Cities that preserve Jewish culture: Chicago, New York, Philadelphia, San Francisco
 _____________________________________________________________________
 
 Also in this issue:  Who will you find in the National Jewish Sports Hall of Fame?

         San Diego Jewish World

                                           Sunday Evening
, July 22, 2007    

                                                                           Vol. 1, Number 83
 

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Feingold         Wexler                                                               Bush              Cheney

San Diego Jewish World—July 22, 2007
  (click on headline below to jump to the story)

United States
U.S. Sen. Russell Feingold plans two resolutions to censure President Bush

Contemporary Jewish Museum in San Francisco
 will have 63,000 square feet of Libeskind-space


Chicago will have $55 million Jewish cultural center

Larger site in the works for the National Museum of American Jewish History in Philadelphia

New York's Jewish Museum describes the major themes of its permanent 28,000-piece collection


Features
Jews in the News


Sports
Is Brad Ausmus in training as a baseball manager?

Who is in National Jewish Sports Hall of Fame?

Israel TV audience witnesses a 2-1 pitchers duel

First the baseball league, and now the souvenir cards

Arts & Entertainment
Who killed the Samurai? You can be the jury

ABT's theatrical new Sleeping Beauty


U.S. Sen. Russell Feingold
plans two resolutions to censure President Bush

WASHINGTON, D.C. (Press Release) – U.S. Senator Russ Feingold (Democrat, Wisconsin) announced today that he will introduce two censure resolutions condemning the President, Vice President and other administration officials "for misconduct relating to the war in Iraq and for their repeated assaults on the rule of law. "

Feingold called the resolutions appropriate and necessary steps for Congress to rebuke an administration that is responsible for some of the worst misconduct and the worst abuses of the law in American history.

“Censure is about holding the administration accountable,” Feingold said. “Congress needs to formally condemn the President and members of the administration for misconduct before and during the Iraq war, and for undermining the rule of law at home. Censure is not a cure for the devastating toll this administration’s actions have taken on this country. But when future generations look back at the terrible misconduct of this administration, they need to see that a co-equal branch of government stood up and held to account those who violated the principles on which this nation was founded.”

 

 


 

{Earlier this month, another Jewish Democrat, Rep. Robert Wexler of Florida, announced that he would bring a resolution against President Bush in reaction to his decision to commute the sentence of I. Lewis 'Scooter' Libby, who had served as Cheney's chief of staff.}

Feingold will work with his colleagues, as well as seek input from his constituents and the American people, as he crafts the final language of the resolutions. The first resolution will condemn the President and others for misconduct relating to the war in Iraq including:

  • Overstating the case that Saddam Hussein had WMD, particularly nuclear weapons, and falsely implying a relationship with al Qaeda and links to 9/11.

  • Failing to plan for the civil conflict and humanitarian problems that the intelligence community predicted.

  • Over-stretching the Army, Marine Corps and Guard with prolonged deployments.

  • Justifying our military involvement in Iraq by repeatedly distorting the situation on the ground there.

The second resolution will focus on the administration’s attack on the rule of law with respect to, among other things:

  • The illegal NSA warrantless wiretapping program.

  • Extreme policies on torture, the Geneva Conventions, and detainees at Guantanamo.

  • The refusal to recognize legitimate congressional oversight into the improper firings of U.S. Attorneys.

In March 2006, Feingold introduced a resolution censuring the President for authorizing and misleading Congress and the public about the illegal NSA warrantless wiretapping program. In January 2007, the administration finally brought its wiretapping program within the FISA statute.

“At my town hall meetings, online, and everywhere I go, I hear the American people demanding that the President and his administration be held accountable for their misconduct, both with regard to the disastrous war in Iraq and their flagrant abuse of the rule of law. Censure is a relatively modest response, but one that puts Congress on record condemning their actions, both for the American people today and for future generations,” Feingold said.

Feingold is encouraging people to email suggestions of what to include in the censure resolution. People can email him at Russell_Feingold@feingold.senate.gov or visit his webpage at http://feingold.senate.gov.
                                                             _______________

 

United States of America


 
Contemporary Jewish Museum in San Francisco
 will have 63,000 square feet of Libeskind-space

SAN FRANCISCO—Since its founding in 1984, The Contemporary Jewish Museum (CJM) presents exhibitions and programs that explore Jewish art, culture, history and ideas to audiences of all ages and backgrounds. The Museum has been housed in a gallery space off the lobby of the Jewish Community Federation building at 121 Steuart Street, where it has presented more than 100 exhibitions and programs on the subject of the Jewish spirit and imagination. The Museum is a welcoming place for discovery and a gateway to explore the diversity of intercultural and interfaith exchange.

As early as 1990, the CJM recognized the urgency for a more expansive facility to meet the growing needs and interests of the local community. To accommodate its expanding programming, the CJM is building a new home in the historic Jessie Street Power Substation. Originally designed in 1907 by Willis Polk, the building is located at 736 Mission Street in the heart of San Francisco's Yerba Buena cultural district located in the South of Market (SoMa) neighborhood. In 1998, the CJM selected internationally renowned architect Daniel Libeskind to design the 63,000-square-foot Museum, which is an adaptive reuse of the landmark structure. This is his first Museum project on the West Coast.

The building will feature the unique shapes and spatial concepts that have earned Mr. Libeskind his worldwide acclaim and will make visible the relationship between the new and the old. The design preserves the character defining features of Willis Polk's 1907 landmark structure, including the brick southern facade, trusses and skylights and open space. It will also make this distinctive San Francisco building accessible to the public for the first time in its nearly 100-year history. Characteristic of Mr. Libeskind's designs for Jewish organizations, the extension to the original structure is resonant with Jewish ideas. Inspired by the phrase "L'Chaim," meaning "To Life," Libeskind utilized the two Hebrew letters of "chai," the "chet" and the "yud," to create the form of the building. From the outside of the building, the addition will be most remarkable for its unique shape, as well as its skin: a vibrant blue metallic steel.

The new Contemporary Jewish Museum is scheduled to open in late Spring 2008.

The Contemporary Jewish Museum is led by Director and CEO Connie Wolf. Roselyne C. Swig serves as Chair of the Board of Trustees and leads the CJM's $80 million comprehensive Campaign for the New Museum with CJM Board members. The Contemporary Jewish Museum is a private, not-for-profit institution supported by members, foundation and community support, and admission revenues.

For more information about The Contemporary Jewish Museum, call (415) 344-8800 or visit www.thecjm.org.

The preceding story was provided by the Contemporary Jewish Museum

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Chicago will have $55 million Jewish cultural center

CHICAGO (Press Release)—The Spertus Institute of Jewish Studies will officially open its new $55 million state-of-the-art facility at 610 S. Michigan Avenue with a week-long public celebration, beginning Friday, November 30. Among the attractions will be a rare Chicago appearance by Pulitzer Prize-winning author and journalist Thomas Friedman, as part of Spertus’ new Center for Public Dialogue on Issues of the Day lecture series.

The bold new 155,000-square-foot building designed by the award-winning Krueck & Sexton Architects will provide enhanced features to better serve visitors and students of Spertus Institute’s three main branches: Spertus College, Spertus Museum, and the Asher Library. In addition, the building will feature the new 400-seat Feinberg Theater, a sophisticated performance space to showcase lectures, concerts, theater, and film; an interactive Children’s Center designed by Jim Lasko, Artistic Director of Chicago’s innovative Redmoon Theater; and a new kosher café – filling a downtown Chicago void – in partnership with Wolfgang Puck Catering.

“We pride ourselves on being a center of Jewish learning and culture, and the new facility will introduce Chicagoans and visitors to Jewish culture in an expansive way,” said Dr. Howard A. Sulkin, President of Spertus Institute of Jewish Studies. “Our opening celebration will showcase the caliber of programming we will be offering on an on-going basis, including prominent scholarly, artistic, literary, and even culinary talents.”

The public Spertus celebration will begin on Friday, November 30, with tours of the new facility and the opening museum exhibitions. Highlights of the week-long celebration include an evening program of contemporary music, humor, and poetry geared towards young professionals on Saturday, December 1, followed by an all-ages Open House presented with Redmoon Theater on Sunday, December 2.

Other special events include a salute to Jewish culture with the world premiere presentation of a specially commissioned brass piece by prize-winning symphonic composer Jonathan Berger. Spertus will inaugurate its new Center for Public Dialogue on Issues of the Day lecture series, featuring speakers of national and international importance, with a rare Chicago appearance by Pulitzer Prize-winning author and journalist Thomas Friedman, presented here as the Bucksbaum Family Endowed Speaker. Plus, Hanukkah begins on the evening of Tuesday, December 4, and Spertus will certainly “cook” up some tasty programming with its friends at Wolfgang Puck Catering. More specific details on all Grand Opening programming will be announced shortly.

Leading up to the public celebration will be a series of preview events for Spertus donors, members, alumni, and friends, culminating with a Grand Opening Gala benefit on Thursday evening, November 29. 

The Spertus Institute of Jewish Studies, founded in 1924 as the College of Jewish Studies, now encompasses Spertus College, Spertus Museum, and the Asher Library.

Spertus invites people of all ages and backgrounds to explore the multi-faceted Jewish experience. Through its innovative programming, exhibitions, collections, research facilities and degree programs, Spertus inspires learning, serves diverse communities and fosters understanding for Jews and people of all faiths, locally, regionally and around the world.

For additional information about Spertus or the new facility, visit www.spertus.edu.

The preceding story was provided by the Spertus Museum
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Larger site in the works for the National Museum of American Jewish History in Philadelphia

PHILADELPHIA (Press Release)—The National Museum of American Jewish History is constructing a new home for  the only National Museum in America devoted to telling the American Jewish Experience. 

This $100 million facility is located between and in full view of both the National Constitution Center and Independence Hall and the Liberty Bell Center on the premier corner of Fifth and Market Streets.  The new landmark building will house the Museum's exhibitions and programs and serve a diverse audience of more than 250,000 visitors each year.   

  • A Museum for All People: It will be a major national educational and cultural resource.  At a time when some people have less historical perspective and are less connected to synagogues, Israel, and the Holocaust, this Museum will educate Jews and non-Jews alike about how Jews used the opportunities of freedom to make diverse contributions to American life, while also recording the experiences of other ethnic groups.  Most importantly, the coming generations will have a better understanding about who they are and where they came from. 

  • Architecture:  James S. Polshek of the internationally acclaimed architectural firm Polshek Partnership Architects, LLP is designing the new building.  His recent projects include the Rose Center for Earth and Space at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City, the William J. Clinton Presidential Center in Little Rock, Arkansas, and the Cultural Resource Center of the National Museum of the American Indian, Smithsonian Institution, in Suitland, Maryland.

  • Core Exhibit Design: Patrick Gallagher of Gallagher & Associates, one of the leading exhibition design firms in the country, is designing the core exhibition.  Gallagher recently completed the core exhibition design of the International Spy Museum in Washington, D.C., and is currently working on exhibits for Gettysburg National Military Park, the Jamestown Settlement in Williamsburg, Virginia, the Reginald F. Lewis Museum of Maryland African American History and Culture in Baltimore, Maryland, and the National Archives in Washington, D.C.

  • Historians: Jonathan D. Sarna, Braun Professor of American Jewish History at Brandeis University is chairing a committee of nationally noted historians.  His field embraces all aspects of American Jewish history, from the colonial  period to the twentieth century, with special emphasis on social, cultural and religious history.  He also chairs the Academic Advisory and Editorial Board of the Marcus Center of the American Jewish Archives and the online Judaic Studies network, H-Judaic.  Dr. Sarna has written, edited and co-edited fifteen books, including The American Jewish Experience: A Reader; People Walk on Their Heads; Jacksonian Jew: The Two Worlds of Mordecai Noah; JPS: The Americanization of Jewish Culture 1888-1988.  His most recent work, American Judaism: A History, has been praised as being "the single best description of American Judaism during its 350 years on American soil."  It won numerous awards including the 2004 Everett Family Foundation "Jewish Book of the Year" award from the Jewish Book Council.                 

  • Education: Reflecting the themes of the core exhibition and the mission of the organization, the Museum is coordinating educational programs that will include schoolchildren, teachers and families as well as an online learning center, a fully interactive resource that will extend the reach of the Museum well beyond the borders of Independence Mall.  This valuable resource will allow our current and new audiences to experience the Museum even as it is being built.  

    The preceding article was provided by the National Museum of American Jewish History

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New York's Jewish Museum describes the major

themes of its permanent 28,000-piece collection


NEW YORK (Press Release)—The permanent exhibition of the Jewish Museum is called Culture and Continuity: The Jewish Journey.  It is one of the world’s great opportunities to explore Jewish culture and history through art, archaeology, ceremonial objects, photographs, ritual textiles, videos, interactive media, and television excerpts from the Museum’s broadcast archive. The overall exhibition examines the Jewish experience as it has evolved from antiquity to the present over 4,000 years.

The exhibit explores the dynamic interaction between continuity and change within Jewish history and culture, and include close to 800 works from the Museum’s outstanding collection of 28,000 works of art, antiquities, ceremonial objects and electronic media materials.

Designed as a dynamic experience, the entire exhibition comprises four principal sections: Forging an Identity (c. 1200 BCE-c. 640 CE), which describes the transformation in ancient times from Israelite to Jew and the evolution of the Jews as a people with distinctive customs, rituals, and institutions; Interpreting a Tradition (c. 640-c. 1800), which begins on the 4th floor and continues on the 3rd floor, and explores the vitality and diversity of Jewish life in the Diaspora; and Confronting Modernity (c.1800-1948), which considers how, beginning in the 18th century, Jewish life was transformed by its encounter with modernity. A final section, Realizing a Future: Contemporary Voices, brings the visitor to the present with a look at contemporary art and various expressions of Jewish identity today.

Some highlights include: a pair of silver Torah finials from Breslau, Germany (1792-93) reunited at The Jewish Museum after sixty years of separation; paintings by such artists as Max Weber, Moritz Daniel Oppenheim, Isidor Kaufmann, Morris Louis, Ken Aptekar, and Deborah Kass; prints by Ben Shahn and El Lissitzky; and sculptures by Chana Orloff and Hannah Wilke.

A display of 38 Torah ornaments allows the viewer to compare artistic styles from different parts of the world. It features lavishly decorated Torah crowns, pointers, finials and shields from Afghanistan, Algeria, Austria, England, France, Germany, Holland, Hungary, Ottoman Empire (Greece and Turkey), Georgia (of the former Soviet Union), Morocco, Israel, Italy, early 20th century Palestine, Persia, Poland, Russia, Tunisia, the United States, and Yemen.

Exhibits also focus on sculpture such as Leonard Baskin’s 1977 The Altar (based on the biblical story of the sacrifice of Isaac), considered the artist’s greatest carving, and George Segal’s 1982 work, The Holocaust.

The “New Directions” gallery of the Confronting Modernity section includes photographs from the Museum’s collection that address, on a rotating basis, aspects of Jewish life after World War II.

For example, one wall in the “New Directions” gallery features five video monitors showing television excerpts from the collection of The Jewish Museum’s National Jewish Archive of Broadcasting. The television excerpts range from David Ben-Gurion declaring the independence of the State of Israel in 1948 to Abraham Joshua Heschel and Martin Luther King, Jr. in Alabama in 1965 to Adam Sandler singing part of The Hanukkah Song.

Culture and Continuity: The Jewish Journey examines a question that has long intrigued Jews and non-Jews alike: How has Judaism been able to thrive for thousands of years across the globe, often in difficult and even tragic circumstances?

Culture and Continuity examines this question primarily through objects and texts. Objects reflect the different ways Jews have expressed their sense of what it means to be Jewish throughout their history. Texts have been the prime element of continuity in the evolution of the Jewish experience. Jews have been able to sustain their identity by adapting to life in different countries, cultures, and religious contexts. Survival as a people has depended upon both the continuity of Jewish ideas and values and the flexibility to adapt to changing circumstances.

The exhibition traces the dynamic interaction among three catalysts that have shaped the Jewish experience: Jews’ constant questioning and reinterpretation of their own traditions; the interaction of Jews and Judaism with other cultures; and the impact of historical events that have transformed Jewish life.

By entering this exhibition each visitor will be joining a debate that is as pertinent in today’s world of rapid change, cultural interaction, and challenges to tradition as it has always been for defining the meaning of Jewish life.

The preceding story was excerpted from material provided by the Jewish Museum of New York

 

                       San Diego Jewish World
                                      
       Writing Contest #1 

What was your most interesting Jewish summertime experience?

Perhaps it was at summer camp, or on a family trip, or in summer school, or even at home.  Send us an essay of up to 1,000 words about a true experience.  We will publish up to six bylined essays.  Winners will receive two passes (worth $30 each) on San Diego's Old Town Trolley Tour or on the Seal Tour.

Please send your entries by July 31 to sdheritage@cox.net.  Your stories should be clearly identified in the email message line as contest entries. Include for verification purposes your full name, address, and telephone number. Winning essays will be published in August, and thereafter will be permanently archived on this site.

Questions may be addressed to editor Don Harrison via email above. 
 

 


Dear Readers,

Along with my husband Don, I co-publish San Diego Jewish World. As a couple we have gone to many places.  Cruising ranks at the top of our list of favorite ways to travel.

Watch this ad for a different cruising photo each day. A similar adventure can be yours!

Anderson Travel, with which I'm affiliated, is a multi-branched travel agency that is able to provide you both good prices and good service.  Before you book anywhere else, please ask me for a price comparison.

Please call me at (619) 265-0808 for information about booking a cruise from San Diego or anywhere. Or email me at sdheritage@cox.net

Thank you!  
Nancy Harrison

 

Adventures in Cruising

Aboard Holland America Ryndam
San Diego  to Mexico cruising




Arches of Cabo San Lucas from pool deck of Ryndam

Thanks to Abe & Bea Goldberg of San Diego and Ruth Kropveld of Cincinnati for sharing their family cruise photos!
 

               Features

.

Jews in the News          
 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Like you, we're pleased when members of our community are praiseworthy, and are disappointed when they are blameworthy.
Whether it's good news or bad news, we'll try to keep track of what's being said in general media about our fellow Jews. Our news spotters are Dan Brin in Los Angeles, Donald H. Harrison in San Diego, and you. Wherever you are,  if you see a story of interest, please send a summary and link to us at sdheritage@cox.net and we'll acknowledge your tip at the end of the column. To see a source story click on the link within the respective paragraph.

*Congressional Democrats Howard Berman and Tom Lantos of California and Eliot Engel of New York are among a group of congressional representatives pushing the Justice Department to investigate allegations that some American companies in the United States have employed drug-smuggling gangs in Colombia for criminal protection of their interests in Colombia.  The story by Josh Meyer is in today's Los Angeles Times.

*
Rabbi  Marvin Hier and Rabbi Abraham Cooper of the Simon Wiesenthal Center have taken the Los Angeles Times to task for providing a forum on its opinion page to a writer for Hamas.  Their op-ed piece is in today's Los Angeles Times.

*Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban has been pioneering a new concept in movie theatres—living room like viewing areas with soft chairs and foot rests, a nearby bar from which you can carry your drinks, and surround sound.  Individual tickets cost $11, or a party can rent the Landmark theatre for one movie showing for $1,500.  He built the concept into a theatre at the shopping center at Westwood  and Pico Boulevards.  The story by Lee Grant is in today's San Diego Union-Tribune.

*
Al Aqsa Brigade terrorists on the West Bank are laying down arms in response to a call by Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas to give peace with Israel a chance.  Mahdi Maraka and Nasr Kharuz say times are changing.  The New York Times News Service story is in today's San Diego Union-Tribune. David Ignatius of the Washington Post suggests in a column that the United States is consciously following a West Bank first option in the hope that moderates in Gaza will split from Hamas and seek union with the Palestinian state headed by Abbas.

*
The guilt felt by young Germans over the acts of their fathers and grandfathers in furtherance of the Holocaust is a recurring theme.  Now author Rachel Seffert explores the phenomenon in the novel Afterwards.  A review by Heller McAlpin is in today's Los Angeles Times.

*
San Diego Sheriff Bill Kolender has reversed his stand of several years ago and now is opposed to the continuance of a state liquor license for the casino and hotel on the Barona Indian Reservation.  He said even though Barona agreed not to serve liquor on the floor of the casino, the number of drunk driving crashes on windy Wildcat Canyon Road has been increasing steadily.  The story by Onell R. Soto is in today's San Diego Union-Tribune.

*In a story of international intrigue, the question is being asked "Who used thallium to poison Yana Kovalevsky and her mother, Dr. Marina Kolvalevsky, two former Soviet Jewish emigres to the United States, when they made a return visit to Russia? Paul Pringle tells the story in today's Los Angeles Times.

*Singer Barry Manilow has been making financial contributions to a variety of presidential candidates including Joe Biden, Hillary Clinton, John Edwards, and Barack Obama.  But the one that has some people scratching their heads is his contribution to Republican Ron Paul (who typically votes against Israel). The story by Don Frederick and Andrew Malcolm is in the "Top of the Ticket" column in today's Los Angeles Times.

*
It is not an easy topic to tackle, not for playwrights nor for audiences, but more and more dramas are dealing with genocides in Rwanda and in the Sudan.  One of them is Rash by Jenni Wolfson.  The story by Zachary Pincus-Roth is in today's Los Angeles Times.

*
Los Angeles County Supervisor Zev Yaraslovsky and other members of the board have expressed skepticism over County Counsel Ray Fortner's decision to no longer release summary memos concerning out of court settlements reached by the county government.  They may reverse his decision at an upcoming meeting. The story by Mark Haefele is in today's Los Angeles Times.


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Arts & Entertainment



Arts in Review

 by Carol Davis

To tell

the truth:

these three

all have

different

versions of

what led to

the Samurai's

death in

 

  Rashomon
 

Seema Sueko, Mitchell Wyatt

(Samurai), Richard Baird

(Bandit)


Who killed the Samurai? You can be the jury

SOLANA BEACH, California—I don’t think I could ever be a good witness to a crime. I’ve never been put to the test, but every now and then I try my skills while people-watching, or driving when someone cuts me off, or watching T.V. I describe in my mind  the person, situation or happening, and it amazes me how quickly I forget. It’s not that I don’t recall the incident. The details get fuzzy and I begin to doubt myself.

In Fay and Michael Kanin’s adaptation of Ryunosuke Akutagawa’s Rashomon, based on the 1950’s film directed by Akira Kurosawa which is taken from  two stories or fables by Akutagawa, reality and the idea of truth get intertwined  when three men, a woodcutter,  a priest and a wigmaker find themselves taking shelter under the Rashoman  Gate near Kyoto, Japan and share a tale.

Both the priest and the woodcutter tell that they witnessed the rape of a young woman and the murder of her Samarai husband at the hands of a renowned bandit. The wigmaker (played by Doren Elias who gives another perfect performance as a curmudgeon who knows too much) is intrigued by the event and being somewhat of a troublemaker himself, eggs them on to them to tell what they saw  happen.

Each has a different account of what they thought they saw. As the events are told in flashback, what we hear are a series of contradictions leaving the listener to arrive at his own conclusion. Adding to the confusion, the Bandit, the Samurai’s wife and the dead Samurai also give their account in an emotional series of  flashbacks.

At the North Coast Repertory Theatre in Solana Beach, artistic director David Ellenstein takes his talented cast of nine on a journey to find the truth, that oh, so elusive idea hidden in the stories each of the participants has to offer. Robert May ( low keyed and soft spoken) is the Priest who saw the Samurai and his wife the day the incident happened. The woodcutter, (Diep Huynh) claims he found the body of the Samurai three days before while looking for wood. Frightened, he went to the authorities and reported what he found.

What takes place next is a trial of sorts where the Bandit, Tajomaru, (played by Richard Baird who is bigger than life in this part which is meant for him) tells his interpretation of events. He claims he tricked the Samurai to step off the mountain trail with him to look at a cache of ancient swords. There he ties the Samurai to a bamboo  tree and goes back for his wife. He planned to rape the woman, who initially fought him off only to submit later on. The woman, wracked with shame and guilt, begged the bandit to a duel with her husband to the death. While they fought honorably and Tajomaru became the victor, Masago escapes.

The Samurai’s wife, Masago, (Seema Sueko has just the right balance of scheming wife, violated woman and frightened bird to give her credibility) has an entirely different story to tell. She claims that after the Bandit raped her, she begged her husband, who is tied to a bamboo tree, to forgive her, but he ignores her. She then freed him and begged him to kill her with her dagger, but he only stares at her in cold disbelief. She faints with the dagger in her hand and when she awakes she finds her husband dead with the dagger in his chest.

Through a medium, (Jensen Olaya completely realistic), because all of the stories are so different, the deceased Samurai, (a poised and believable Mitchell Wyatt) is allowed to give his account. After he was captured by Tajomaru, and after his wife was raped, Tajomaru asked Masago to travel with him. She accepts only after asking the Bandit to kill her husband so she wouldn’t feel the guilt of being with two men. Shocked by her request the Bandit  asks the Samurai if he should let his wife go or kill her. At this point, Masago escapes again and after an aborted attempt to recapture her, the Bandit lets the Samurai free. 

With the woodcutter, the Priest and the wigmaker looking on as are the rest of the audience, we are all left to draw our own conclusions  of the rape and murder for all versions are so different. Finally,  the attention is drawn back to the woodcutter, who says his earlier story was a lie and he tells yet another version of what he saw which is completely different from his own first story and from the others.

Entertaining? Absolutely. And there’s more!

Again, under Ellenstein’s direction and fine and powerful  acting overall, with wonderful costumes by Jeanne Reith, appropriate music by Chris Luessmann,  Matt Novotny’s fine  lighting design and on another excellent set by Marty Burnett, Rashomon is on the ‘not to be missed’ list. It’s better than watching Truth or Consequences. It plays through Aug. 12th. For more information call 858-481-1055 or visit northcoastrep.org

Jewish Postscripts:

Both Fay and Michael Kanin have been recognized with high praise within the Jewish Community. Fay Kanin has assumed various leadership roles in the film industry. She was the second female president for The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. She received numerous nominations and awards as writer and producer for stage, screen and television. They include several Emmy and Peabody awards, the Crystal Award for Women in Film and the Burning Bush Award from the University of Judaism. She is listed in American Jewish Women of Achievement Oral History Collection, which is the source of this information.

The late Michael Kanin was a distinguished playwright and screenwriter who  encouraged young playwrights to write for stage and screen. For more information on Michael Kanin visit Michael Kanin Playwriting Awards Program

See you at the theatre.

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Dance~The Jewish C~o~n~n~e~c~t~i~o~n
                                    by Sheila Orysiek



Two scenes from ABT's production of Sleeping Beauty.  
 Gene Schiavone photos

ABT's theatrical new Sleeping Beauty

COSTA MESA, California—American Ballet Theatre’s new production of this major ballet made its appearance at Orange County Performing Arts Center in Costa Mesa, with a worthy Saturday evening performance on July 21.  The house was filled – and well it should have been.  Premiering in New York on June 1, the production received mixed reviews; not for the dancing but for some unhappy theatrical effects, some tinkering with the drama of the story as well as choreographic “tune-ups.”  Always be careful when re-arranging a beloved classic.

If there is an obvious lesson to be learned from Sleeping Beauty it is to check and re-check an invitation list and that who one invites is more important than whom one wants to invite.  But perhaps the greater lesson is that a harsh verdict by an offended individual may need to be ameliorated by one of good heart.  That is why equity is married to common law.

A good lesson for a dance critic, too. This is a fairy tale and all too often critics try to discern within it heavy handed analysis perhaps coming to the theater prepared to condemn rather than with an equal measure prepared to enjoy.  The same can be said of librettists – it doesn’t really need much psycho-drama.  I simply enjoyed it. 

Whatever high wire flying fairies there were that garnered negative raves when this new production first premiered – are gone – perhaps for good.  The costumes (by Willa Kim) are sumptuous – lavish – glittering – bejeweled – and thank heavens – colorful.  We’ve become so used to the pale pastels for major and supportive roles or the range of earth tones (brown and dull) for peasants (even when they are celebrating something) seeing real color is almost jarring but welcome. A ballet such as Sleeping Beauty should be an optical feast, a spectacle – a theatrical experience - and this production certainly is all of that.

Susan Jaffe, retired from principal roles in 2002 returned to play the Queen and she was loving as a mother and one could see why the King cherished her when she implored him to spare the lives of the four “village gossips” who contrary to his edict brought a spindle to the Court.  He, danced by Roman Zhurbin, while properly kingly in proclaiming his edict (and other kingly duties) was much too stoical while watching his daughter dance with the deadly spindle or when she succumbed to the spell and swooned to the floor.  Even a king can show emotion as a father. 

Gillian Murphy was a beautiful Lilac Fairy – she didn’t simply dance well – she set jewels across the stage.  She was tender, she was firm in her contravention of Carabosse, and she enticed and convinced the Prince to follow her to find a Sleeping Princess in a forbidding forest.  Calm, sure, regal, she led the story forward and controlled it.

The Garland Dance didn’t dance for me.  As much as I love color – yellow edging toward mustard with turquoise accents, didn’t quite fit the idea of flower garlands.  Likewise the waltz itself never seemed to come together; it should be one of the highlights of the ballet. Two children were used and though they both accomplished with success their task – they were an interruption to the overall action of the waltz.

What a handsome Prince Désiré Jose Manuel Carreno made!  One look would certainly be a pleasant sight to which to awaken – one look would convince the most modest princess.  Julie Kent’s Aurora looked delighted.  (The lady next to me was fanning herself.)  He has the authority of a prince with the smile of a boyish happy heart.

The Vision Scene was introduced by a hunting excursion with the Prince and his friends – this is the first time we see him in the ballet.  Catching sight (actual or imagined) of a castle on a remote hilltop leads him to a reverie and I thought – on no – not another moody prince a la Siegfried in Swan Lake!  However, this scenario did give an opportunity for that rare happenstance – an adagio solo for a male dancer.  To watch a male principal dancer alone on the stage sans mighty jumps and multiple turns is a real treat.  Carreno is a fine dancer, an attentive partner and only lacks the edge of ballon when he does sail through the air.  Of especial note regarding his partnering skills – in the series of fish dives in the Grand Pas de Deux – they were all so smooth, so quickly accomplished and truly beautiful. (I can’t help but wish this particular ballet lift/move had a more flattering balletic name!)

The female corps de ballet in the Vision Scene came into its own and danced as one – coordinated physically and musically.  They completed the Vision – a difficult task very well done.  In addition, the Prince’s friends acquitted themselves in a worthy manner and though I believe it is far more difficult for the male corps to coordinate their signature jumps and turns than it is for the women – they did.

Five fairies – Sincerity, Fervor, Charity, Joy and Valor – earned their applause, but especially, Zhong-Jing Fang as Joy.  She was a delight: quick, clean, clear and yes, joyful.  She is listed in the Company roster as a member of the corps de ballet, but evidently is destined for greater challenges. 

Martine Van Hamel, retired from principal roles, performed as Carabosse and was a treat and then some.  She invested the role with wicked anger and frustrated evil. Unrestrained by strict classical vocabulary, she let loose with her considerable dramatic gifts:  an excellent counterpoise to Murphy’s “triumph over evil.”

Kent’s Aurora was a sweet well bred princess.  There were none of the all too pervasive exaggerations one sees in classical ballet today.  Arabesques did not exceed ninety degrees, penchés didn’t hit six o’clock and therefore obscure her Prince’s face and her lifted leg matched line for line with her arms and head – a thing not possible when extension is exaggerated.  She let the classical lines, the choreography as originally conceived and her own fine proportions speak – no extenuation was necessary.  She brought this classic role back to its classic base.  In Aurora’s allegro pas when first entering the stage – she could have added a bit more eclat to the overall sweetness – a bit more stretch in the skimming movement.   (Jump to continuation)

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Unless otherwise indicated, source for these stories is today's edition of The San Diego Union-Tribune, to which we gratefully provide the links below. We do not apply halacha to determine if a player is Jewish; rather, if he or she has a Jewish parent or has converted to the faith, we count him or her as a member of our community.

Is Brad Ausmus in training as a baseball manager?

BASEBALL—Brad Ausmus appears to be serving as an apprentice for Houston Astros manager Phil Garner, prompting Chris Jenkins of the San Diego Union-Tribune to speculate that a gig as a manager may be in Ausmus' future after he retires as a catcher.  ... T'was day six of the banishment from the American League's top 10 batters list for Kevin Youkilis.  Although he batted a respectable 1 for 3 in the Boston Red Sox's 11-3 defeat of the Chicago White Sox, and added to that a base on balls, scoring both times on the base paths, Youkilis' batting average at .310 is four points below that of the current Number 10 AL batter, Brian Roberts of the Baltimore Orioles.

HORSE RACING—Jockey David Cohen brought Wild Diplomat in for a second place finish Saturday in the 6th race at Del Mar Racetrack, the first time this season the jockey has won a bet-winning horse.  According to the track's website, a $2 bet paid $6.80 to place and $5.20 to show.   Cohen's mount in the 5th race, Trail Mix, did not finish in the money.
 

SCANDALS—National Basketball Association Mark Stern faces a scandal that can hurt his sport more than allegations of dog-fighting by Michael Vicks can hurt the NFL or steroid use by Barry Bonds can hurt MLB because alleged point fixing by referee  Tim Donaghy isn't just about the actions of an individual, it makes the entire sport suspect. That's the opinion of Ethan J. Skolnick of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel in a column appearing in today's San Diego Union-Tribune....


                                            

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Who is in National Jewish Sports Hall of Fame?

You'll find the National Jewish Sports Hall of Fame at the Suffolk Y Jewish Community Center in New York and from now on, we'll try to keep track in this space of new inductees.  But so that we all start off together on the same foot, here's an alphabetical listing by sport of who has been inducted so far. 

BASEBALL—Brad Ausmus, Adam Balkan, Moe Berg, Ron Blomberg, Harry Danning, Thelma Eisen, Mike Epstein, Sid Gordon, Shawn Green, Hank Greenberg, Ken Holtzman, Sandy Koufax, Max Levine, Elliott Maddox, Arthur Richman, Saul Rogovin, Al Rosen, Art Shamsky

BASKETBALL—Sandra Berenson Abbott, Red Auerbach, David Bluthethal, Larry Brown, Herb Brown,  Lou Carnesecca*, Shay Doron, Norm Drucker, Ken Fiedler, Jack Garfinkel, Marty Glickman, Leo Gottlieb, Bess Greenberg, Zachary Greenberg, Dan Grunfeld, Ernie Grunfeld, Sonny Hertzberg, Art Heyman, Nat Holman, Anita Kaplan, Ralph Kaplowitz, Jason Liberman, Nat Militzok, Steve Nisenson, Donna Orender, Marty Riger, Leonard Rosenbluth, Hank Rosenstein, Abe Saperstein, Red Sarachek, Dan Schayes, Ossie Schectman, Jonathan Scheyer, Laine Selwyn, Justin Simon, Zaeda Spoelstra, Sid Tanenbaum, Herb Turetzky, Neal Walk, Dennis Williams, Courtney Zale, Max Zaslofsky

BICYCLING—Nicole Freedman

BODY BUILDING—Dan Lurie

BOWLING—Marshall Holman

BOXING—Ray Arcel, Harry Haft, Benny Leonard, Boyd Melson, Barney Ross,

BROADCASTING/ SPORTSCASTING—Marv Albert; Mel Allen, Len Berman, Bonnie Bernstein, Linda Cohn, Howard Cosell, Stan Fischler, George Kalinsky, Barry Landers, Bill Mazer, Dwight Stones, Susan Waldman, Warner Wolf

CANADIAN FOOTBALL—Noah Cantor

CANOEING—Joe Jacobi

CYCLING—Ryan Levinson, Doug Shapiro

COLUMNIST—Gerald Eskanazi, Stan Isaacs, Steve Jacobson, Shirley Povich, Milton Richman, Dick Schapp, Lisa Winston

DISCUS—Nancy Moloff

DRESSAGE—Robert Dover

EXECUTIVE—Alan Freedman

FENCING—Cliff Bayer, Tamir Bloom, Emily Jacobson, Sada Jacobson,

FIGURE SKATING—Sarah Hughes

FOOTBALL— Matt Bernstein, Gary Bettman, Hayden Epstein, David Ettinger, Jay Fiedler, John Frank, Bennie Friedman, Lennie Friedman, Sid Gillman, Marshall Goldberg, Neila Jacobson, Chad Levitt, Marv Levy, Sid Luckman, Wellington Mara. Josh Miller, Marvin Miller, Ron Mix, Ed Newman, Neil Ravitz, Sage Rosenfels, Mike Rosenthal, Mike Saffer, Allie Sherman, Bob Stein, Dick Steinberg, Josh Taves, Preston Robert Tisch, Gary Wichard, Mark Wohlstadter, Gary Wood, George Young*

GOLF—Amy Alcott

GYMNASTICS—Mitch Gaylord, Dustin Greenhill, Dan Helmer, Sarah Lownthal, Kerri Strug,

HANDBALL—Vic Hershkowitz, James Jacobs

HORSE SHOWING—Margie Goldstein-Engle

HORSERACING—Walter Blum

ICE HOCKEY—Sarah De Costa, Bob Nystrom*, Eric Nystrom, Mathieu Shneider, Marc Siegel

JUDO—Bob Berland, Charlie Minkin

KARATE—Marilyn Fierro

LACROSSE—William Beroza, Al Blau, Adam Mahfouda, Rebekah Rottenberg,

MARATHON RUNNING—Helene Hines, Deena Kastor, Fred Lebow

POLE VAULT—Jilian Schwartz

RACQUETBALL—Marty Hogan

REFEREE—Jerry Markbreit

ROWING—Aerial Gilbert,

RUGBY—Shaw Lipman

SKIING—Carrie Sheinberg

SOCCER—Jeff Agoos, Charles Altchek, Yael Averbuch, Hilary Framson, Jesse Koller, Jarryd Levine, Shep Messing, Chad Prince, Debbie Rademacher, Sara Whalen

SOFTBALL—Rachel Blume, Samantha Marder

SHOT PUT—Andy Bloom, Rebekah Green, Amy Rosson

SPECIAL OLYMPICS—Craig Ludin

SQUASH—Stephanie Barnet

SWIMMING—Anthony Ervin, Scott Goldblatt, Ben Herman, David Kahn, Lennie Krayzelburg, Jason Lezak, Madelyn Raemnofsky, Mark Spitz,

TENNIS—Gladys Heldman, Julie Heldman, Ilana Kloss, Dick Savitt,

TRACK—Deena Drossin, Margaret Lambert, Irving Mondschein, Zhanna Pintusevich-Block, Jodi Schlesinger

TRIATHLETE—Joanna Zeiger

VOLLEYBALL—Fran Kalafer, Brie Katz, Jessica Levy

WEIGHTLIFTING—Isaac Berger,

WRESTLING—Damion Hahn, Henry Wittenberg

WRITER—Roger Kahn

* George Young Award winner, given to a Jew or non-Jew.

 





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Israel TV audience witnesses a 2-1 pitchers duel

By Nathaniel Edelstein

PETACH TIKVA, July 22- Fans who tuned into Arutz Sport5's Sunday Night Game at Yarkon Field were not disappointed as the Netanya Tigers defeated the Modi'in Miracle in a 2-1 pitchers duel.  New York City native Leon Feingold out-pitched Modi'in's Audy Alcantara by throwing a complete-game three-hitter, allowing just one run while striking out four and walking one to pick up his second win.

The Tigers scored one run in the third inning on a single from leftfielder Dan Rootenberg and then one more in the fifth on a single from Dominican shortstop Hector De Los Santos.  Although Modi'in centerfielder Adalberto Paulino hit his sixth homerun of the season, his team dropped its third consecutive game.

At the Sportek, the Tel Aviv Lightning capitalized on the Miracle loss by beating the
Bet Shemesh Blue Sox 10-1 to take sole possession of second place and move just 1.5 games behind the first-place Sox.  Lightning pitcher Daniel Kaufman began the game a bit wild, but settled down to throw six innings and allowed no earned runs and only one hit while striking out seven batters and walking five to improve to 3-2.

The Tel Aviv offense handed Bet Shemesh's Juan Feliciano his first loss of the season, but a sloppy Blue Sox defense didn't help the cause either.  Designated hitter Matt Brill and first baseman Stewart Brito each went 2-for-4 with two RBI to give Kaufman more than enough support as Steve Hertz's club won its third straight game.

At Kibbutz Gezer, the Petach Tikva Pioneers won their fourth game of the season by

beating the Ra'anana Express 14-6.  The Pioneers offense piled on the runs, but Brooklyn-native Alper Ulutas pitched a good game, throwing six innings and giving up two earned runs on six hits to go along with four strikeouts and five walks.

However, the offense was certainly the story of the game as leftfielder Ryan Crotin led the way, going 4-for-4 with two homers and three RBI.  Centerfielder Ben Dashefsky also contributed with a 2-for-3 night and two RBI along with his first homerun of the season as the Pioneers put the brakes to their four-game losing skid.

In other league news, Commissioner Daniel Kurtzer disallowed the Petach Tikva Pioneers' protest of the July 17th game against the Modi'in Miracle in which a
homerun derby controversy occurred.  During the game the umpires ruled that Petach Tikva second baseman Willis Bumphus could not participate in the same derby round as both a pitcher and batter.  The decision means that the Modi'in is the official winner of the game. As a result of the controversy, the commissioner has clarified the
rules of the homerun derby to allow a change of a team's derby pitcher
at any time.

Summaries:
                 1   2   3   4   5   6   7   R   H   E
Netanya     0   0   1   0   1   0   0   2    6   1
Modi'in      0   1   0   0   0   0   0    1   3   3
W: Leon Feingold (2-2); L: Audy Alcantara (1-2); HR: Adalberto Paulino (6)

                         1   2   3   4   5   6   7   R   H   E
Bet Shemesh     1   0   0   0   0   0   0    1   1    4
Tel Aviv           2   5   1   2   0   0   x   10  7    1
W: Daniel Kaufman (3-2); L: Juan Feliciano (4-1); HR: None
                        1   2   3   4   5   6   7    R   H   E
Ra'anana          1   0   1   0   0   2   2    6    9    1
Petach Tikva    1   1   8   3   1   0   x   14  13   3
W: Alper Ulutas (2-1); L: John Thew (2-2); HR: Ryan Crotin (4), Ben
Dashefsky (1)

Standings:
Team                             W    L     %     GB
Bet Shemesh Blue Sox   16    6    .727     –
Tel Aviv Lightning         14    7    .667    1.5
Modi'in Miracle              13    8     .619   2.5
Ra'anana Express             9    13    .409   7.0
Netanya Tigers                7    12    .368   7.5
Petach Tikva Pioneers     4    17    .190   11.5

Monday's games start early due to Tisha B'av.  At noon the Ra'anana Express play the Netanya Tigers at Kibbutz Gezer while the Petach Tikva Pioneers take on the Modi'in Miracle at Yarkon Field at the Baptist Village.  At 3pm the Bet Shemesh Blue Sox visit the TelAviv Lighting at Sportek in Tel Aviv.  For directions to the fields
visit www.IsraelBaseballLeague.com.
                                                  ___________________

First the baseball league, and now the souvenir cards

BOSTON (Press Release)– With pro baseball having arrived in Israel, could baseball cards have been far behind?

Anything related to a “first season” of a professional league is bound to garner attention from collectors, and one of the most popular figures to be a special edition honoring the inaugural year of the Israel Baseball League.

The 18-card set, limited to 3,000, features combinations of players who were making a quick impact in the new league, which had its opening day on June 24. The league is composed of six teams and 120 players, representative of nine nations. They are playing a 45-game schedule, culminating in a championship on August 19.

The copy on the backs of the cards are in both Hebrew and English.

The cards were developed by Jewish Major Leaguers, the organization led by Martin Abramowitz who in 2003 developed the set of all Jewish players who had appeared in the Major League Baseball since the 1870’s. That  set, “American Jews in America’s Game”, led to a weekend forum in Cooperstown and to two “update” editions.
 

The Israel Baseball League set includes 42 player images, grouped as “Top Draft Picks,” “First to Sign”, “Israeli Prospects,” “College Stars” “International Stars” “Managers”, “League Leaders (the founders) and a brief history of the league. The “Managers” card includes ex-major leaguers Art Shamsky , Ken Holtzman, and Steve Hertz. The set also features cards of top players grouped by team.
 

In the league’s early weeks, there have been three no-hitters pitched, as well as multiple home run games and a few players who have already broken double figures on home runs. Thus, the league has been exciting for its balance of strong pitching and power hitting.

“Baseball cards are part of the excitement when you root for a team or root for a league,” said Larry Baras, founder of the IBL. “These will be fun and interactive for kids and their parents and make for terrific gifts. We’ve been asked about whether we will have cards almost since the day we launched the league.” 

Said Abramowitz, “I’m hoping folks will rip off the shrink-wrap and start sorting them, flipping them, putting them in holders, and enjoying them the way cards have traditionally been enjoyed.”

The cards, selling for $15,will be available through the Jewish Major Leaguers web-site, www.jewishmajorleaguers.org, as well as selected local Jewish bookstores throughout the country. Additional IBL-related products can be found on the IBL website.



Sleeping Beauty...
(Continued from above)
The Rose Adagio deserved enthusiastic response of the audience, was secure – but somehow not exciting.  She didn’t eschew the proffered hands of the princes as some recent Auroras have done (a very unromantic circus addition, in my opinion), but she did take them a might too quickly.  I like a more leisurely approach a la Fonteyn.   What was exciting was the series of beautifully done cabriole derriére directly into renversé.  Altogether Kent gave us a lesson in the precise sculpting of classical ballet lines rather than the over flung circus the art form has been approaching. By the end of the ballet, however, Kent’s smile had vanished and she looked strained.

The Blue Bird Grand Pas de Deux, danced by Gennadi Saveliev and Stella Abrera, was an interesting contrast to the principals.  Saveliev is a more compact dancer with fine ballon.  Abrera took advantage of her bird role and was a saucy, flickering delight: her high attitude derriére leg – close behind her head – fit the role – birdlike – quick – and in constant motion. 

The various character dances in the Wedding Celebration such as Puss-in-Boots and Red Riding Hood were present but shortened with no great loss.  In some productions I find the “joke” overdone.  However, the silly business with Prince Charming putting on Cinderella’s slipper could be dispensed with altogether; it came across as someone grappling around a woman’s ankle – with no meaning to the story.

Mounting a new production of Sleeping Beauty is a major undertaking – costly, challenging and rife with potential problems.  Nothing happens on a small scale – the result is either a triumph or a devastating failure because of the huge investment.  This new production reminds us of the word “Theatre” in ABT’s name.  I think it was great theatre.  Carabosse arrives in a blinding meteoric flash of light and noise.  Steam hisses, smoke swirls and rises in a column.  At other times, such as the Vision Scene, mist softly eddies across the stage – the final ripples from the river in the set.  The Lilac Fairy takes the Prince on a journey in a silver winged boat as panels of forest growth cross the other way.  The OCPAC stage crew, silent and unseen behind the glitter, are the unsung heroes for all this smooth sailing: no blips to jar us back to reality. 

While the sets (by Tony Walton) were visually interesting, I thought the entrance for dancers – a stairs coming around a castle tower - was unfortunate.  This is certainly true for anyone sitting left of center.  Also, rather incomprehensible is the separation of the King and Queen from their daughter – they do not join her in the long sleep.  Of happier circumstance this production leaves in the mime – gives it time – making it clear and understandable. Marius Petipa’s choreography with additions by Kevin McKenzie and Gelsey Kirkland, survives.

Sometimes, instead of deep analysis it is worthwhile to cast one’s ears backward and listen to the audience as the story proceeds.  I did that and caught nary a sound of coughing, no shuffling about – everyone seemed caught up in the action.  And that’s the point isn’t it?

With all the color, the theatricality of this production, the lavish costuming as well as the dancing, I think the audience that fist saw this ballet at its birth in January 1890 on the stage of the Mariinsky in St. Petersburg, would have loved it.

The orchestra played well, but under the baton of Charles Barker, at times, here and there, dragged the tempi a bit.

POSTSCRIPT—
Principal Dancer Susan Jaffe, a member of the Jewish community, was born in Washington D. C. in 1962.  She studied at the American School of Ballet which is affiliated with the New York City Ballet and the American Ballet Theatre School affiliated with the Company of the same name - both are
considered amongst the premier ballet schools in the world. 

After dancing with the American Ballet Theatre II Company, she joined the main company in 1980 and was promoted to Principal in 1983 - a fairly short time line for promotion to the first rank.  She has danced all the leading roles of the classical repertoire as well as contemporary roles such as Tharp's Everlast and Dove's Serious Pleasures.  She has also toured with Baryshnikov's company but is specifically admired as Odette/Odile in Swan Lake and the title role in Giselle - two of the greatest challenges for a ballerina in the canon of the classical ballet.  She retired from principal roles in June 2002 at the age of forty but returns to undertake character work.

She will be in San Diego as a guest teacher with City Ballet of San Diego from July 30th to August 3rd and this reviewer has been invited to attend one of her classes as an observer - an event to which I look forward.  Watching a great ballerina impart her knowledge is a lesson in grace.

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