Skip To Content
JEWISH. INDEPENDENT. NONPROFIT.
The Schmooze

How Mike Nichols Was Related to Everyone

This article was first published in the February 26, 2010 issue of the Forward.

On the celebrity family tree, a Jewish film director has been revealed as the missing link among Albert Einstein, Meryl Streep and TV’s Dr. Mehmet Oz.

Mike Nichols, the Oscar-winning director of the 1967 film “The Graduate,” learned that he shared connections with a surprising set of “cousins” in “Faces of America,” a new PBS series that traces the background of a dozen prominent participants. Hosted by Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates Jr., the show uses a combination of genealogical records and DNA testing to make a series of unexpected discoveries, some of them stretching back dozens of generations.

For Nichols, born in Berlin in 1931 as Michael Igor Peschkowsky, those discoveries both confirmed old family legends and turned up new information. In a vindication of the filmmaker’s mother, genealogical records showed that Nichols’s great-grandfather was indeed a second cousin to Einstein — a claim the filmmaker said he’d long dismissed as family lore.

Reaching further back through the help of their respective genomes, Nichols and Streep, who worked with the director on such projects as “Silkwood” and “Angels in America,” also discovered that they share an unidentified relative from within the past 250 years. (Streep, for her part, learns that another of her ancestors helped to found Providence, R.I., early in the 17th century.)

Explaining its DNA research through diagrams and interviews with genetic experts, the show also revealed a common connection between Nichols and Dr. Mehmet Oz, the Oprah Winfrey protégé anointed with his own TV show last fall. Born in Ohio to Muslim immigrants from Turkey, Oz is informed that he descends from “exactly the same paternal haplogroup” as Nichols, the son of Russian-Jewish and German-Jewish parents. “Similarly common among Jews and Muslims,” according to the program, the shared haplogroup — inscribed on the Y chromosome — comes as news to Oz.

“This kind of information, to me, is world changing,” Oz told Gates in an episode that aired on March 3, 2010. “For Jews and Muslims to recognize how interrelated we really are — I have to admit to myself… that the only thing separating us is how we think about things.”

A message from our CEO & publisher Rachel Fishman Feddersen

I hope you appreciated this article. Before you go, I’d like to ask you to please support the Forward’s award-winning, nonprofit journalism during this critical time.

We’ve set a goal to raise $260,000 by December 31. That’s an ambitious goal, but one that will give us the resources we need to invest in the high quality news, opinion, analysis and cultural coverage that isn’t available anywhere else.

If you feel inspired to make an impact, now is the time to give something back. Join us as a member at your most generous level.

—  Rachel Fishman Feddersen, Publisher and CEO

With your support, we’ll be ready for whatever 2025 brings.

Republish This Story

Please read before republishing

We’re happy to make this story available to republish for free, unless it originated with JTA, Haaretz or another publication (as indicated on the article) and as long as you follow our guidelines. You must credit the Forward, retain our pixel and preserve our canonical link in Google search.  See our full guidelines for more information, and this guide for detail about canonical URLs.

To republish, copy the HTML by clicking on the yellow button to the right; it includes our tracking pixel, all paragraph styles and hyperlinks, the author byline and credit to the Forward. It does not include images; to avoid copyright violations, you must add them manually, following our guidelines. Please email us at editorial@forward.com, subject line “republish,” with any questions or to let us know what stories you’re picking up.

We don't support Internet Explorer

Please use Chrome, Safari, Firefox, or Edge to view this site.

Exit mobile version