Federation Star - December 2021

Page 29

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

December 2021

Federation Star

5A

“West Side Story” and other new flicks, a TV show, recommendations Stars of David By Nate Bloom, Stars of David Contributing Columnist

E

ditor’s Note: Persons in bold are deemed by Nate Bloom to be Jewish for the purpose of this column. Persons identified as Jewish have at least one Jewish parent and were not raised in, or identify with, a faith other than Judaism. Converts to Judaism, of course, are also identified as Jewish. The ‘biggest” movie to open in December is a remake of “West Side Story” (opens Dec. 10). This new version of the great musical was directed by Steven Spielberg, 74, and the screenplay was written by Tony Kushner, 65. They first worked together on Spielberg’s acclaimed film “Lincoln” (2012). Kushner was Oscar-nominated for his “Lincoln” screenplay, and Spielberg earned a best director nomination. They also teamed up for “The Fabelmans,” a semi-autobiographical film about Spielberg’s “comingof-age” years that will open in 2022. Spielberg directed the film and co-wrote the original screenplay with Kushner. Here’s “West Side Story’s” very Jewish origin story. Around 1955, choreographer Jerome Robbins “pitched” the idea of a modernized musical version of “Romeo & Juliet.” Romeo would be a young Irish Catholic guy, and Juliet would be a Jewish teenage Holocaust survivor.

Everybody eventually agreed that this update didn’t work. It was too much like “Abie’s Irish Rose,” a schmaltzy hit play about a Catholic/Jewish couple. Not long after, news stories broke about fights in New York between gangs of “white kids” and recent Puerto Rican immigrants. They decided to make Juliet (Maria) Puerto Rican, and Romeo (Tony) a native-born white guy. The Broadway creative team was “all Jewish:” Robbins directed and choreographed; Arthur Laurents penned the “book” (story, dialogue); Leonard Bernstein wrote the music; and Stephen Sondheim, now 91, penned the lyrics. The Broadway musical (1957) was a smash hit, as was the 1961 film. The new film is “still” set in the mid-’50s. It retains the original score and closely follows Laurents’ “book.” As for Jews in the cast? Well, Corey Stoll, 45, has a supporting role as police lieutenant Schrank. And then there’s Ansel Elgort, 27, who costars as Tony. You decide whether you view him as Jewish. My sense is that he’s secular. Ansel’s mother is of non-Jewish background. His mother’s mother was sent to a Nazi concentration camp for saving Jewish children. Ansel’s father, Arthur Elgort, 81,

is a well-known fashion photographer. Arthur’s father was Jewish and his mother wasn’t born Jewish. But I was recently referred to a 1982 interview in which Arthur referenced his bar mitzvah — so, clearly, he was raised Jewish. Also, I think it likely that Arthur’s mother converted to Judaism. In 1953, few rabbis would preside over a bar mitzvah if the boy’s mother wasn’t Jewish. “Licorice Pizza” (opened Nov. 26) is a coming-of-age film directed and written by the “quirky” Paul Thomas Anderson. Anderson is a big fan of the popular band “Haim” (three real-life Jewish sisters) and he cast Alana Haim, 29, in her first acting role. She costars as a teen involved in a high school romance. The cast includes Sean Penn, 61, Skyler Gisondo, 25, Benny Safdie, 37, Maya Rudolph, 49, and Destry Allyn Spielberg, 24 (Steven’s daughter). Opening in theaters on Dec. 17 is “Nightmare Alley,” a remake of a harrowing 1947 film about the rise and gruesome fall of a con man. Bradley Cooper stars as the con man. The supporting cast includes Ron Perlman, 71, and Tim Blake Nelson, 57. As I write this, I know December is the premiere month of the HBO Max

series, “And Just Like That” (a “reboot” of “Sex and the City”). But no start date has been announced. Sarah Jessica Parker, 55, who plays star character Carrie, is in the reboot, as is Evan Handler, 60, who plays Harry, the Jewish husband of star character Charlotte (who converted to Judaism before marrying Harry). Sad to note: Willie Garson, who played Stanford, Carrie’s gay friend, was reported to be in the reboot earlier this year. But it’s unclear if Garson filmed any episodes before he died (Sept. 17) of pancreatic cancer. Finally, here’s two little-known flicks I recently ‘discovered’ that can counter the deluge of Xmas films. They are now streaming on Tubi, a free app (with ads) now easily available (Roku, Amazon Fire, online, etc.). “Arranged” is a really charming and insightful 2007 film about a young Orthodox NYC public school teacher (Zoe Lister-Jones) who accepts that her marriage will be arranged but won’t settle for just anybody. The other, “The Yankles,” is a 2015 comedy/drama about an Orthodox rabbinical seminary that decides to have its own baseball team. Not great, but not bad at all and, wow, truly unique.

Ultimately, it’s your experience that matters. To be sure, we’re proud of our more than 30 years of experience in senior living. But, to us, what really matters is your experience at our community. We do everything with that idea clearly in mind. So, go ahead, enjoy yourself with great social opportunities and amenities. Savor fine dining every day. And feel assured that assisted living services are always available if needed. We invite you to experience The Carlisle at our upcoming event.

Holiday Concert

Friday, December 10th • 4:00pm Join us for a festive holiday concert. Appetizers & refreshments will be served. To RSVP, please call 239.444.6891.

CARF-ACCREDITED INDEPENDENT & ASSISTED LIVING RESIDENCES • ECC LI CENSED 6945 Carlisle Court • Naples, FL • TheCarlisleNaples.com • 239.444.6891

EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY

ASSISTED LIVING FACILITY #9408

Located just south of Orange Blossom Drive on the west side of Airport-Pulling Road

D I N I N G O P TIO N S • TR AN S P O RTATI O N • VI B R ANT WE LLN E S S P RO G R AM S


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Welcoming Jews from all backgrounds

2min
page 42

A return to normalcy

1min
page 41

See Israel 2022

2min
page 40

JCMI members look to December activities

1min
page 39

Being part of one family

2min
page 39

So much happening

3min
page 38

Lessons from the past

3min
page 38

Affirming our identity

3min
page 37

Be careful what you wish for

3min
page 36

More than 1,500 gather virtually for U.S.-Israel conference aiming to help solve social crises

3min
page 34

FIDF conducts first live community town hall with IDF officers

1min
page 33

Our immigrant relatives brought “Happy Sylvester” to Israel!

3min
page 32

The best thing about Hanukkah

4min
page 30

“West Side Story” and other new flicks, a TV show, recommendations

3min
page 29

Musicians wanted

1min
page 28

“Bordello, The Musical”

3min
page 28

Can a clandestine critic overcome his crippling fear of Shakespeare?

3min
page 25

Bringing the community together

2min
page 23

Shalom Naples!

1min
page 22

Five fun facts about Chanukah

2min
page 21

Working together for the common good

2min
page 20

Who we are

1min
page 18

Moments in history

2min
page 18

Holocaust Museum’s 20th Anniversary celebration begins

3min
page 17

Temple Shalom events open to the community

1min
page 16

Taking care of our seniors

1min
page 16

Pomegranate Society’s new season officially underway

2min
page 14

WCA welcomes new members, expanding our community of friendship

3min
page 13

Have fun! (MCA style)

3min
page 12

PJ family spotlight

1min
page 10

PJ Library news

1min
page 10

Your support brings our new cultural center closer to reality!

6min
pages 8-9

Next phase for the Capital Campaign

1min
page 6

Books make great gifts

3min
page 5

Two upcoming Catholic-Jewish Dialogue events

1min
page 4

The “Pope’s Rabbi” is coming to town

1min
page 4

Happy holidays!

2min
page 4

Good news from Israel

1min
page 3

“Anti-Semitism: Ancient Threat in a Modern World”

1min
page 3

Construction has begun

2min
page 2

Celebrate campaign and community

2min
page 1
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.