Jewish History & Culture
171 posts found
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Columbo co-creator solves his own mystery
William Link "Now, Tom, do I look Jewish?" William Link, 77, was asking the question. Link is one of, if not the most successful producer and writer in television history, having put, with his late partner Richard Levinson, 16 series on the air, including creating "Columbo," "Murder, She Wrote," "The Cosby Mysteries" and "Mannix." They also created any number of important TV movies, including "The Execution of Private Slovik," which launched Martin Sheen's career, "That Certain Summer," which was the… -
Churchill's Stand
Who do we have to thank for Hitler's eventual defeat? What was World War II's turning point? Who, by his actions during the war, inspired Chaim Weizmann and David Ben-Gurion, Israel's early leaders? The answer, according to the Simon Wiesenthal Center's stirring new documentary, "Walking With Destiny," is Winston Churchill. Churchill, who died in 1965, is hardly a forgotten figure. To the contrary, there is a large and healthy Churchill industry producing new books, one after another, season after season.… -
Turning Qassams into Art
A work by Niso Maman The Barzilai Medical Center in Ashkelon in Southern Israel, six miles from Gaza, is a 500-bed facility with an emergency room and a teaching hospital that treats Israelis and Palestinians. Qassam rockets launched from Gaza land so regularly on the building that the top two floors are kept unoccupied as a "safety buffer." Imagine that you are Lee Wallach, an American and CEO of Community Assets Consulting, a firm specializing in assisting Israeli, international and… -
The man who was Tony Curtis
Tony Curtis was so famous, so iconic an American movie star that I don't really need to tell you who he was. He was Tony Curtis, and he lived that role with childish delight, relishing where his life had taken him, and the pleasures and opportunities fame had afforded him. By the time he died last week at age 85 at his home in the Las Vegas suburb of Henderson, Nev., he was known the world over - for the… -
The Passions of a Nobel Laureate
Given that I haven't been posting much lately, I thought perhaps I would fill the gap by publishing an interview I did for Andy Warhol's Interview back in the early 1980s with Isaac Bashevis Singer, the winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature. As I recall he was prickly but quite game -- qualities evident in the interview below, with the man I came to think of as "The Yiddish Yoda." The Passions of a Nobel Laureate: Isaac Bashevis Singer… -
What We Say When We Talk about Mel Gibson
The recent news that Mel Gibson is no longer a client of William Morris Endeavor should come as no surprise. Many news and entertainment programs, including NBC's "Today Show," pegged the delisting to Gibson's recent domestic assault allegations and tabloid leak of surreptitious tapes of racist rants he allegedly made, all arising from his custody dispute with his baby-mama Oksana Grigorieva. But Gibson was already on borrowed time at the agency. In 2006, following his Malibu arrest and anti-Semitic rant,… -
Bell Rings it in
Violinist Joshua Bell. Photo by Timothy White Recently I sat down with violinist Joshua Bell to talk about being a classical music performer in the 21st century and a star in the age of iPods and auto-tuned performances. Bell, who will perform July 15 at the Hollywood Bowl, talked about how technology can enhance the concert experience, what makes for a great performer and his deepening connection to Israel. Now 42, Bell has been playing violin since he was 5.… -
Bagels, Bongos and Josh Kun
If USC professor Josh Kun had his way, the Jewish people might not be known as "the People of the Book" but rather "the People of the Record." "Bagels and Bongos," Irving Fields Trio, Decca, 1959 Courtesy of Josh Kun and Roger Bennett "Jews on Vinyl," curated by Kun and Roger Bennett, of the Charles and Andrea Bronfman Foundation, is the new exhibition at the Skirball Cultural Center, where you can seat yourself on a midcentury-modern couch and tap your… -
Q & A with Mel Brooks
JewishJournal.com exclusive audio: Interview with Mel Brooks Mel Brooks sings Mel Brooks is on a hot streak: He was just a Kennedy Center Honoree (along with Dave Brubeck, Robert De Niro, Grace Bumbry and Bruce Springsteen); 20th Century Fox just released "The Mel Brooks Collection" in Blu-ray - a nine-DVD set that includes "Blazing Saddles," "Young Frankenstein" and "Spaceballs," among other classics; and Shout! Factory has released "The 2000 Year Old Man: The Complete History," a three-CD, one-DVD set that… -
Rethinking Kasztner
"Killing Kasztner: The Jew Who Dealt With Nazis," a new documentary, portrays filmmaker Gaylen Ross' attempt to understand why Reszo (Rudolf) Kasztner, a Hungarian Jewish leader who saved more than 1,600 people in war-time Budapest - more than Oskar Schindler - on the so-called Kasztner train, remains so controversial to this day. In the course of the film, Ross tells several interrelated stories, including that of Kasztner's rescue efforts during the Holocaust, as well as the stories of his life… -
Silver Judaica is Sign of the Times
“How’s it going?†As a tough year ended and a new decade began, it seemed a fair question. While The New York Times has looked to bowling alley attendance as a gauge of our nation’s condition, I turned to Jonathan Greenstein and his recent auction of silver Jewish ritual art, or Judaica, to determine the health, wealth and current condition of the Jewish community. On Jan. 11, 2010, J. Greenstein Co., the country’s only auction house dedicated to Judaica, held… -
Shadows of the Sun
When the German forces surrendered to the Allies in May 1945, World War II in Europe ended. However, for the Jewish survivors of the Holocaust, the trauma of what they endured wasn't over. For many, the effects lingered on in ways large and small, noticeable and not, often in ways their families came to know. Rita Lurie was one such person. She survived the war in hiding, a young child hidden for two years in a Polish farmhouse attic with…