arts & life Let It Be Never got to see the Beatles perform? Here's second best. Members of Let It Be Let It Be: A Celebration of the Music of the Beatles starts at 7:30 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 22, at the Sound Board at the MotorCity Casino Hotel, Detroit. $24- $35. (866) STAY-MCC; SoundBoardDetroit.com . Celebrity Jews Nate Bloom Special to the Jewish News TV TAKES I recently watched the first two episodes of the new late-night TLC talk show, All About Sex – not bad; not great (new epi- sodes air Saturdays at 11 p.m.). The panel is certainly diverse: It includes Korean-American comedian Margaret Cho, whose grandfather was a Protestant minister and who is open about her bisexual past but is long- married to a man; comedian Heather McDonald (Chelsea Lately), a practicing Catholic and mother of three; Marissa 42 February 19 • 2015 I Suzanne Chessler Contributing Writer R euven Gershon was born after the Beatles became international stars. But as a child interested in singing and music, he loved and learned their songs. When Gershon achieved his own level of fame portraying Buddy Holly in the Buddy Holly Story, a musical-theater pro- duction, he once got to meet briefly with Paul McCartney. Now, years later, he portrays John Lennon in an international tour that brings him to Sound Board at the MotorCity Casino Hotel in Detroit on Sunday, Feb. 22. In Let It Be: A Celebration of the Music of the Beatles, more than 40 hits — including "She Loves You," "Here Comes the Sun" and "Hey Jude" — from every stage of the groups constantly evolving career will be performed against the backdrop of historic video footage. "Playing Beatles' music onstage and traveling all over the world to play John Lennon is a dream job for me Gershon says. "Without realizing it, I was preparing [my whole life] for the job I got. I read so much about the Beatles. I listened to their music constantly since the age of Jaret Winokur, 42, who is the shyest about talking about sex; and an African-American thera- pist, Dr. Tiffanie Davis Henry. They take video calls from regular folks and sometimes bring in their personal lives. Winokur is best known for winning a 2003 Tony for the lead role in the stage musi- cal version of Hairspray. Since then, she has kept in the pub- lic eye via TV guest shots, a short stint on The Talk and on Dancing with the Stars. She and her Jewish husband are syna- gogue members and they have a son. By the way, Cho wrote the best, funniest and most moving account of Joan Rivers' 10. I watched as much footage as is available just for fun because I enjoyed it:' Gershon, raised in England and still based in London, appeared in the show in his home city before bringing it to Broadway and taking it on tour. "There are five of us — the four [band members] plus an additional musician covering all the parts that the Beatles couldn't do as a live foursome says Gershon, near 30 and single. "The Beatles started off as a live band, but they added orchestras and all kinds of special effects. Sometimes, George Martin played piano on their tracks. We needed an extra musician for that:' Gershon had his first taste of performing on stage with parts in small religious presentations at the Jewish day school that he attended, including playing a guard in a play about Esther. And at home, his father sang and often imperson- ated Al Jolson, possibly influencing Gershon's interest in taking on roles of actual entertainers. "I had a book and a cheap, sec- ond-hand guitar from an aunt who didn't want it:' says Gershon, who is self-taught. "My mom said she wasn't buying me a guitar because she thought I would pick it up and lose interest "I had a little bit of help from my older brother. He showed me the chords. After I got the chords together, someone brought me a Beatles book, and I started to play Beatles' songs:' funeral I've read (visit margaretcho.com and click "blog"). Among other things, she notes that one of the big- gest criers at Rivers' funeral was John Waters, the irreverent creator of Hairspray. Sarah Jessica Parker, 49, is filming an HBO pilot, Divorce, a comedy about a woman involved in a drawn- out divorce. Thomas Haden Church plays her husband, with Talia Balsam, Parker 55, playing a friend of Gershon, who studied drama at Middlesex University in London, describes bonding with the touring performers. "We love the music, and ifs exciting to play together as a band:' he says. "We've formed friendships with that:' Also longtime fans of the music are Canadians Jeff Parry and Rubin Fogel, who have been on the pro- duction team in different locations. Parry, who notes that fans keep on buying Beatles' recordings, feels a responsibility to replicate perfor- mances for audiences who likely never got to see the four stars in person. Fogel, partial to Lennon, takes note of today's sound and lighting technology that would not have been available when the Beatles were at their peak. He also points out that the later songs were never performed live. Gershon says that there are many Beatles songs that remain personal to him, but "Help" stands out. "I used to enjoy singing 'Help' when I was a kid:' he recalls. "The lyrics are about someone crying out for help, and anyone can relate to that during certain times in life:' Gershon, who loves rock 'II' roll, points out that Let It Be offers some different challenges from the Buddy Holly production. While Let It Be is nonstop music, the Holly theater piece presented a life story. "Buddy Holly was a geeky young kid with glasses and made [kids] across the world think that maybe they also could be rock stars," he says. "John Lennon probably was one of the kids who thought that:' ❑ Parker's. (She's the daugh- ter of the late actor Martin Balsam as well as the first Mrs. George Clooney.) It's like- ly, but not certain, that HBO will turn the pilot into a series. jock (Robbie Amell) to help reinvent her- self. The direc- tor, Ari Sandel, 40, won a 2007 Oscar .", for his short Sandel musical film, West Bank Story, about a Jewish man and a Palestinian woman who run adjoining food stands and fall in love despite their families' opposition. It's a Hollywood tradition to give directors of Oscar-winning shorts a shot at helming a light feature film. If it's a hit, they often go on to big things. ❑ AT THE MOVIES Opening this week: The teen comedy, The Duff, opens on Friday, Feb. 20. Basic plot: Bianca (Mae Whitman), a happy high-school senior, is destroyed when she learns her whole class has labeled her "The Duff" – Designated Ugly Fat Friend to her prettier, more popular friends (Skyler Samuels and Bianca Santos). She enlists a slick but charming