Akeena Solar

Tommywood

October 20, 2009

Shadows of the Sun

When the German forces surrendered to the Allies in May 1945, World War II in Europe ended. However, for the Jewish survivors of the Holocaust, the trauma of what they endured wasn’t over. For many, the effects lingered on in ways large and small, noticeable and not, often in ways their families came to know.

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Robert KraftWednesday, September 16, 2009

The Kraft of Movie Music

“If there’s music in a movie,” said Robert Kraft, president of Fox Music, “whether on screen, or underscore, or someone is playing guitar in a scene, I’m involved.”

Illustration by Dan KacvinskiTuesday, August 11, 2009

What Survives From the Sixties

The summer of 1969 was host to a pair of historic events — the moon landing and the Woodstock festival — that seemed to define the ’60s. As we revisit those events this summer, it is fair to ask: What did they mean, what did they accomplish and what parts of the ’60s have meaning today?

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Owners Patty Polinger, left, and Cathy Tauber. Photos by Dan KacvinskiWednesday, August 5, 2009

Vidiots

If you believe all the tech pundits, the future of home movie watching will be moving to “the cloud.” We’re already well on the way to where Netflix DVDs will no longer arrive in the mail and sit, unwatched, on an entryway table. Soon all films and many reruns of TV shows will be downloaded and sit on your hard drive — indeed, this option is already available in many cases.

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Spies, Celebs, Classics and More —  Good Reads

Lajos Kozma, 1930.Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Budapest Designer Melded Classical With Cutting Edge

Can a piece of furniture convey the story of Hungarian Jewry or reveal the genius of a little-known master? The story of a career undercut by anti-Semitism and cut short by death?

Ossie SchectmanWednesday, April 22, 2009

JEWBALL

Who knew that basketball has a storied Jewish past, or that a non-sports guy like me would ever read, no less enjoy, a book about baseball umpires, Bruce Weber’s “As They See ‘Em” (Scribner, 2009)? Maybe it’s because Passover is a time of miracles — or is that Chanukah? Or Purim? Or the entire sweep of Jewish history? No matter. We’re here to talk sports, a subject I now know a little more about.

“Hermosa Beach Pier” Photo by Lawrence Ho/Los Angeles TimesTuesday, March 24, 2009

City of Images Gets Its Own Photography Scene

Los Angeles has long held a fascination with the visual; beholden to looks, surfaces and images, it is a city where even the buildings seem to strike a pose. So it might seem surprising that until now, there’s never been an institution here devoted to photography. But that all changes this week with the opening of the stunning new Annenberg Space for Photography in Century City.

Grauman's Chinese TheatreTuesday, March 10, 2009

Laud the Life of Grauman, Hollywood’s Gold Standard

Ever wonder how the movie industry went from five-cent nickelodeons in New York to the glamour of Hollywood with red carpet premieres and the highest of artistic aspirations? Or why a certain pagoda-like Hollywood movie theater in whose courtyard rest footprints of actors is one of the most beloved and frequented tourist sites on the planet?

"The Reader"Thursday, February 19, 2009

Holocaust Movies: Winners and Losers

Are Holocaust movies good for the Jews? Or even, for that matter, for society at large?

“Superman” No. 14, cover art. Artist: Fred Ray; © 1941 DC Comics; Superman ™ and © DC ComicsAll rights reserved; Used with permission. Collection of Jerry RobinsonWednesday, February 18, 2009

‘Zap! Pow! Bam!’

Look! Up in the sky! It’s a bird! It’s a plane! It’s two Jewish kids from Cleveland!

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Tom Is ...

Tommywood is ... Tom is ... on Facebook. Aren’t you? If you read this column online and are not on Facebook, you will soon be.

Thursday, December 25, 2008

The ‘Maus’ that roared

Art Spiegelman attended Harpur College in Binghamton, N.Y. It was the '60s! Sex, LSD and combinations of both blew his mind, while trips to San Francisco, the East Village and a Vermont commune put flowers in his hair, or at least in some of his drawings.

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

L.A.‘s new Grammy Museum: A museum as muse

New downtown Grammy Museum reflects on music's importance, even during a time of industry uncertainty

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Wild about Diamond

David Wild wants you to know that he is an unabashed Neil Diamond fan. So much so that he has written a book titled, "He Is ... I Say: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Neil Diamond"

Yoram KaniukThursday, November 6, 2008

Kaniuk’s writerly riffs probe Israeli psyche

" . . . I'm talking to Shlomo Shva about my daughters, trying to dredge up a little sympathy. He knows about that. The harshest criticism of Israel and the Jews has always come from us. The biggest anti-Semites of all are educated Israelis, and my daughters are as fanatical as they are, but sweeter than most . . . "

Gary LevineWednesday, October 15, 2008

Showtime is just this cantor’s day job

Levine was in the middle of a Showtime meeting when his assistant interrupted saying "Dustin Hoffman's on the line." Hoffman was not calling to pitch Showtime; instead, he was standing on a soundstage and needed Levine to intone the Kaddish for a movie he was mixing

Steven SpielbergWednesday, October 1, 2008

Steven Spielberg dreams anew

What does it mean that Spielberg's other founding partners, David Geffen and Jeffrey Katzenberg, are no longer with the company?

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Defender of Faith:
Rabbi David Wolpe explains why faith matters

As we get older, we no longer ask so many questions aloud. Our questions become more private: Why? Why are we on this earth? Events occur, and we ask: Why me? Or, why not me?

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Premier theater complex blossoms on West Side

"Without people like the Broads,we wouldn't have commissioned work of Mozart and Bach and Beethoven and so many of the great painters. How they use their capital is commendable." -- Dustin Hoffman

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Herb Gold, elder statesman of the Beat Generation, writes on

It was at college that he first met Allen Ginsberg. "He was 17. He was a bit crazy, and he was more eccentric than I was," Gold said.



Director Isabel Coixet on the set of "Elegy"Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Waxing (Philip) Roth

I decided to watch every film adapted from Philip Roth's work. My mission started simply enough: a search on imdb.com turned up eight works on film and TV, stretching back to the 1950s. Some had never been released on video, some are only in VHS, some were available at the local video store, some had to be tracked down in specialty shops or in university or museum archives. My quest led me across Los Angeles and afforded me the pleasure of visiting some of the city's most beautiful libraries and research facilities, as well as some of its best-stocked video stores.

Thursday, July 3, 2008

The heart and the drive

He was famous for being the first man in Hungary to own a car, and my grandmother kept a clipping from the Royal Hungarian Automobile Society with a picture of him seated at the controls of his Benz with a little girl on the rear rumble seat. Beneath the photo was the caption in Hungarian, German and French, proclaiming "Hatsek Bela le premier automobiliste Hongrois sur son voiture Benz en 1895."

John Turturro, left, Adam Sandler and Emmanuelle Chriqui in "You Don't Mess With the Zohan." Photo by Tracy Bennett/Columbia PicturesThursday, June 12, 2008

Sandler and the Zohan

As to whether "Zohan" will advance the cause of peace in the Middle East and increase regard for Israel and Israelis in the world at large, even as Israel itself celebrates its 60th anniversary, that's hard to say

Thursday, June 12, 2008

Trolling between the lines: Collecting titles at Publishers’ BookExpo

The last time BookExpo was in Los Angeles, the convention floor was constantly, overwhelmingly crowded, with so many booths that the author autographing section had to be relegated to a basement hall

Benjamin JaffeThursday, May 29, 2008

Jazz: Made in New Orleans

Preservation Hall's formula was simple and is followed to this day: No reservations, no food, just music in a small room. Shows began at 8 p.m. Each set lasted around 35 minutes, and tickets were priced low (they're now $10 a show, Wednesday through Sunday)

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Post-Zionism in a diaspora world

What does it mean to be a Jew in a Post-Zionist world?

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