arts&life p ro f i l e Rising Star Milana Vayntrub A WOMAN OF VALOR Up-and-coming actress, comedian and activist Milana Vayntrub headlines this year’s Woman’s World. SUZANNE CHESSLER CONTRIBUTING WRITER C atch a rising star at this year’s Lois Linden Nelson Woman’s World, presented May 2 by the Congregation Shaarey Zedek Sisterhood. The rising stars include career- building actress Milana Vayntrub, emerging synagogue leader Jeri Fishman (see sidebar) and special- ized merchandise introduced by new pop-up shops joining with favorite boutiques for the daylong sale. Vayntrub, who was born in Uzbekistan and moved to the United States with her family, will be the after-lunch featured speaker talking about Judaism, efforts to help refugees as well as professional initiatives. Before, during and after “There are principles in Judaism that are about taking care of each other, and there are elements of Judaism that have been staples in my humanitarian work.” — MILANA VAYNTRUB the program, guests will be offered a variety of goods, such as Judaica, art and pillows from the Farber Soul Center, leather products by Key to Style and upcycled fashions from Rebel Soul Apparel — all new this year. “Judaism has played a huge part in my activism,” Vayntrub, 31, explains. “There are principles in Judaism that are about taking care 62 April 19 • 2018 jn of each other, and there are ele- ments of Judaism that have been staples in my humanitarian work. I’m going to draw correlations between those.” Vayntrub, who came to the United States at the age of 2½, started doing commercials when she was 5 and living in Los Angeles. Her interest in performing waned until college classes at the University of California San Diego, where she was a communications major. She connected with Judaism through the school’s Hillel program and became bat mitzvah at age 21. “After college, I came back to Los Angeles and started doing improv comedy, which was probably the biggest stimulus I had in terms of training,” she says. “I made my own web series on YouTube, found rep- resentatives and started audition- ing.” Vayntrub, familiar to many view- ers as Lily the salesperson in AT&T commercials, appeared in the recurring role of playwright Sloane Sandburg in the massive NBC hit series This Is Us; in one episode, she told the story of Chanukah. Her newest role is Squirrel Girl in Marvel’s New Warriors, Marvel’s first live-action scripted comedy — it will be shown on Freeform, Disney’s young adult cable and satellite streaming network. Volunteering is an important focus in her life, and it often takes a specific direction. “I am a refugee who had so much help coming to this country,” she says. “I know I would not be where I am today if Jeri Fishman will be presented with the Woman of Valor award at the Lois Linden Nelson Woman’s World event at Congregation Shaarey Zedek on May 2. She is being honored as a Rising Star for the outstanding work she has accomplished at Congregation Shaarey Zedek and in the community at large. The award will be presented at the event luncheon, which will also feature rising TV and media star Milana Vayntrub. After marrying Steve Fishman (a third-generation Shaarey Zedek member) Fishman became a shul member and was thrust into the world of synagogue volunteerism. She began as a Sisterhood board member, and soon became Sisterhood president. Shortly thereaf- ter, she was elected to the Jeri Fishman Synagogue Board of Trustees and her responsibilities grew as a member of the executive board. Currently, she serves as vice president of the shul, where she is working on an inclusion program that will be open to the entire community this spring. Fishman comes by her leadership skills naturally. During her career at the Michigan Department of Corrections, she was a field agent, a case worker, a parole agent and a probation officer — it was dur- ing this time that she honed her skills as a leader and manager. She has also served on the board of the ACLU, as a community volunteer with Capuchin East Jefferson Alcoholism Treatment Center and was an active member of the Michigan Corrections Association. As a full-time wife and mother, Fishman was active in her children’s school-parent associations and attend- ed their sporting events, eventually becoming a team photographer at Cranbrook and Kingswood schools as well as Kalamazoo College. She is also the resident photographer at Congregation Shaarey Zedek. Around the synagogue, she’s often compared to the Energizer Bunny. •