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Yiddish Cinema

Yiddish Cinema. Depiction of life in the “Big City”. Maurice Schwartz (1889-1960). Born in Ukraine, died in Israel. American Yiddish actor, scriptwriter, director, and producer. Founder of the Yiddish Art Theatre in New York.

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Yiddish Cinema

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  1. Yiddish Cinema Depiction of life in the “Big City”

  2. Maurice Schwartz (1889-1960) • Born in Ukraine, died in Israel. • American Yiddish actor, scriptwriter, director, and producer. • Founder of the Yiddish Art Theatre in New York. • Played in countless theatrical productions in Yiddish and English, and in over twenty films, including Uncle Moses. • “The best of all Yiddish actors” (in the USA).

  3. Uncle Moses (1932) • Made in the USA. • First important Yiddish sound film in America. • Based on a novel by a Polish-American Yiddish writer, starring a Polish-American actor. • Polish-American Yiddish background and themes.

  4. Uncle Moses • What meanings does the name of the title character create in the film? • What themes does the film tackle? • How is the conflict of the “old” and the “new” worlds is presented? • What role does the music play?

  5. Yiddish Cinema in Poland • First Yiddish (silent) films produced in 1911. Ex., The Cruel Father (Der vilder Foter, dir. Andrzej Marek). • About 10 films made in 1911-12. • The first sound Yiddish film, For Sins (At Chejt, dir.Aleksander Marten) produced in 1936.

  6. Yiddish Cinema in Poland • Several production companies. • Polish-American cooperation (ex., Joseph Green, director/producer). • Intended for international public (Yiddish speakers regardless of geographic location).

  7. Yiddish Cinema in Poland • Ups and downs in the 1920s-early 1930s (due to political and technological changes). • Input by Polish and German filmmakers. • Documentaries (ex., Sabra, dir. Aleksander Ford, 1932). • “The golden age” from 1936 to 1939.

  8. Yiddish Cinema in Poland Themes: • Conflict of old and new values and/or generations; • Life in a shtetl; • Love; religion; traditional beliefs. Genres: • Musical comedy • Melodrama • Tragedy • Documentary Aesthetic sources: • Theatre • Yiddish literature • Yiddish folklore • Klezmer music • European culture

  9. Mamele (1938) • Musical comedy. • Adaptation of a play by Meyer Schwartz that was a hit on Second Avenue in New York. • Polish-American co-production. • Directed by Joseph Green and Konrad Tom. • Starring Molly Picon.

  10. Molly Picon (1898-1992) • American theatre and film star. • Had talent for singing, dancing, and acrobatics. • In the 1930-s, had a Broadway theatre of her name. • Specialized in roles of tomboys.

  11. Joseph Green(Yoysef Grinberg, 1900-1996) • Polish-born American actor, film director, script-writer, producer. • Studied and worked in Europe until 1925, when he moved to America. • While in Hollywood, conceived the idea of making Yiddish talking films. • Bought Yiddish-film rights in America and brought them to Poland. • “Father of the Golden Age” of Yiddish cinema

  12. Joseph Green’sprinciples of filmmaking • Technical perfection and high quality of production; • High standards of acting; • The subject: Jewish yet universal; • Avoidance of stereotypes; • Purity of Yiddish language; • Elements of folklore and ethnography; • Authenticity of setting; • Humour and music.

  13. Mamele • Made on the brink of World War II. • Shows the “Atlantis” of Polish Jewry before its disappearance. • The setting shifted from New York to Lodz(Poland). Local “flavour.” • Attempts of using modern cinematic techniques (ex., overlapping images).

  14. Mamele • Urban setting; • Modern way of living: gentile clothes, young men without beard, uncovered married women; • Universal subject; • Influence of Hollywood musical comedies.

  15. Mamele • Cinderella story; • Yiddish cultural “flavour.” • The place of women in traditional culture. • Satirical take on idling men. • Strong women.

  16. Mamele • Social problems: strikes, unemployment, gangsters. • Tradition and modernity: prayer replaced with games; a religious holiday vs nightclubs.

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