquette, who had wanted to be a nun, 'I think your Jesus and my Jesus are different."' While sincerely spiritual, Arquette doesn't follow any organized religion. Her sister, Rosanna, 55, who had her only child with a Jewish husband and is now married to another (obser- vant) Jewish guy, is the most Jewishly affiliated of the Arquette acting family. Best Director: Bennett Miller, 48, Foxcatcher; Best Original Screenplay: Dan Futterman, 47, Foxcatcher (with E. Max Frye, who isn't Jewish). Futterman's wife, Anya Epstein, 44, is the grand- daughter of the late Philip G. Epstein, who was a co-winner (with twin brother, Julius J.) of the 1943 screenplay Oscar for Casablanca. Her brother, Theo Epstein, 42, is a baseball execu- tive who turned the Boston Red Sox into champions and is now trying to turn around the Chicago Cubs; Best Adapted Screenplay: Graham Moore, 32, The Imitation Game. Moore's mother, Susan Sher, 69, formerly served as Michelle Obama's chief of staff and she was also White House liaison to the Jewish community. Moore recently said, "My Judaism has felt more and more important to me, and more and more of a social identifier. My grandparents passed away a few years ago, and I was very close to them, and for their generation, their Jewish identity was extremely important. And after they passed away, this notion that my mother and I would become the keepers of this tradition became very apparent and very important." Best Documentary, feature length: John Maloof, who is Lebanese- American (and not Jewish), and Charlie Siskel, 44, who is Jewish (he's the nephew of the late film critic Gene Siskel), for Finding Vivian Maier. Best Live Action Short Film: Oded Binnun and Mihal Brezis, who are both Israeli, for the French-Israeli film, Aya, a film about a young woman waiting at an airport who has an unexpected encoun- ter with an arriving passenger. Reports say the filmmakers are now working on a feature-length version of Aya. OSCARS on page 45 February 19 • 2015 41