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Monday, October 25, 2010

Ventura County Star Review

Sandy Gelfound chronicles path from Raiderette to 'Jewette' in 'Kosher Cheerleader' show

Pompoms and epiphanies

There are, at last count, 43 different characters floating around in the brain of Simi Valley’s Sandy Gelfound. She’ll introduce them all Sunday when she performs her one-woman show, “The Kosher Cheerleader,” at Thousand Oaks Civic Arts Plaza.
The autobiographical play chronicles the unique twists, turns and challenges of Gelfound’s life: her turbulent upbringing (she was, for a time, consigned to an orphanage), her battle with overeating, her job as an NFL cheerleader and her spiritual awakening, which led her to study and embrace Modern Orthodox Judaism.
'THE KOSHER CHEERLEADER'

Sandy Gelfound of Simi Valley will perform her one-woman show at 3 p.m. Sunday in the Scherr Forum Theatre at Civic Arts Plaza, 2100 E. Thousand Oaks Blvd., Thousand Oaks. Tickets, $39, are available in person at the box office or through Ticketmaster, 800-745-3000 or http://www.ticketmaster.com. To watch a nine-minute highlight reel from the show, visit http://www.youtube.com and search on 'kosher cheerleader.'


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Courtesy photo 
Sandy Gelfound of Simi Valley is the creator and star of 'The Kosher Cheerleader.' 'The theme running through the show is to see the glass as half-full and not half-empty,' she says. 'Once you do that, you can see how wonderful life can be.'
'THE KOSHER CHEERLEADER'
Sandy Gelfound of Simi Valley will perform her one-woman show at 3 p.m. Sunday in the Scherr Forum Theatre at Civic Arts Plaza, 2100 E. Thousand Oaks Blvd., Thousand Oaks. Tickets, $39, are available in person at the box office or through Ticketmaster, 800-745-3000 or http://www.ticketmaster.com. To watch a nine-minute highlight reel from the show, visit http://www.youtube.com and search on "kosher cheerleader."
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Courtesy photo
Sandy Gelfound of Simi Valley is the creator and star of "The Kosher Cheerleader." "The theme running through the show is to see the glass as half-full and not half-empty," she says. "Once you do that, you can see how wonderful life can be."
As she relates in her act, that epiphany came when she and other Oakland Raiders cheerleaders were signing autographs at an East L.A. automotive store in 1996. One of the young girls in line to get her picture taken was named Amanda and she was from an orphanage. She sat on Gelfound’s lap as a Polaroid was snapped and said, “I hope I can be like you someday.”
Gelfound lost it. “The next thing I knew, I’m sitting there sobbing and wailing,” she says in her act. “I’m having a spiritual epiphany at Pep Boys in hot pants with Manny, Moe and Jack.
Cheerleading, she tells the audience, suddenly seemed empty. She wanted to “cheer for something bigger than football.” Gelfound, who is half Jewish, quit the Raiders and immersed herself in Modern Orthodox Judaism. “When I go for something, I go all the way,” she said.
She spent the next decade exploring her faith, trading in her hot pants for long skirts. The idea of putting her life on the page — and the stage — began five years ago. She had, by then, made the transition from Raiderette to “Jewette.” But something was still missing. She missed performing.
“If you’re a creative person and you don’t exercise that part of you, then it’s like a kind of death,” she said. “One day I was meditating with the big guy upstairs and I was reflecting on how I wasn’t being fulfilled creatively. Then it came to me. How about that show I wrote? So I pulled it out.”
During her time as a cheerleader, Gelfound had written a treatment for a sitcom called “View from the Sidelines.” Using that show treatment as a starting point, Gelfound started storyboarding her two-act play. She clipped papers with jokes, stories and characters onto a clothesline and strung it across her kitchen.
“People would come in and read names on the papers and say, ‘Uh, what’s this?’ It was how I put it all together,” she explained.
She started performing pieces of “Kosher Cheerleader” in friends’ houses, receiving feedback and making changes. Gelfound said she entered a portion of the play in a contest called “Fifteen Minutes of Fem” and she won. Eventually, the play expanded to include 43 characters, all performed by Gelfound. Among the characters are her castanet-playing mother (an Orthodox Christian), her father (a Jewish atheist) and her five siblings.
“I started imitating when I was young,” she explained. I would imitate my mom and dad when they were arguing and it would get them to laugh and then they would stop. Now, when I perform and people don’t laugh I feel like I’ve lost my power.”
Gelfound has performed “The Kosher Cheerleader” in Arizona and Florida. Though much of the story is designed for laughs, she does address some of her difficult memories.
“What I hope people see is that if I can come through the things I have and be so happy, then anyone can do it,” she said. “The theme running through the show is to see the glass as half-full and not half-empty. Once you do that, you can see how wonderful life can be.
“There’s something for everyone,” she continued. “If you like cheerleading, football, or you’re interested in any kind of religion, you’ll have fun.”
The newest character in her play is her husband Craig, an engineer-turned-attorney who brought his four children — Scotty, Heather, Jeff and Mike — into her life. They were married last December.
“Now I have the family I’ve always wanted,” she said.
And Craig has a new favorite football team.
“He used to be a Rams fan before he met me,” Gelfound said. “I told him if you’re going to marry an ex-Raiders cheerleader, you’re going to have to change allegiances.”


Read more: http://www.vcstar.com/news/2010/oct/08/pompoms-and-epiphanies-sandy-gelfound-chronicles/#ixzz13PKwxenv
- vcstar.com

Ira Fistell Review KABC Radio

Give me an 'R'; Give me an 'A'...
For The Rabbi and the Cheerleader
August 22, 2005
By Cynthia Citron

Perky" is hardly the word that comes to mind to describe a rabbi's wife.  But Sandy Wolshin is hardly the wife that comes to mind for an Orthodox Jewish rabbi.  She is willowy, with long blond hair that she continually flips to punctuate the twists and turns of her life story, she is hilarious and upbeat, she is graceful, and she carries two shiny silver pom poms.  "Perky" is definitely the word.

Sandy Wolshin calls her story The Rabbi and the Cheerleader, and she prances her way through it in a guest production at the Odyssey Theatre in West L.A.  She begins, as all life stories begin, with her mother and father, two drama queens who were larger than life.  Her father,  a Borscht Belt performer, was a Jewish atheist.  "He knew he was one of the Chosen People, he just didn't know by Whom," she explains.  Her mother, a Russian Orthodox gypsy flamenco dancer taught her to play the castanets.  "Theirs was like a marriage between Carmen Miranda and Jackie Mason," she says.

Wolshin brings them both vividly to life, along with her grandmothers, whom she evokes by changing her headscarf and her accent.  And as for the religious dichotomy in the household, she notes that her gypsy grandmother liked to point out that, since Sandy was only half-Jewish, that made her only "half a Christ-killer."

Diagnosed at an early age with a hole in her heart, Wolshin lived with the trauma of knowing that she would never be able to compete in the Olympics—even though that had never been a desire or a goal.  What she did desire was to be a cheerleader.  And she became one, for the National Football League's Los Angeles Raiders.  As one of 48 Raiderettes, she traveled with the team for five years, making an impressive salary of $35 a game.  She demonstrates her cheerleader routines, twirling prettily and performing a cartwheel.  And she sings, encouraging the audience to sing along and clap.

She also matriculated at Santa Monica College, which she liked so much that she spent 10 years there, collecting a variety of degrees.  And finally, after having "an epiphany at the Pep Boys," she began to study Judaism.  Which she did with such eagerness that she became the bane of everyone else's existence.  (You know about the curse of the newly converted and their zealous devotion  to proselytizing everyone within earshot).  This part of her odyssey is both touching and hilarious, as she describes her conversion to Orthodoxy, her dates with inappropriate bachelors arranged by a matchmaker,  and her first encounter with her husband-to-be, an Orthodox rabbi who approaches her table at a kosher restaurant and begins to ply her with questions to determine her suitability for marriage.  Talk about "meeting cute"!

It's an interesting life, and Sandy Wolshin presents it well.  She is loosely directed by Heidi Crane and not much helped by Victoria Profitt's  sparse living room set, which has nothing to do with the story and is never explained.  But Val Poliuto's sound and big screen projections are a welcome addition.

Sandy Wolshin, Orthodox cheerleader, had the audience in the palm of her hand throughout as she distributed Sabbath candles and brought her remarkable story to a close with a final exuberant twirl.

The Rabbi and the Cheerleader will be presented  Thursdays, Saturdays, and Sundays through September 25th at the Odyssey Theatre, 2055 S. Sepulveda Blvd. in West Los Angeles.

 Be aware that the Saturday night performances begin at 9 o'clock---after the conclusion of the Sabbath.

The Miami Herald Review

The Miami Herald
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 2008

THEATER REVIEW
Cheers for story of one woman’s complicated life
BY CHRISTINE DOLEN


As journeys of self-discovery go, Sandy Wolshin’s is more interesting than many. Unique, perhaps.

After all, how many former NFL cheerleaders become Orthodox Jews and entertainers?

The Rabbi and the Cheerleader is Wolshin’s attempt to stitch together the disparate threads of her life into a compelling solo show. The result is a largely engaging if somewhat odd amalgam of theater, standup routine, self-help lecture and slide-show confessional. But the mostly elderly, mostly Jewish Hollywood Playhouse crowds listening to Wolshin’s story seem to find the Orthodox blond bomb-shell quite beguiling.

In truth, there’s not much rabbi (her hero enters late and exits too soon) but plenty of peppy cheerleader in Wolshin’s show.

Boldly portraying everyone from her own parents and siblings to Oakland Raiders owner Al Davis, Wolshin paints the picture of a little girl born with a hole in her heart – a fact as well as an intentional metaphor. Wolshin spent her early years in Hialeah, loved her Russian Orthodox gypsy mother but idolized her non-practicing Jewish daddy. Through traumatizing circumstance, she and her three sisters wound up spending time in a South Florida orphanage.

As a teen, she found two sources of solace: cheerleading and eating. The latter nearly kept her from becoming a scantily clad Raiderette, but she got it together in time to drop 50 pounds and embrace her future – which included dancing with Sylvester Stallone at a 1984 Super Bowl after-party.

There’s more, of course, including her life-altering embrace of Orthodox Judaism. Wolshin, a slender blond, keeps her skirts below her knees and her arms covered, as an observant woman should. Yet she still has those Raiderette moves (including a cart-wheel) .........


Review when the show was previously called The Rabbi and the Cheerleader

PAGE 24 STUDIO CITY SUN APRIL 14-20, 2006
WWW.STUDIOCITYSUN.COM
Theater Reviews
The Rabbi and The Cheerleader
is a comic mitzvah to behold
BY AMY LYONS
performer Sandy Wolshin brilliantly plays
the castanet-playing blonde in an engaging
two-hour solo show as she tap-dances,
pom-pom waves, eats, shops, writes
and prays her way through 40-plus years
of living.
As her childhood self, Wolshin spends
on-stage time in a hospital bed surrounded
by overly concerned grandmothers,
a cramped family road-trip vehicle
loaded with siblings in enforced pursuit
of their parents’ nomadic dreams,
and most poignantly, in an orphanage
after one of her father’s many shortlived
but devastating departures of
the household.
Wolshin is at her best when focusing
on exterior characters, rather
than her solo character. Through portrayals
of her heavily accented, guilt-tripping
grandmothers; her unaffectionate,
wisecracking Jewish father, who embarrasses
the kids at every turn; and her
mother, whose use of song and dance
as coping mechanisms inspires the line,
“some would call this denial, mom called
it Broadway,” Wolshin shows us what her
development was like, rather than simply
telling us.
Her forte is imitation and she knows
well the art of ethnic humor. When she
takes us through her high-school Latina
phase, during which she wrote an advice
column for Low Rider magazine, her exaggerated
accent and streetwise ruse
combines with a genuine love for the
Latino culture that makes for a hi- lar ious
but respectful mock-up.
“I fell in love with everything
about the Latino
culture...they were
all about family,” said Wolshin,
who remembers moving toward that
place of warmth and love when her own
family could not provide it.
The show does not, however, rely
on accents and imitations to hold audience
attention. Images of beer-swilling,
raucous NFL fans are projected onto a
screen, which is used sparingly and at
just the right moments. Family photos
and action shots of Wolshin in all of her
sideline, leg-kicking glory allow us passage
into the actual events of her life,
contributing detail to her storytelling in
short segments that do not overshadow
the narrative.
Wolshin engages the audience in a
sing-along, as well as many other moments
of audience interaction that keep
energy high and prevent waning interest
— often the death of a solo show.
With knees and elbows covered
throughout her performance, Wolshin
stays true to her late-in-life conversion to
the Orthodox Jewish faith, while allowing
her comedic spirit to shine. Whether
cheering for the Oakland Raiders or the
Orthodox Jews, Wolshin emerges as a
bona fi de mensch.
The Whitefi re Theatre has struck gold
with this show, which is currently scheduled
to play just one more time (April 30)
as part of the its Sunday Solo Series.
....In The Rabbi and The Cheerleader,
The Rabbi and The Cheerleader
enjoys its fi nal performance
on Sunday,
April 30 at 7pm.
The Whitefi re
Theatre is
at 13500 Ventura
Blvd.,
Sherman
Oaks.
Call 866.811.4111
for tickets.

From "24 hours a day" Today's reading - October 25th, 2010

" I have learned to live one day at a time. I have finally realized the great fact that all I have is now. This sweeps away all vain regret and it makes my thoughts of the future free of fear. Now is mine. I can do what I want with it. I own it, for better or worse. What I do now, in this present moment, is what makes up my life. My whole life is only a succession of nows. I will take this moment, which has been given to me by the grace of G-d, and I will do something with it. What I do with each now will make me or break me. Am I living in the now?"