

Something odd, though, happens: When it comes to asking a girl to the big Ballyhoo dance, Joe goes right for the conventionally beautiful Sunny and rejects the “Jewish looking” (Uhry’s words) Lala. Which is why Joe (Mark Kassen), a New York Jew, falls in love with the blond, beautiful Sunny (she eventually makes it home from college) and teaches everybody about their heritage. Other than the looks department, however, they don’t really know they’re Jews. Whichever group it is, the Freitags think they belong to the good-looking one. He reads the newspaper, which is how we know about Hitler and, in his opinion, the difference between German Jews, Russian Jews and Czechoslovakian Jews. Boo’s unmarried brother, Adolph (Peter Michael Goetz), is the intellectual in the family. Those that remain belong to klutzy Lala, who merely flunked out of college because she’s so dim. Reba is the card of the group, and since she’s a borderline moron, gets all the laughs.

Between tinsel-blowing, Reba knits a sweater for her daughter, Sunny (Rebecca Gayheart), who is away at college but will return for the holiday - Christmas, not Hanukkah. She knows that tinsel goes on one at a time, and if you hold a strand up in the air and then blow, it creates a real natural effect.

Sister-in-law Reba (Harriet Harris) is the tinsel expert. Daughter Lala (Perrey Reeves) wants to put a big shiny star up on top, but her mother, Boo (Rhea Perlman), reminds the girl, “Jewish Christmas trees don’t have stars.” Boo is the sensible one, albeit bitter to the core. When “Ballyhoo” opens, the Freitag family is having a little problem decorating their Christmas tree.
