Matzo Balls for Breakfast and Other Memories of Growing Up Jewish

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Edition: Reprint
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2005-10-03
Publisher(s): Free Press
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Summary

Alan King -- the beloved comic, actor, producer, author, philanthropist, and storyteller extraordinaire -- has compiled a wonderfully readable book about growing up Jewish, with totally original contributions by famous people. Combining warmhearted humor with a prideful nostalgia, these essays discuss life in the Jewish family and neighborhood, being a Jew in a non-Jewish world, Jewish holidays, and discovering the essence of being Jewish.

Author Biography

Alan King conceived and developed this book in the period of time before he died, in May 2004. It would be his final accomplishment in a lifetime of prolific achievement.

Table of Contents

Foreword xi
Larry King
PART I: LIFE IN THE JEWISH FAMILY AND NEIGHBORHOOD
1(54)
From Manhattan to Allentown to Washington DC
3(2)
Susan Stamberg
Brighton Beach, the Music, and Mom
5(2)
Neil Sedaka
A Blessing for Yakov Robinson
7(3)
Alan Dershowitz
A Lost Soul
10(7)
Bernie Siegel
My Alteh Zaideh
17(1)
Monty Hall
Seltzer
18(1)
Anthony Weiner
My Favorite Deli
19(3)
Jay Winik
Encouragement When You Need It Most
22(1)
Bill Macy
My Son . . . Not a Doctor
23(2)
Joel S. Kaplan
My ``Hasidic'' Father
25(4)
Ruchama King Feuerman
Aunts, Uncles, and Grandmothers
29(2)
Carol Bruce
Yiddishkeit
31(4)
Iris Rainer Dart
Brighton Beach
35(2)
Gloria Dubov Miklowitz
Bubbe's Basement
37(4)
Faye Moskowitz
At Reuben's After the Shabbat Service
41(1)
Alan Oppenheimer
Rocky Dale
42(6)
Steve Bronstein
Growing Up Jewish in Chicago
48(4)
Jan Schakowsky
Diaspora in Miami Beach
52(3)
Thane Rosenbaum
PART II: A JEW IN A NON-JEWISH WORLD
55(86)
First Contact
57(1)
Ed Asner
Baseball Was Our Religion
58(4)
Murray Olderman
Persecution
62(1)
Neil Simon
Dog
63(2)
Gerald Stern
What Are You?
65(5)
Carole L. Glickfeld
Southern Jew
70(5)
Lisa Solod
Sheriff of the Ship
75(1)
Shecky Greene
What's a Good Day?
76(2)
Gene Saks
A Jew in Texas
78(3)
Fred Zeidman
Riches from the Mameloshen
81(2)
Larry Katzman
On Not Having a Christmas Tree
83(1)
Susan Davis
Not Quite ``Normal''
84(2)
Len Berman
The Hebress of the Class
86(4)
Ruth Knafo Setton
Growing Up Jewish in Atlanta
90(9)
Stuart Eizenstat
Fighting On
99(4)
Barney Rosenzweig
In the Jewish Chapel
103(2)
Sheilah Kaufman
Changing Names
105(4)
Martin Jay
Opening a New Door
109(1)
Benjamin Cardin
Chosen
110(7)
Richard Marcus
The Permits
117(3)
Steve Israel
West Hartford
120(3)
Jacob Neusner
Becoming an OD
123(4)
Jerome Slater
Growing Up with the Holocaust
127(11)
Joel Siegel
It Helps to Have Captain America on Your Side
138(3)
Stan Lee
PART III: MILESTONES AND HOLIDAYS
141(44)
Lighting Candles
143(1)
Melissa Manchester
Bris
144(3)
Dmitriy Salita
Jewish Christmas
147(5)
Barbara Rushkoff
Matzo Balls and Me
152(3)
Leslea Newman
Invitation to a Wedding
155(1)
Don Rickles
The Nuns' Seder
156(2)
Sally J. Priesand
Christmas in Southern California
158(7)
Leslie Epstein
High Holidays in the Granite State
165(3)
Daniel Mariaschin
Menorah
168(2)
Ruth Laredo
A Stormy Bar Mitzvah
170(2)
Larry Brown
Never Too Late to Become a Bar Mitzvah
172(4)
Warner Wolf
A Yom Kippur Remembrance
176(2)
Melvin Jules Bukiet
The Night My Father Invented Champagne
178(7)
Melville Shavelson
PART IV: MY DEFINING MOMENT; OR, DISCOVERING THE ESSENCE OF BEING JEWISH
185(52)
In Comedy There's Hope
187(2)
Jerry Stiller
Four Things
189(3)
Jamie Lee Curtis
An Ethical Choice
192(2)
Daniel Schorr
Heal the World and Pursue Justice
194(2)
Peter Yarrow
Humor, Education, Tradition, and Matzo Ball Soup
196(1)
Larry King
Hugs and Kisses
197(1)
Gene Wilder
And/Or
198(3)
Edward Newman
What Keeps Us Going
201(1)
Sid Caesar
A Worried Jew
202(1)
Judd Hirsch
My Mezuzah
203(2)
David Copperfield
Closer to God Through Music
205(1)
Nathaniel Rosen
Commandments
206(3)
Barry Louis Polisar
A Jew by Politics and Art
209(3)
Nicholas Meyer
A Jew by Chance
212(3)
David Margolis
Lessons from the Yiddish Shule
215(2)
Arthur Hiller
Tikkun Olam
217(2)
Judy Chicago
Food and Laughter
219(4)
Bernie Brillstein
Listen
223(3)
Alan Shapiro
The Tree in the Log
226(2)
Dina Rosenfeld
A Passion for Being Jewish
228(3)
Susannah Heschel
``What Are We?''
231(2)
Anne Bernays
Every Gesture, Every Decision I Make
233(4)
Uri Geller
REMEMBERING ALAN KING
237(10)
Alan King, Comedy, Tennis, and Food
239(4)
Rick Moranis
Life According to Alan King
243(4)
Barbara Walters
Alan King Eulogy
247
Billy Crystal

Excerpts

Chapter One: From Manhattan to Allentown to Washington, DC

Susan Stamberg

For fourteen years, Susan Stamberg has been the cohost of National Public Radio'sAll Things Considered.She is an Edward R. Murrow Award winner and a Broadcasting Hall of Fame member.

Growing up in Manhattan in the 1950s, I thought the whole world was Jewish. Well, my whole world was! Yes, my public school classes had a Despina Chilakis and a Diane Grimaldi. But mostly we were Levitt and Fortgang and Goldstein and company. Every weekend, my dad took us down to the Lower East Side for knishes at Schmulka Bernstein's (today it's Bernstein on Essex, a glatt kosher Chinese restaurant where the waiters wear little red silk yarmulkes with tassels). Or to Yonah Schimmel's. We were ethnic Jews more than observant ones. Still, I was sent to Temple Rodeph Sholem for confirmation classes. I found them most interesting. Until our teacher, Mr. Lear, decided to switch from Hebrew lessons to lessons in the rhumba. When I objected, I was called to the principal's office with my mother. I said I was there for language, not fancy footwork (I was much too earnest a child, I see now). Either they invited me to leave school, or I parted in protest -- I can't quite remember. My mother was mortified and, I suspect, a bit proud. So much for my formal Jewish education.

It wasn't until I married Louis Collins Stamberg of Allentown, Pennsylvania, that I realized the world included rhumba dancers who were not Jewish...not to mention people with two left feet, people who thought Jews had horns, people who were deeply immersed in very different faiths and beliefs. My husband, growing up, knew just how many Jews there were in Allentown. His family belonged to the Reform temple and the Jewish country club. The Stambergs of Allentown were self-consciously Jewish. They knew they were in the minority, had neighbors who didn't like living near Jews, and practiced traditions that defined them as Jews in a town that didn't reflect those traditions back to them. Allentown was not New York.

Neither is Washington, DC, where I've spent my adult life. Yonah Schimmel? Knishes? Stuffed derma? We don't have a single decent deli in our nation's capital! You can't buy a rye bread with any zest to it, let alone find pastrami that makes your mouth water just ordering it. Sometimes I wish the whole world was Jewish. Usually on weekends. At lunchtime.

Copyright © 2004 by Alan King Productions and Bill Adler Books, Inc.


Excerpted from Matzo Balls for Breakfast: And Other Memories of Growing up Jewish by Alan King
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