Become a Member
Life

When celebs get stage fright

A barmitzvah can be harrowing. We reveal coming-of-age memories

October 22, 2009 15:44
Tim Samuels

ByAlex Kasriel, Alex Kasriel

4 min read

Dan Patterson, TV comedy producer, was barmitzvah in 1973 in Oxford: “Because Oxford Synagogue was being rebuilt I had the ceremony in St Aloysius Church. The lunch was at St Cross College and the dinner was at St Giles House, so it was probably the most saint-invoked barmitzvah of all time.

“I have happy memories. I was already being swayed towards Habonim and the Jewish joyousness was through that really, but it felt like an important rite of passage. The presents were unbelievable. It was like getting the best thing you got at your birthday over and over again. So when I say to my kids: ‘It’s not all about the presents,’ it’s a bit unfair. ”

Comedian Mark Maier was barmitzvah in June 1976 at Jesmond Synagogue: “My overriding memory was the pit-of-the-stomach churning sensation that embedded itself deep within my belly six months before the big day. Coined by my father as ‘The Barmitvah Feeling’, it was the abject fear that I would get my Haftorah wrong and be marched out of shul, shunned by my family and the Newcastle Jewish community and be forced to live in Sunderland. Suffice to say, all went well and I now look forward to my son Jake’s big day. We’ve got nine years to prepare but it’s starting. That pit-of-the-stomach churning sensation.”

Hadley Freeman, writer, was batmitzvah in 1991 at West London Synagogue: “Looking back at the photos from the whole day, I seemed to have been going through a skirt-and-matching-jacket phase, working a white and black look for the synagogue and then breaking out a matching floral twin set for the party. I looked like a 13-year-old Ivana Trump, with brown hair. The party was at the Mandarin Oriental Hotel on Hyde Park — or, as I now refer to it, the hotel where Samantha Ronson’s cousin also had her batmitzvah party and took Lindsay Lohan this year. So Lindsay Lohan came to my batmitzvah (18 years later).