>She has this problem with her car being up front, putting on airs I >think she calls it. The stereotypical jewish grandmother, as I've seen >it growing up Jewish, is someone who backstabs and worries about how >they look to others instead of doing what they want. I think that the point that you are missing is the fact that _Driving Miss Daisy_ is set in the South. There is a clash of 'Jewishness' and being Southern, there is also the relationship between Miss Daisy and her driver who are _both_ not accepted into Southern 'society', he because he is black and she because she is Jewish. "Dr. Missy" [log in to unmask] (Internet) Melissa Lee Price melissa@univscvm (BITNET)