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THE JEWISH WORLD IN 2006

 

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45-NEW YORK: WHAT'S HOT

Chic  women in New York wear ruffles and everything else

Photo: Glittery tunic by Frenette

While flirty ruffles and feminine lace were front and centre at many shows last week, the collections ranged from creative to commercial, arts-and-craftsy to sophisticated and accomplished. Here's a look at what's in store from Montreal designers for next spring and summer. Marie Saint Pierre: What a pro! Every season, Saint Pierre tweaks her signature style to reflect the trends. This time, the designer worked mainly in black, white and champagne, punctuated by gold-studded black ties. Knockout pieces included a champagne trench, a painted white pouf dress with black bodice and a Japan-esque black evening coat. And, of course, there was plenty of magic in mesh, mainly in black and white. Falbala: Sisters Melanie and Sophie Veilleux are riding high, just having opened a boutique on Bernard St. W. in Mile End from which to sell their feminine fashion. Melanie described this collection as more coquettish, fresh, frivolous and flowery than ever. It's for the girl who knows she's sexy but doesn't have to flaunt it, Sophie said. Look for apple green dresses, ruched in all the right places, a pretty paisley sun frock with magenta trim, lace overlays and, that staple of the season, ruffled skirts. All of this femininity comes in happy brights. Fairyesque: Katrin Leblond and Nicole Picard, in their fifth collection, put real women, with significant floral hairpieces, on the runway. There were cute pieces, including flared skirts with glitter insets, fruit and flower prints, and gauchos, which we think will be a hit next summer in Mile End, where the designers' studio is based. By Eve Frede

 

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Neiman Marcus

Cruise on Barbara Walters' top-10 list

New York grapevine whispers that Tom Cruise, Teri Hatcher and Kanye West are among the names on Barbara Walters's list of the 10 most fascinating people of 2005. The list of the year's most prominent names in entertainment, politics and sports also includes Lance Armstrong, Michael Jackson's lawyer Tom Mesereau and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, ABC has announced. Barbara Walters Presents: The 10 Most Fascinating People of 2005 will air Nov. 29 (10 p.m. EST). The No. 1 most fascinating person of the year will be revealed on the special, now in its 12th year.

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Pam's ex Kid Rock to appear on Stacked

Kid Rock and ex-fiancée Pamela Anderson are getting back together -- but only for a night -- when the rap-rock star makes a guest appearance on Anderson's comedy series, Stacked. Rock, whose real name is Bob Ritchie, will guest star as a delivery man on the Nov. 9 season premiere of the Fox show, according to a statement posted on his website. Anderson and Ritchie became engaged in the Las Vegas desert in April 2002, but never set a wedding date. Their romance ended in 2003. They began dating in April 2001, when they met backstage at VH1's salute to diva Aretha Franklin at Radio City Music Hall in New York City.

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NCFJE Chanukah Telethon

Photo: Rabbi Perl with Bruce Adler

Blending joyful song and dance with heartfelt emotional appeals, the 13TH NCFJE annual Chanukah Telethon generated important support for the group's educational and social service programs. This broadcast one of most successful fundraising events to date for NCFJE of Long Island.  “We are so deeply grateful for the remarkable generosity shown by our viewers,” said Rabbi Anchelle Perl, Director of National Committee Furtherance of Jewish Education on Long Island and Director of Chabad of Mineola. “Our supporters once again demonstrated their strong  spirit of kindness and caring, and their support will allow us to continue to help the needy in the coming year.” The “Celebration 13” Telethon, which broadcast live from Long Island for four hours on December 11,  aired in major markets across the Tri-State  area and was also simulcast on the Internet. The show featured a lineup of political leaders, sports and entertainment figures. Live music by the Neshoma Orchestra included acts by Chassidic Sensation Avraham Fried, Broadway star Bruce Adler, Blue Fringe, Lenny Cocco & The Chimes, The Manhattan Day School Choir and The Kinderlach- Israel’s New Kid’s Band. The show aired taped segments from individuals and  families whose lives were touched by the Committees programs of caring and compassion. In addition to thanking the donors, Rabbi Perl also thanked everyone involved in the production of the show. “Many talented people worked very hard on this year’s Telethon, and a broadcast of such quality wouldn’t be possible without their efforts,” the Rabbi said. “On behalf of all of  us, we wish to offer our terrific production staff the appreciation they deserve.”

Rabbi Anchelle Perl, of Temple Beth Scholom, Mineola, NY, with Rabbi Israel Kestenbaum, director of The Chaplaincy’s Jewish Institute for Pastoral Care. Rabbi Perl is an outstanding human being, a great asset to our community. He is a scholar, a humanitarian...and lots of fun!

 

 

A.L.S. 8th Annual Fundraising Event

Photo: Katie Couric and Joely Fisher Katie Couric at ALS event in New York.

The highlight of New York last week social events was the ALS 8th annual New York City fundraiser Tomorrow is Tonight, hosted by the dynamic Katie Couric. The event took place at Cipriani on 42nd street. The Who's Who personalities and Manhattan socialites glittered amid charity and fundraising affairs, and bien sure, juicy gossips. However, it was a social success. ALS project is a noble cause. It was founded in 1998, by Jenifer Estess and her sisters to raise awareness and  contributions toward the treatment and a cure for  this hideous disease, known as the  Lou Gehrig’s disease. Among the distinguished guests were Cari and Matthew Modine, Valerie Estesse, Meredith Estess, Robert Kaplan, Elizabeth Guest, Prince Dimitri of Yugoslavia et al...

 

 

 

eBay's Whitman tops most powerful list

Photo: For the second year in a row, Meg Whitman, the 49-year-old chairman and CEO of eBay, has come in first place on Fortune magazine's 50 most powerful women in the U.S.

For the second year in a row, Meg Whitman, CEO of eBay, was named the most powerful woman in the United States, according to the latest issue of Fortune magazine. Meanwhile, Barbara Stymiest, chief operating officer of RBC Financial, came in at No. 34 on Fortune's international list. Carly Fiorina, who long held the No. 1 spot, and who was No. 2 last year, dropped off the U.S. list after leaving Hewlett-Packard.  Martha Stewart, who wasn't even on the list last year, returned at No. 21.  Rounding out the top ten on the U.S. list were Anne Mulcahy, Chairman and CEO, Xerox (No. 2); Brenda Barnes, President and CEO, Sara Lee (No. 3); Oprah Winfrey, Chairman, Harpo (No. 4); Andrea Jung, Chairman and CEO, Avon (No. 5).  So how did Meg Whitman retain the No. 1 spot? "The empress of eBay still rules Silicon Valley," according to the magazine. "Though the stock has had a tough year, down about 30 per cent, revenues and profits are strong." According to a Fortune article, Whitman has gone shopping, buying seven new businesses for more than $1.3 billion. Up next: the controversial $2.6 billion acquisition of Skype."

NEW YORKER MONICA CROWLEY IS ALWAYS NO.1

In 2003, World Art Celebrities Journal http://www.worldartcelebritiesjournal.com conducted survey on the most popular faces of the American media. Monica Crowley came first. In 2004, The International Herald Daily News http://www.internationalheralddailynews.org  in Paris and London did the same thing. And Crowley scored again. She topped the list. This year INA conducted an international poll on the prettiest and brightest women in the American media. Here are the results: The five brightest women are Monica Crowley, Diane Sawyer, Christianne Amampour, Paula Zhan and Catherine Crier and Nancy Grace,  both in five place. The prettiest are Monica Crowley, Deborah Norville and  Paula Zahn in third place.

Photos from L to R: #1. Monica Crowley. #2. Diane Sawyer. #3. Deborah Norville. Gorgeous women of the American media

 

 

JANET WALLACH:  NEW YORK'S LA CRÈME DE LA CRÈME

Photo: Janet Wallach, soul, mind and heart of "SEEDS OF PEACE".

Ms. Janet Wallach is currently executive vice president of Seeds of Peace, a conflict resolution program which brings together teenagers from the Middle East; India, Pakistan and Afghanistan; the Balkans; and Greece, Turkey and divided Cyprus. The organization has a year-round program that includes a summer camp in Maine, a Center for Coexistence in Jerusalem, annual conferences and an educational arm that helps Seeds alumni attend college in the U.S. Over 3,000 participants have participated in a three-week session at the camp in Maine and then returned to their regions for further workshops, meetings and conflict resolution programs.

Ms. Wallach is a Woodrow Wilson Institute Visiting Fellow and has taught at Earlham College; Longwood College; Ohio Wesleyan University; Stetson College; St. Olaph’s College; Bradford College; Susquehana College; and West Virginia Wesleyan College. As a frequent contributor to The Washington Post Magazine from 1982-1987, and as a contributor to Smithsonian Magazine and other periodicals, Janet Wallach has written cover story profiles of Iraqi Ambassador Nizar Hamdoon; Her Majesty Queen Noor of Jordan; Reza Pahlavi, heir to the throne of Iran; PLO envoy Hassan Abdul Rahman; Saudi entrepreneur Adnan Khashoggi; First Lady of Egypt Jihan Sadat; and the  British official Gertrude Bell. Janet Wallach was born in New York City and received a B.A. degree from New York University. She was married to the late John Wallach, founder and president of Seeds of Peace, and has two sons, David Allyn, and Michael Wallach.    

SEEDS OF PEACE

Photo: John Wallach.

SEEDS OF PEACE began with a toast made over a glass of champagne.  John and Janet Wallach were attending a small reception in Washington D.C. honoring Israel’s then Foreign Minister, Shimon Peres.  The Wallachs had co-authored 3 books about the Middle East, and were highly respected in Washington circles.  It was at that dinner that John Wallach spontaneously proposed that he would start a camp in the United States where teenagers from conflicting areas could work and play together.  Most importantly, they could get to know each other as human beings and not “the enemy.”  Also present at the party were the Egyptian Ambassador and the PLO Envoy.  Wallach asked them, along with Peres, to go back to their governments and ask for teenagers from their communities to attend the camp. His reasoning was that the only way to effect a change is by working with young people who were not yet entrenched in hatred:  “If you can change their thinking, you can change their behavior.”  A camp setting would give them the opportunity to form friendships and develop trust and respect for one another.  The brilliant thought behind that was when these teenagers became adults, they would become leaders and effect a positive change in the world. It’s one thing to propose a toast under the heady influence of sparkling champagne.  It’s quite another to fulfill the promise.  Wallach first had to overcome a number of obstacles.  There was getting the governments to approve of sending representatives.  He then had to raise the money to run the program and find a qualified staff.  Importantly, he needed a summer camp that would donate their facilities to try this experiment.  He found it at Camp Powhatan in Otisfield, Maine, where his son had been a camper. 

Photo: Her royal Majesty, Queen Noor of Jordan.

Six months later, in August, 1993, 46 Israeli, Egyptian, and Palestinian teenage boys arrived at the newly created International Camp in Maine, ready to participate in this grand experiment.  They spent three weeks in workshops, addressing their feelings, getting to know one another, and coming away with a greater understanding of their similarities rather than their differences.  Along the way, they also picked up leadership skills.     Seeds of Peace members were present at the signing of the Oslo Accords.  Can you imagine how exciting it must have been for these teens to attend such an historic event?  (photo of U.S. President Bill Clinton with Seeds teenagers behind him)

Photo: Seeds members at Center for Coexistence.

Each successive year, the camp has expanded, including teenagers from more countries.  Girls now attend.  400 boys and girls attended the 2005 summer camp.  The End of Polarity (seeing unity, rather than separateness), is one of the Keys in my book, The Seven Keys to Live a Masterful Life.  In that chapter, I quote a Jordanian girl who attended Seeds of Peace:  “In order to understand your enemy, you have to go to war with yourself.”  Seeing how we are all one sometimes requires that kind of radical thinking.  There’s a Seeds of Peace Center for Coexistence in Jerusalem which operates year round, offering programs for continuing discussion between graduates and opportunities for community service.  The educational outreach projects allow graduates to teach what they learned at Seed of Peace to others.  (Seeds members at Center for Coexistence).

Photo: President Bill Clinton with Seeds of Peace members standing behind him.

The Seed of Peace comprehensive training program has become an international model.  They’re now working with teenagers from other areas of conflict.  2001 saw the beginning of its South Asia program with Indian and Pakistani youth.  Since 1993, over 3,000 teens from 25 nations have graduated from Seeds of Peace.  A reunion of 130 Seed graduates gathered at last summer’s camp and set up a formal Alumni Association.  When John Wallach passed away in 2002, he was replaced by Aaron Miller as President of the organization.   Former U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell had this to say about Miller:  “Although my colleagues and I at the Department of State will miss him greatly, the work he will be involved in is vital to Arab-Israeli peacemaking."  As Executive Vice President of Seeds of Peace, Janet Wallach (photo of Janet Wallach) continues to lead the way in fulfilling her husband’s mission and dream.  She oversees the activities of the New York office and is involved in fund raising.  But what she’s most passionate about are the young people themselves.  “There has been a large investment in each Seeds participant.  They are our hope for the future,” Janet explains.  “We want to make sure they stay connected to the values they learned at Seeds of Peace.”  Their 32 member Board of Directors and 5 Advisory Board members includes George H.W. Bush, William Jefferson Clinton, Her Majesty Queen Noor, Shimon Peres and Sa'eb Erekat. The extensive media coverage for Seeds of Peace includes being featured on 60 Minutes, Dateline NBC, Nightline, The Today Show, and in numerous newspapers and magazines.  A new documentary film called Seeds has already garnered several prizes.- By Paulette Attie

NEW YORK'S CELEBRITY OF THE WEEK

LAURA SAVINI: DIVA OF THE AMERICAN PUBLIC TELEVISION!

 

 

 

 

 

 

Yes! Public television can make you a "beloved star". Do people watch public television? You bet, if PT stations networks have personalities like Laura Savini and Charlie Rose. We know who Charlie Rose is, but Laura who? Hold your horses. Laura Savini is a knockout, brilliant, sharp, extremely well respected and above all, she is stunning. But who in heavens is Laura Savini? We asked this question to 15 of our reporters and senior writers. Twelve of them knew who she was. We asked 300 of our readers if they knew anything about Savini, heard of her, and if they did, what did they think of her. Great! To our great astonishment and delight, 210 heard of Savini and 179 of them watch her regularly on her public television network. So, public television is well and kicking. Although, many of our readers who are regular viewers of PT admitted that they get extremely annoyed by the monotonous and continuous appeals and begging of public television announcers and hosts for donations and contributions, the majority of those whom we have surveyed, admitted that they love to see the face of Savini on the small screen. To some viewers, Savini is the prettiest face they have seen on public television networks. To others, Savini is sharp, straight to the point, an effective fund raiser and an "Italian Stallion". WOW! So we decided to check her out. Laura Savini is the VP of marketing and communications for WLIW21 New York Public Television. She controls and manages the whole marketing, communications, fundraising, outreach, graphics and instructional television departments of the station. The whole 9 yards, from concept to realization.

 

Laura SaviniPhoto: Laura Savini.

Yes, sir, Savini managed to  raise $6 million for her station. And astonishingly, she does it every year. Watching this woman is a pure delight. No doubt, we watched her last week, and yesterday when she appeared on an Italian food segment of a show. Savini was there helping an Italian chef cooking his Spaghetti A La Carbonara. She was a darling, event though, she missed one or twice, grabbing the spaghetti with her fork. No problem, she got it with her fingers and of course with grace and a big smile. To many, Savini is a celebrity. A hot hot celebrity and  a familiar face, for she  hosts the station's on-air fundraising campaigns and ever week, she  interviews new talents on her program, "Metro Guide." This program is extremely informative and entertaining. A large segment  of "Metro Guide" is ethnic, and that is good for Savi. Because it helped her in creating a super duper, quality ethnic programming, with strong and intelligent  emphasis on Italian-American community and vital topics. After all, Savini is  the past president of the National Organization of Italian American Women, and currently, she serves on the Advisory Board of the Italian American Museum. Fascinating woman, de facto. So we decided to learn more about this most unusual woman. Files and Internet data, as well as literature on Savini provided us with the following: "In March 2002 she hosted the acclaimed national PBS special "The Best of Sarah Brightman: Classics" from Europe with Ms. Brightman. In June 2002 she spent two weeks in Italy co-hosting a new series on wine. That month she also interviewed Irish tenor Ronan Tynan in Dublin for PBS.

Photo: The stunning Laura Savini and Franco Frattini, Italian Minister of Foreign Affairs.

Photo: Laura Savini with Apostolos Kaklamanis,  President of the Hellenic Parliament.
 

Never one to slow down, in September she was in Guadalajara on a Mariachi project for PBS, then on to San Francisco to interview Tony Bennett under the Golden Gate Bridge. In April 2001 she was one of only seven American women invited to participate in Global Forum: Women and Power, held by the Women's Federation for World Peace, as a guest of Taiwan's Vice President Annette Lu.

Photo: Laura Savini addressing the audience after receiving the Artemis Award at the Benaki Museum.

The goal of the conference was to provide inspiring examples to empower the next generation of women in an on-going effort to promote gender equality that transcends national borders. A cum laude graduate of Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah, Ms. Savini has extensive experience in marketing communications having worked with Manhattan agencies Dan Klores and Associates, Fleishman-Hillard, and Pezzano + Company/Dorf & Stanton. Her client list has included Hershey USA, Lever Brothers, Ralston Purina, Pictionary, The Hit Factory and many others."

Laura Savini  has been honored wad infinitum. To name a few:

  • May 1999 by the National Association of Italian American Women with their Rising Star Award.

  • May 2000 by The Sons of Italy.

  • 2001 Recipient of the ll Leone di San Marco Award from The Italian Heritage and Culture

  • Committee of The Bronx and Westchester.

  • October 2001 as the Grand Marshall of the Westchester County Columbus Day Parade.

  • Grand Marshall in the White Plains Sons of Italy Columbus Day Parade.

  • October 2002 as the Grand Marshall of the Long Island Columbus Day Parade.

  • She was named Women of the Year by the Italian Charities of America, Inc., October 2002.

  • Her hometown of Massapequa has added her to its Hall of Fame in 2002, an honor of which she is very proud.

  • Fieri New York honored Ms. Savini in April 2003.

Ms. Savini has served on the community advisory boards of Telicare, the television station of the diocese of Rockville Centre, and Help for the Poor.

Photo: From left to right, Claudio Angelini, Antonio Bandini, Italy Consul General, Justice of the Supreme Court Dominic Massaro and Laura Savini. From the GEI Gala Dinner to Franco Fattini,  Italian Minister of Foreign Affairs and President of the Council of the European Union, was the guest of honor September 25, 2003, at the GEI Gala Dinner at The Pierre Hotel in New York. The gathering attracted hundreds of GEI members and their guests who were treated to a sumptuous dinner accompanied by a range of fine Italian wines. The guests were entertained by pianist Cristiana Pegoraro who played a selection of arias from Italian opera

THE MAGIC OF LAURA SAVINI

I watched Laura Savini co-hosting a show/program on Italy, and particularly on Cicily. A fundraising program. She was magnificent. Her radiating smile, eloquence, savoire faire, human warmth, magnetizing charisma and perfect mastery of "suggestion" and mass communication define the magic of this woman. I do not know if she does research a priori the product she is trying to sell us but, one thing is sure: SHE WILL CONVINCE YOU TO DONATE IN A HEART BEAT AND SHE WILL SEDUCE THE HELL OUT OF YOU. She is perfect in what she does. Savini is a diva. A lovely human being sincerely committed to public television programming and the promotion of ethnic culture and heritage. This woman is a national treasure. By Maximillien de Lafayette.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Isi Tenenbom, spokesperson of the Jewish Theater of New York sent the New York Jewish Herald the following press release. We are hereby publishing it in its entirety without taking side.

"Ron Kuby to Represent The Jewish Theater of New York in Response to Threatened Lawsuit by Stern Family Lawyers, Pryor Cashman Sherman & Flynn LLP

Photo: Actress Emily Stern, daughter of Howard Stern and former leading star of "Kabbalah", a play produced by the Jewish Theater of New York. The show came to an end, when Stern walked out, fearing that fans might maliciously use her alleged nude photos taken from her performance on stage.


Following the shameful attempt by the lawfirm representing the Stern family, Pryor Cashman Sherman & Flynn LLP, to take this theater to court on baseless grounds, The Jewish Theater of New York announces that it has engaged the services of the renown New York attorney, Mr. Ron Kuby, to defend it against this atrocious act.  In his response letter to attorney Stephen F. Huff of Pryor Cashman, Mr. Ron Kuby writes, in part:  "I represent the Jewish Theater of New York, a not-for-profit theater group dedicated to the artistic exploration of Jewish issues and Jewish philosophy. The Jewish Theater of New York prides itself on artistic excellence and creative exploration while eschewing personal profit—concepts alien to your firm, but about which you may have read or heard. The production of Kabbalah, in which Ms. Stern sought and was awarded the lead, took over a year to research and produce. Dozens of actors and production personnel spent thousands of unpaid hours devoted to making the production a success. Your client referred to the show, in an e-mail dated December 31, 2005, as 'the most wonderful show I have been a part of.' All of that time and work was wasted when your client, in a snit because some of her father’s lewd and lunatic fans discovered she was Emily Stern, abandoned her commitment to the production. Apparently concerned that she might become the fantasy object of her father’s carefully cultivated fan base of masturbatory adolescents, Emily Stern runs to the planet’s most expensive intellectual property firm to bully the very theater that gave her the opportunity she so craved. Ironically, your firm is an expense she can afford only because her father has so successfully created the very following of drooling jerk-offs from which she flees. Now that is a story worthy of theater!" In the latter parts of the response, attorney Kuby goes over other details of the KABBALAH story and challenges Mr. Huff's threats against this theater. The Jewish Theater of New York, the only English-speaking Jewish theater company in New York, will fight with all its might against attempts by people (Jews, in this case--and sadly so) who try hard to crush it with the power of their limitless financial resources, infamous celebrity status, and sheer viciousness. The Jewish Theater of New York is grateful to Mr. Ron Kuby for once again standing on the side of justice. Contact: Isi Tenenbom, 212.494.0050 "

 

 

Isabelle Huppert takes New York by storm

Isabelle Huppert, courtesy MoMA

Photo: Isabelle Huppert is respected for not shying from challenging roles.

New York- The 52-year-old French film star has just made her New York stage debut in a play written by the late British playwright, Sarah Kane. 4.48 Psychosis is a harrowing meditation on mental illness and suicide - a virtual monologue delivered in French with minimal supertitles. "When desperation visits," the character says, "I shall hang myself to the sound of my lover's breathing." But audiences here in the United States adored her stark rendition. "It's not the Folies-Bergere," Huppert had observed. But perhaps what these theatregoers loved was the sheer proximity to her. New York, it seems, is in the grip of all things Huppert at the moment. As well as her theatrical debut, the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) is running a major retrospective of her films; she has made more than 70 in three decades. This selection celebrates her work with filmmakers great and good, from Jean Luc Godard to the French master of mystery, Claude Chabrol, as well as the American auteur Otto Preminger. And if that is not enough, this weekend, an exhibition entitled La Femme Aux Portraits will open at MoMA's sister museum, PS 1 Contemporary Arts Center in Queens. It features portraits from legendary photographers like Henri Cartier-Bresson, Helmut Newton and Robert Frank. The images run the gamut from freckled teenager to tragic beauty. But what does all of this adoration mean to Isabelle Huppert? What does it mean to be feted like this, tagged as legendary, an icon? "I think these are just words," she says. "I think it's an exterior perception, but if it becomes your perception of yourself, then you are in bad shape, I would say." Huppert has earned this stateside status through her body of work, not necessarily by showbiz outings on the red carpet. "She is not a star in the traditional western or Hollywood sense of being a celebrity," says Laurence Kardish, the MoMA curator who put together the Huppert retrospective. "She is a star by virtue of her passion. A Hollywood celebrity might choose roles that enhance their image, but Isabelle Huppert chooses roles that make her vulnerable."

 

 

Isabelle by Peter Lindbergh, courtesy MoMA

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Photo: Isabelle Huppert has long been revered in her native France.

Tour de force: Huppert has played many women who are seemingly quite placid but who quietly burn with hidden desire. Her latest film, Gabrielle, is another tour de force which just premiered at the New York Film Festival. It is a period drama based on a Joseph Conrad story that explores the collapse of an upper class marriage; the relationship deteriorates rapidly when Gabrielle decides to leave her proud husband. But she returns on the very same day to excavate her loveless marriage. Huppert sees the role as a cousin to Madame Bovary, perhaps the quintessential anti-romantic heroine which she played in 1991. "These women go very far in trying to seek a certain truth about themselves and their desires," she says. More recently, Huppert won the best actress award at Cannes for her role in the disturbing 2001 film, The Piano Teacher, in which she plays a woman with hidden sado-masochistic desires. In each case, it is alarming to see how she transforms silent despair into something so charged and potentially violent.

Huppert in Coup de foudre (Entre nous, 1983), courtesy MoMA

Photo: Isabelle Huppert has been making movies for more than 30 years.

"Horrifyingly honest': So what makes her want to act? "I just expect to forget, to have pleasure. It's a very personal and private experience. But I don't think I learn," she says. "I would say on the one hand I know who I am, and on the other hand, whatever I don't know about myself I don't think I will find out from acting." In the United States, Huppert is known primarily for her film work, but her stage debut is a reminder to American audiences that she comes from a background in theatre; she trained at the National Conservatory of Dramatic Art in Paris. Her performance in 4.48 Psychosis has revealed yet another side to this actress - and even the tabloids could not resist chipping in. Although some critics here were not thrilled by this chilly French production, most seem to agree that Huppert delivered a pitch perfect performance - "horrifyingly honest" said one. "It's more like breathing for me to act," says Huppert, a few hours before one of the sold-out performances which are part of a season-long Act French Festival. "It's not difficult; it's not a big effort. But it's a big effort for me to pursue what I want to do, so that's the effort. When I act, it's just a relief. It's just a respiration." -Damian Foler

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Publishing icon Korda to exit top job

New York's Michael Korda, publishing's master raconteur and an institution as editor of Richard Nixon, Larry McMurtry, David McCullough and countless others, will relinquish his full-time position at Simon & Schuster, the publisher announced Wednesday. "After 47 years, I felt it was time to get off the stage, or at least into the wings," said  Korda. After stepping down as editor in chief at the end of the year, he will hold the title "editor in chief emeritus" and continue to edit McCullough, Mary Higgins Clark and others, but otherwise will concentrate on his own books. "I won't be going to meetings anymore. That alone will free up a lot of time," he said with a laugh. Since joining Simon & Schuster in 1958, he has had one of the remarkable careers in publishing, both for the time spent with just one company and for the people he has worked with, whether former presidents such as Nixon and Reagan, Pulitzer Prize winners such as McCullough and McMurtry, or brand names such as Jacqueline Susan and Harold Robbins.

 As his own books have proved, including Charmed Lives and Another Life, he is also a born storyteller with enviable material. As the son of English actress Gertrude Musgrove and the nephew of film impresario Alexander Korda, he grew up around artists and celebrities, including Vivien Leigh, David Selznick and Graham Greene, whom he later edited. His years as an editor enabled him to offer further portraits of the famous: Joan Crawford fuming about the white flowers in her hotel room; Nixon referring to himself in the third person during a private dinner with a Chinese delegation; a faultlessly polite Reagan offering up a plate of cookies to his guests, wishing in vain that he will get to eat the last one. "Michael combines European sophistication, show business glamour, a well-trained intellect, and a deep regard and respect for the text to remarkable effect," according to a statement issued Wednesday by Simon & Schuster.

"He is one of the few in our industry who has forged an identity outside Publisher's Row, becoming a well-known public figure in his own right." Asked to cite a highlight of his long career, Korda hesitated, then mentioned the publication of McMurtry's Lonesome Dove, winner of the Pulitzer for fiction in 1986 and a bestseller that became the basis for a beloved TV miniseries. "He would write book after book that I liked, and at every meeting I would get up and say, 'One of these days Larry McMurtry is going to write the great novel of the American West, the Moby Dick of the Plains.' And Lonesome Dove fulfilled everything I had been saying about him." Korda has had health problems in recent years, including prostate cancer and a heart attack, but has remained active as an editor and a writer. He and wife Margaret have just published a pair of books, Horse Housekeeping and Cat People, and he is planning a "big, big" biography of Dwight Eisenhower and a work on the Battle of Britain.

"I know plenty of people who think the magic in publishing is gone, but I don't," he said. - By Hilel Italli

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FROM HOLLYWOOD TO NEW YORK

 

City keeps close eye on Stone 9/11 film

 

 

 

 

 

 

Photo: Oliver Stone is treading on still-sensitive turf as he films a movie about 9/11 in New York.

Oliver Stone has begun shooting one of the first Hollywood films about Sept. 11 in New York -- without recreating the large-scale devastation that's all too familiar to residents who lived through the 2001 attacks. After months of meetings with community and family groups, producers of the untitled movie have promised to tread carefully on sensitive ground. Most of the major action portraying the World Trade Center collapse will be shot on a Los Angeles sound stage. And although news footage of the towers themselves will be shown during the film, it will play on television screens in the background. "We're not doing the Towering Inferno-Titanic version," said Michael Shamberg, who's producing the Paramount film with his partner, Stacey Sher.

AdvertisementStone started shooting scenes in New York last month for the as-yet untitled film, starring Nicolas Cage as one of two policemen who survived the towers' collapse and were rescued from the trade centre ruins after 22 hours. After holding dozens of meetings, producers decided to limit their filming in the city, shooting the bulk of the action in Los Angeles and staying away from the Trade Center site. Family members who met with the producers said they still weren't sure whether Hollywood would treat Sept. 11 with proper respect. "Are there going to be love scenes in it? How do you portray it correctly?" said Lee Ielpi, who lost his firefighter son on Sept. 11, and met with producers about the film. "It has to be done with some reverence." Others said they were concerned about how Stone -- whose more controversial films include JFK, which offered conspiracy theories about the Kennedy assassination -- might interpret the attacks in the film. In October 2001, Stone was quoted as referring to the attacks as a "revolt" against multinational corporations. But in July, Stone called the untitled project "a work of collective passion, a serious meditation on what happened, and carries within a compassion that heals." "It's an exploration of heroism in our country -- but it's international at the same time in its humanity," he said. Charles Wolf, who lost his wife on Sept. 11, has met with producers and asked to see a copy of Andrea Berloff's script. He said he appreciated the outreach and sensitivity of the filmmakers, but wanted to make sure that the day's events, including details as precise as the officers' view of the elevator from the rubble, are represented accurately. "I think they need to be factual. It's too close in people's minds," Wolf said. " 'Based on a true story' should not happen here." Because Berloff's script focuses entirely on McLoughlin and Jimeno's experience on Sept. 11, the film will not interpret the politics or meaning of Sept. 11, the producers said. Stone has taken great care to portray the event as it happened, and has worked to make sure that Cage, Pena and the other actors playing officers are using authentic equipment. "We're not doing everyone's story that day," said Shamberg. "We're trusted with the accuracy of the particular story that we're telling." The Stone film may not be the first studio film about Sept. 11 to be released. Flight 93, a Universal Studios film about the hijacked plane that left Newark, N.J., and crashed into a Pennsylvania field, is scheduled for an April release. Stone's film will be shooting in New York through mid-November and is tentatively scheduled to open Aug. 11, one month before the attacks' fifth anniversary. Other Sept. 11 films are in development, including an adaptation of the book 102 Minutes, and a TV miniseries based on the findings of the Sept. 11 commission. Paramount hired Jennifer Brown, a former vice president for community development at the Lower Manhattan Development Corp. in charge of rebuilding the Trade Center site, to act as a liaison with the community. Brown set up more than a dozen meetings with business, community, family and survivor groups, along with police and fire officials. Brown said that once people understood that the story was only about the officers and not about the entire story of Sept. 11, they were supportive. "What we've heard mostly, is just to be real," she said. -By Amy Wetfeld.