NBC’s Sunday night drama, “American Dreams,” finds the generally non-Jewish saga’s second season storylines, about an Irish Catholic family in 1960s Philadelphia, becoming a bit more Jewish.
“We have people praying on TV,” said “Dreams” executive producer Jonathan Prince, the prototypical nice Jewish boy from Beverly Hills who co-created the series about the Pryors, a middle-class white family, and the Walkers, a poorer African American family.
Three new “Dreams” characters depict three distinct Jewish American images: the half-Jewish college student, Andrew Mandel; a politically conscious Jewish American soldier named Silver; and an Orthodox medical school student, David, who wears a yarmulke and enjoys cigarettes — he prays for the Pryors’ youngest son when he undergoes life-altering surgery in the Nov. 16 episode.
In one scene, Catholic mom Helen Pryor (Gail O’Grady) prays in a hospital chapel, with the “Dreams” camera then showing David (David Norona) also praying.
“Helen is on her knees crossing herself while a Jewish fellow is davening,” Prince told The Journal.
Prince said he specifically avoided typical male Jewish casting for the medical student — “glasses, curly hair” — and instead, “I went Sephardic and not Ashkenazic” while also depicting David’s imperfect, very human Judaism. “We’re saying, with the kippah, a religious man, a flawed, religious man who smokes.”
For assimilated student Andrew Mandel (Samuel Page), there has been no mention of his Jewish heritage as Prince for now focuses on the character’s prep school-handsome features and political leanings that portend a budding, Tom Hayden-like college radical whose Jewishness is overshadowed on TV by his romance with the Pryors’ high school-age daughter, Meg (Brittany Snow).
“I’m making him a totally assimilated Jew,” Prince said.
Later this season, the show’s oldest Pryor son, J.J., meets Silver, a Jewish lance corporal in J.J.’s Marine Corps unit in Vietnam. Prince said he wrote Silver as patriotic and raised by leftist Jewish parents — “Rosenberg socialists.”
In upcoming episodes, he said, Silver reads week-old,
mailed copies of The New York Times to learn about the war: “It is through
Silver that J.J. learns the politics of Vietnam.” For more on “American Dreams,”
visit
Did you enjoy this article?
You'll love our roundtable.
Editor's Picks



What Ever Happened to the LA Times?

Who Are the Jews On Joe Biden’s Cabinet?


No Labels: The Group Fighting for the Political Center
Latest Articles


Smokey Presence – A poem for Parsha Pekudei


On the Huckabee Nomination

A Bisl Torah~Waiting Versus Walking
