Golden age romantic comedy sparks Love in Suspenders
Film Review By Michael Fox, Special To The Observer The graying of the baby boomer generation has had a side effect we should have anticipated: septuagenarian romantic comedies. Made for a specific demographic, golden age rom-coms are a decidedly mixed bag. If the leads are movie stars, we’ve followed their
To live and love again after the Holocaust
Film Review By Michael Fox, Special To The Observer Hundreds of movies have been made about the horrors of the Holocaust. The exquisite Hungarian film Those Who Remained is one of relatively few to explore how survivors struggled in the years after. A small story that contains multitudes, Those Who
Bark Mitzvah Boy
Look for The Adventures of Bark Mitzvah Boy each month in The Dayton Jewish Observer and at this site. To read the complete July 2020 Dayton Jewish Observer, click here.
Obituaries
Janet Bogin, devoted wife, mother, grandmother, friend and teacher, died May 20 in Oakland, Calif. Born July 24, 1927 in New Rochelle, N.Y. to Pauline and Pinchus Schmier, she attended college at Ohio Wesleyan University and, in 1950, married Asher Bogin, also of New Rochelle. After the Bogins settled in
In Dayton’s Oregon District, woman punches rifle-toting ‘white supremacist’ in face
Tells The Observer she feared another massacre on Fifth Street or that nearby protesters would be shot By Marshall Weiss, The Dayton Jewish Observer Fairborn, Ohio resident Katie Mae Marshall, as she goes by on Facebook, came to Downtown Dayton by herself around noon on Saturday, May 30 to join
How Fiddler on the Roof made it to the stage
By Curt Schleier, JTA Instinctively, director-choreographer Jerome Robbins (né Rabinowitz) knew the musical that he was preparing for Broadway was something far greater than just the story of a Jewish family facing persecution in czarist Russia. So at one of his early meetings with the creatives behind the project, he
Heading Home: Team Israel’s Magic Carpet Ride
Documentary examines ‘miracle’ of World Baseball Classic By Jonathan Mark The New York Jewish Week The 2018 documentary, Heading Home, about Team Israel’s Joe Hardy-like ride through victory after victory in the Major League’s 2017 World Baseball Classic, is a sports documentary, of course, but a love story all the
Ben Ferencz shines the light of law in Prosecuting Evil
By Michael Fox Special To The Dayton Jewish Observer Benjamin Ferencz was the lead prosecutor in the Nuremberg trial of 24 officers who led the Einsatzgruppen (mobile SS extermination squads) that murdered more than a million Jews and other “enemies of the state” in Nazi-occupied Eastern Europe. Just 27 when
Soap-opera comedy ignites Tel Aviv on Fire
By Michael Fox Special To The Dayton Jewish Observer Palestinian writer-director Sameh Zoabi achieves something altogether remarkable with his second feature film, particularly at this moment in time: He finds humor in the tattered relationship between Israelis and Palestinians. “The whole idea of Tel Aviv on Fire is that we
How will our children remember these times?
By Rabbi Haviva Horvitz Temple Beth Sholom, Middletown The word commencement is a noun, which is defined as a beginning or a start. It is also used when referencing a ceremony in which degrees or diplomas are conferred on graduating students. Doesn’t that seem contradictory? Those who are graduating and