CHICAGO — Rabbi Steven Stark Lowenstein, of the Am Shalom synagogue in Glencoe, looked out on the more than 300 people sitting in front of him and Brett Gelman on Tuesday night. “Raise your hand if you were at Brett’s bar mitzvah,” the rabbi said. About 20 people did.
“Ah,” said Gelman, wearing faux-leather pants and a long white sweater and a single earring. “Now that was the one thing that kept me from killing myself! That was my only good day in junior high, my bar mitzvah. I was deluded enough to believe I had friends.”
Gelman’s book tour was not going the way it was planned initially.
For one, publishers tend to prefer bookstores, not religious venues. He pulled a decent crowd at the Jewish Community Center in New York (which was planned from the start), but the Book Stall in Winnetka backed out in February, as did Book Soup in Los Angeles and Book Passage in San Francisco. The problem, two of the stores said, was safety; they could not provide the level of security such a controversial figure required. Book Passage went a step further and said Gelman had made “intemperate” remarks against “ethnic and social groups,” but it declined to cite examples. Gelman said the cancellations were driven by protester intimidation and antisemitism, and then he changed plans.
On a normal book tour fronted by a well-known actor selling a book of short stories, you would expect a mix of readers — in Gelman’s case, fans of the show “Stranger Things,” fans of “Fleabag” and fans of a character actor whose burly, bearded comic presence has become a fixture of TV and movies. His Am Shalom appearance attracted a bunch of fans, but also congregants and those who have known him a long time, including family and friends. His mother sat in front, beside his fiancee.