June 25, 2018

Page 27

mazel tov to Achievement Five years into a successful career as a sales agent with William E. Wood and Associates (now Howard Hanna) Nancy Evans was identified as suited for management. Now, after a 25-year-career of managing, negotiating, coaching, and advising an office full of successful agents, Evans has returned to selling real estate. Evans says she “looks forward to helping clients with all of their real estate needs” by using her years of acquired skills and knowledge to advise, negotiate, and educate. Evans is a Norfolk native who spent her youth at Temple Israel and the JCC. Mazel Tov submissions should be emailed to news@ujft.org with Mazel Tov in the subject line. Achievements, B’nai Mitzvot, births, engagements and weddings are appropriate simchas to announce. Photos must be at least 300k. Include a daytime phone for questions. There is no fee.

Why is LIFE & LEGACY™ important to you? The Schulmans knew it was important to plan for the future. The LIFE & LEGACY™ program helped them think about their legacy and take action.

WHO KNEW? The Band’s Visit wins 10 Tony Awards, including for best musical

T

he Band’s Visit, a jewel-box musical based on an Israeli film about an Egyptian band stranded in a hardscrabble Negev town, won the 2018 Tony Award for best musical. The Band’s Visit dominated its categories during the 72nd annual Tony Awards ceremony at Radio City Music Hall Sunday, June 10. Ari’el Stachel, the California-born son of an Israeli-Yemeni father and an Ashkenazi mother from New York, won the award for best featured actor in a musical for his performance as a romantic Egyptian trumpeter in the musical. Tony Shalhoub (Monk) won for best actor in a musical and Katrina Lenk for best actress in a musical for their roles as, respectively, the leader of the band and the Israeli cafe owner who takes him in. The Band’s Visit also won awards for best book (by Itamar Moses), best direction of a musical, best original score (by David Yazbek), best lighting design, best orchestration and best sound design. Stachel, 26, is making his Broadway debut in The Band’s Visit. The play is based on the 2007 award-winning Israeli movie directed by Eran Kolirin. In her acceptance speech, Lenk paid tribute to the late Israeli actress Ronit Elkabetz, who

originated her role in the film. In his acceptance speech, Stachel acknowledged his parents, who were in the audience, saying the musical led him to again embrace an identity he had long avoided. “Both my parents are here tonight. I have avoided so many events with them because for so many years of my life I pretended I was not a Middle Eastern person,” he said. “And after 9/11 it was very, very difficult for me, and so I concealed and I missed so many special events with them. And they’re looking at me right now and I can’t believe it.” He also thanked producer Orin Wolf “for telling a small story about Arabs and Israelis getting along at a time where we need that more than ever.” Angels in America, playwright Tony Kushner’s 1993 epic about the AIDS epidemic, won the award for best revival of a play for the 2018 iteration starring Andrew Garfield. Lindsay Mendez won for best performance by an actress in a featured role in a Musical for the revival of Carousel. Mendez, whose father is Mexican American and who identifies herself as “a Mexican-Jewish girl,” said she had been advised to change her surname to downplay her ethnicity when she first moved to New York, but was glad she refused. (JTA)

“We found OST to be a welcoming community and we are excited to bring our girls up there. Our hope is that our gift will help preserve our community.” – Elaine & Joash Schulman

Find out how to create your legacy plan by contacting Barb Gelb, bgelb@ujft.org or 965.6105; or Scott Kaplan skaplan@ujft.org, 965.6109.

jewishnewsva.org | June 25, 2018 | Jewish News | 27


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.