Calendar: October 7-13
Roy Lichtenstein was renowned for his inventive interplay of lines, dots and color, shaping a new form of fine art.
Roy Lichtenstein was renowned for his inventive interplay of lines, dots and color, shaping a new form of fine art.
Award-winning author Maggie Anton has a new book called “Fifty Shades of Talmud: What the First Rabbis Had to Say About You-Know-What.”
Andrea Mezvinsky, named “America’s Funniest Mom” on “The Oprah Winfrey Show,” is a stand-up comedian and actress whose new solo play, “Sawed in Half,” asks the question: What happens when one woman’s competing roles of wife, mother, lover and performer collide?
Bring a potluck dinner and join the community on the roof as the summer winds down.
Join in the new Kaballat Shabbat gathering in Los Angeles for young Jewish and Israeli adults, ages 25-40.
Bring your family and friends, a picnic dinner, and come mingle with the community and all of the 16 congregations and Jewish organizations involved.
Come enjoy a Shabbat service celebrating Tu b’Av — the day of romance in Israel, like Valentine’s Day.
In 1936, Adolf Hitler was in power, the Third Reich was hosting the Summer Olympics in Berlin and the racial divide in America was prominent.
This comedy show pays tribute to and reinvents classic jokes of the past and present.
One day after giving a free audiovisual presentation at Beth Chayim Chadashim, photographer and author Penny Wolin will deliver an audiovisual lecture and exhibit with selected silver-gelatin photographic prints featured in her new book, “Descendants of Light: American Photographers of Jewish Ancestry.”