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Mayim Bialik: From 'Blossom' to Brachot |
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by Matthue Roth, May 6, 2009 |
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I was a child of the '80s in name only. I never watched Blossom when it first came out. I was aware of it only as - and, the few times that I did, it both intrigued me and turned me off: some too-cool kid who was two or three years older than me (at the time, a vast gap) who wore wild vintage-store outfits, used unnecessarily long vocabulary, and had a penchant for confessional D.I.Y. films about 2 decades before YouTube was even conceived of....It made me feel more than a little protective. This was my subculture they were stealing. She couldn't possibly be doing it right.
Little did I know, for its time - and even for ours - Blossom was completely transcendent. In the pilot episode, The Cosby Show's Phylicia Rashad,
wearing a retro-'50s polka-dot dress, drew a map of the human ovaries on a
sheet cake with a tube of icing in order to explain to 14-year-old Blossom
Russo how her period worked. Subsequent episodes made pretty profound
statements on puberty, body image, premarital sex and divorce and parental
responsibility. The endings were always sugar-coated, but the TV show itself
(which has just
been released on DVD) was meaty and
unafraid in ways that make current sitcoms like How I Met Your Mother and The
Office feel positively sanitized.
As much of a travesty as grouping Blossom
together with tepid '80s sitcoms such as Full
House might be, mentioning the Mayim Bialik's name together with the name
of the television show might be an even more audacious generalization.
In the decades since she stopped playing Blossom Russo, Bialik has not sat
still. She's earned a Ph.D. in neuroscience and has undertaken cutting-edge
studies at UCLA as one of the top researchers of Prader-Willi Syndrome in the
field. (Read more about the disorder here, or sift through Bialik's blog to find out about her work.) She's also testing
the waters of going back into acting, with recent appearances on Curb Your Enthusiasm and Bones. And she's also in the middle of
another big revival: she's experimenting with being an observant Jew.
What first motivated you to start
researching the causes of Prader-Willi Syndrome? Are you still?
I always had an interest in working with kids with special needs, and in the
neuroscience department at UCLA, you generally meet a lot of professors and
then drop into a project that suits you. There's been a lot of genetic research
on Prader-Willi, and there's been a lot of behavioral research, but there isn't
a lot of research combining the two..and that's what I thought I could bring to
it.
I got my doctorate last year, so my research was my thesis. Since then, I've
done some writing for organizations that raise money for Prader-Willi research.
In the meantime, I've started acting again, and we just had our second child,
so I've had my hands pretty full, taking care of him and doing auditions.
Have you been auditioning a lot?
Yes, actually! Far more than I thought I would be. I'm auditioning for all
sorts of things. I'm actually filming an episode of Bones tomorrow. I've auditioned for comedy, drama,
movies -- anything they send my way.
Is it mostly one way or the other --
dramatic roles, films, or ironic stuff? Are you being selective about which
roles you take?
Not really. I don't think I can afford to be selective. I'm just seeing what's
out there, and whatever I do get, like Bones,
is great practice to get into the swing of things again.
Have you tried connecting your
Prader-Willi research to non-Prader-Willi patients -- that is, once you've
discovered the impulse that makes people with Prader-Willi insatiably hungry,
can you theoretically control that impulse in people who don't have PWS?
It actually depends on the mechanism itself. There's a lot of reasons that
people with Prader-Willi can't control their hunger. Regulating the
hypothalamus is difficult, because it connects to the brain and there's a lot
of sources in the brain that control every function. There's a theory that the
hunger you can explore, there are several different sources for, and we'll
never be sure exactly what causes it. You can try and narrow down a little
more...but also, the reasons are different. So it's difficult to pinpoint it
down to one thing, for sure.
I remember reading a few years ago -
you know, the way rumors spread between Jews - that you were active at UCLA
Hillel, and that you'd started getting more observant. Um, are you?
My mother was raised Orthodox, and my grandparents are immigrants from Eastern
Europe. I was raised in a Reform household, but with a lot of remnants of
Orthodoxy. We lit candles. We had two sets of dishes, but my mom never told me
why. I thought it was breakfast dishes and dinner dishes. There was no emphasis
on halacha and learning. Totally not to disparage my
parents; it just wasn't their thing.
When I went to college, I didn't have a lot of friends. Blossom had ended two years before. I'd always gone away to Jewish
camps for the summer, and so I kind of ended up at Hillel and I started
learning with the rabbi, and it kind of took off from there.
I'm hesitant to label myself or call myself Orthodox because people will be
like, "Celebrity Mayim Bialik says she does X, but I saw her doing Y" - I guess, to be safe, I would say I'm Conservative, but in reality, I'd say
Conservadox. But my husband and I have definitely increased our observance over
the years, and we're always trying to grow.
We kinda do the Big Three [Shabbos, keeping kosher, and family purity], but it's hard. I mean, it's hard for everyone
to classify themselves, but it's a whole new level of hard when people are
watching you. Like, I pretty much eat a vegan diet, but I eat eggs if they're
in things. What I say is, I eat a mostly vegan diet, and that's kind of how it
is with Judaism. We keep Shabbos, we keep kosher, and I don't know if people
want to hear about the Mikveh, but, um, yeah.
And now that you're acting again, that whole "celebrity Mayim Bialik"
factor is coming back into play. Is it weird to get back into the arena after
you've been away so long? What sort of gigs are you looking for? What sort of
gigs are you getting?
When I was younger, things came in and I got offered things a lot. Now it's my
manager saying it's the girl who played Blossom,
which has its own attractiveness, and its own stigma.
And then I have projects that I want to do. I just optioned the Rashi's
Daughters books. I love that I
can do something like that in the first place, and I'd love to get it made into
a film. But I don't have the kind of star power to say, I'm ready to talk to
Steven Spielberg next weekend....
Do you ever watch old episodes of Blossom? Would you ever show them to
your kids, or is it kind of something you want to keep in the past?
No! I stopped watching in the middle of the first season, and I would kind of
watch the last half and part of the second season. But I literally have never
watched the last three seasons. So, needless to say, my kids haven't, either.
What was your life like during Blossom? Did you have much contact with
the outside world?
Yeah. It was actually pretty normal - we would work for three weeks, then I
would go to school on my week off. I had tutors on the rest of the set. We got
there two hours early than everyone else - me, Joey, and Michael each had our
own tutors, and our lessons started at 7:00 and lasted until everyone showed up
at 9. I was on the show from when I was 14 years old until when I was 19. At a
certain point, I was very recognizable-I'm a pretty normal person, I was always
a pretty normal person. I wasn't motivated by fame or money. I just wanted to
act.
Were you doing anything Jewish at the
time?
Not so much. We filmed on Friday nights. The local Bureau of Jewish Education
used to have programs for beyond-bar-mitzvah-age kids, which was helpful. I
went on retreats like Shabbatons, and that actually really cemented my Jewish
identity. When my parents weren't doing Jewish stuff anymore, I still had a
place to pray and live Jewishly. But it wasn't until UCLA that I really fully
realized my Jewish identity.
And that was where you started doing
chazzanut and leading services, right?
I haven't done that for about 2 years. It's in conflict with some of what I've
been learning, but it's also in line with a lot of what I do as a performer.
It's a great honor to daven, and to dav on behalf of a community. My
grandfather was a chazzan in San Diego and the Bronx, and I inherited his
voice. It takes a lot of learning, and it takes a lot of kavanah
[concentration], but it's complicated, as anyone in this line knows.
And there's a reason that, in traditional Jewish circles, women don't lead
services. I've been pregnant twice in the past three years. Going to shul has
been incredibly different after having one child, and then having, thank God,
two children, it's been even more different, and Judaism kind of knows that.
How has your Jewish life changed with
the birth of your sons? Are you taking them along?
At this point, my oldest son's not yet in preschool. Religiously, my husband
and I are both still growing. We're not quite ready for day school yet - we
don't feel like it's quite our niche - but a Conservative day school wouldn't
meet our needs at this point. Kosher home, but you get into all sorts of
conflicts about other things....You have to find the right place; it's very
important to find the right place. At this point, he knows all the holidays,
and we've started studying Torah, and he knows all the brachos, and he doesn't
know the English alphabet but he knows the Hebrew alphabet.
I grew up speaking Yiddish, and I'm trying to do the same thing with my son. He
has a large vocabulary - well, for a 3-year-old, at any rate.
Are you still working?
No, it's just me. All day. With both of them. That's how it is most of the time
-- I'm filming tomorrow.
Is it true that you're related to Chaim
Nachman Bialik?
Yes, I am. I'm from his brother's line; he was my great-great-grandfather's
uncle. My grandfather met him when he came to America. My grandfather was
young, and Chaim Nachman Bialik passed away young as well, so they didn't have
a chance to know each other well. We do get in free to the Bialik Museum in Tel
Aviv. We have some nice collections of books, and we carry that heritage.
But all the Bialiks have been extraordinary people. I'm very proud --
especially in Israel -- to carry his name.
What do you have planned next, after Bones? How far are you into Rashi's Daughters; do you have a
screenwriter or anything lined up?
I optioned it. So I'm looking to have it written as a movie or a
miniseries. I'm kind of a classic actress-performer: I like to be given a
script, and then I try to make you laugh or cry. This is the first project that
I found that I'm really inspired by, inspired to get involved in the production
of. There's a good story there, a meaningful story. But what I'm interested in
emphasizing is the beauty of Orthodoxy, and the dimension and depth of women's
relationship with study. It's a wonderful story that shows a lot of facets of
Judaism that I think want to be appreciated.
Other than that, I'm just auditioning and taking care of my kids.
Which can pretty much fill up your time,
just that.
And I learn once a week. My mentor lives in New York -- we were paired up
totally accidentally, and it's been amazing. Her name is Allison Josephs, and
she runs a YouTube series
about Jewish topics. She was a Blossom fan, and wanted to study with
me, and I called an organization and they paired her with me. She couldn't
believe it, that she found me after all that time. She's my Jewish instructor
and my guru. We study melachos of
Shabbos and tznius and stuff, but
even when my son had a bris, I go to her for moral support.
What are your favorite things to learn?
I didn't grow up with a strong sense of halacha, and I have family who are
religious Zionists, but I never really knew about halacha. I'm a nitty-gritty
person. I love that our tradition encourages debate, and a lot of what I love
to learn is practical -- how to kasher things for Pesach, what legally
constitutes bishul. My husband calls
it my Jewish book club. It's more than that, though. We read a Soloveitchik
book. I read Rivka Slonim's book Bread
and Fire, which I've gained
so much from. We're making our way through our lives with whatever we come up
with.
myzol
Mayim, As an Orthodox girl watching Blossom in its heyday I wondered about you. This article told me so much and I was surprisingly moved, too. I think it's amazing that you're exploring your religious options. There is so much in Orthodoxy that speaks to and respects the role of a woman in a way which is not necessarily evident to people who have not learned. I wish you much continued success with your acting, with your studies and most importantly with your children. As a mom (of four!) myself, I know it's a big, big job.
Heshy Fried
juliet
I blogged about my own personal memories of watching her show (yup, I'm one of those children of the 80s too!) at my blog here: http://thanksgivingfeast.blogspot.com/2009/05/child-of-80s.html
I remember her brother from my days at the UCLA Daily Bruin. He was editor of the Jewish student newspaper on campus.
Also can I just say, I am loving Jewcy. I only recently discovered it and I check it daily now. Great site, great info. I love how Jewcy respects that Jews come in all shapes, sizes, colors, and stripes. We are very diverse. We find common ground here.