Talking about the Thomashefskys

Enjoy this video of Judy Blazer and Zalmen Mlotek talking about Michael Tilson Thomas and The Legacy of Bessie and Boris Thomashefsky.

Remembering Shifra Lerer

This week, the Yiddish Theatre lost one of its most enduring talents, and the Folksbiene lost a beloved friend.

A veteran actress who worked with everyone from Boris Thomashefsky to Woody Allen, Shifra was a mainstay of the Yiddish theatre for over 90 years.

 

 

Shifra Lerer & Benzion Witler

Shifra was an active part of our lives here at the Folksbiene.  As part of an

evening that Governor Pataki hosted as a tribute to the Yiddish Theater in 2002 at Hunter College , with Kirk Douglas, Tony Randall, Eli Wallach present – we picked several artists to be given Lifetime Achievement Awards from Governor Pataki- Besides Shifra Lerer, receving her Lifetime achivemnt award we also honored Mina Bern, Seymour Rexsite, Lillian Lux, David Rogow, and Tsiporah Spaisman .

Zalmen Mlotek, Shifra Lerer and Lloica Czackis, Folksbiene Yiddish Theatre, JCC Manhattan, New York. September 2004.

 

 

 

Born in Argentina, Shifra was always generous sharing her unique roots.  When presented an evening of Yiddish Tangos, with

Argnetinian born Lloica Czakis, Shifra became a part of the act and together they sang Spanish and Yiddish Tangos.

 

We will miss her dearly…

To learn more

Read the New York Times Obituary

A Cabaret to Remember- December 2010

Elie and Marion Weisel with Ambassador Ronald Lauder

New York’s social calendar is full of charity events where the purpose is to be seen.  Others, like Folksbiene’s spring galas — and more recently its winter cabarets — put the focus on stage.  When it set a new standard for fundraisers in 2004 with a crowd-pleasing concert starring Neil Sedaka and The Klezmatics at Carnegie Hall, Folksbiene let its patrons know that it could be counted on to produce fundraisers that would have as much entertainment value as any Broadway show.

On December 8, The National Yiddish Theatre – Folksbiene took another bold step forward when it managed to pack as much star power in the audience as on stage.

In an evening that will not soon be forgotten, luminaries from the worlds of finance, publishing, real estate and politics gathered at the Bohemian National Hall on the Upper East Side to honor Elie and Marion Wiesel and Ambassador Ronald Lauder.  Their awards were presented to them by CUNY Chancellor Matthew Goldstein and Malcolm Hoenlein Executive Vice Chairman of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, respectively. In addition, special greetings were given by Board Charimen Jeff Wiesenfeld and President Mark Mlotek.

Zalmen Mlotek (Artistic Director), Mrs. Beatrice Malovany and Cantor Joseph Malovany, Nobel Laureate Elie Weisel, Simon Bergson, Jeff Wiesenfeld (Chairman of the Board), Judith Rosen (Dinner Chair), and Mark Mlotek (President)

They were joined by Folksbiene stalwarts Paul Bernstein, Ruth and David Levine, Jerry and Carol Levin, Daniel and Nina Libeskind, Leo and Betty Melamed, and Dr. Charlotte Frank, and several influential new supporters joined us for the first time.

Breathtaking moments were never in short supply.  Ronald Lauder enchanted with his personal reminiscences about the rebirth of Yiddish in Eastern Europe.  CUNY Chancellor Matthew Goldstein, surprised the Wiesels, who were standing at his side, by announcing that funds had just been secured to endow a CUNY professorship in Mr. Wiesel’s name.

Throughout the evening, during which 300 Folksbiene patrons enjoyed an elegant dinner, Artistic Director Zalmen Mlotek presented highlights from a major concert he is developing that explores the intersections between Jewish and African-American folk music traditions.  The singers Magda Fishman, Elmore James and Tony Perry, supported by Folksbiene’s talented youth ensemble, performed to thunderous applause.

Performer Elmore James with Elie Weisel

Commenting on the multi-generational show as it was unfolding, Nobel Laureate Elie Wiesel, said with a smile from the stage: “to see these young actors, especially the children, perform in Yiddish warms my heart.”

To Learn More- Click here for the article in the Wall Street Journal

New Worlds- An Artistic Director’s Notes

I’m sitting in Baruch, watching final rehearsals for the two new pieces we are presenting as part of the evening New Worlds: A Celebration of I.L. Peretz.  The first piece Di Tsvey Brider (The Two Brothers) conceived and directed by Motl Didner. Motl has conceived the dramatization as a piece with voice, dance and original music, and it is moving in every sense of the word.   I sit here in the theatre listening to the familiar recorded voices of Shane Baker (of “Big Bupkis” fame) and Mikhl Baran (long time friend, former camp director of Camp Hemshekh, and for many years Yiddish culture director at Camp Kinder-Ring) as they bring the roles of the Two Brothers, narrator and Snake to life. I am watching the story performed by the three fantastic dancers Colette Krogol, Matthew Reeves and Brandon Washington working in tandem with  the inventive choreography by Rebecca Warner.  It’s intriguing the set designed  by Roger Hanna (who did the incredible set for last seasons The Adventures of Hershele Ostropolyer) and the lighting by Natalie Robin is simple yet effective. And of course, there is the beautiful the original score performed by Dmitri “Zisl Yeysef” Slepovitch with percussionist Matt Temkin. This a real bonbon! This new expression takes the Peretz story and bringing it to life, with the most contemporary sensibilities. I’m totally excited about this short curtain-raiser.

And then the piece de resistance, watching master performer Rafael Goldwasser performing his Gilgul Fun a Nign (The Metamorphosis of A Melody) which he did at a tiny theater for the Fringe festival in the village this summer.

The design of the entire piece is fascinating, and something that people have never seen on the stages of the Yiddish Theater, and it fills our stage beautifully.  Gorgeous taleysim are hung throughout the stage on which the special video and images by Mariette Feltin and Patrick Flock are projected.  We’ve added the English supertitles so that the entire piece is totally accessible, and we can follow this beautiful and poignant story of a melody that migrates.

The evening is a wonderful contrast to Fyvush Finkel – Live! our first offering of this season.  If Fyvush represents the past glories of the Yiddish stage in all its warmth and humor, then New Worlds: A Celebration of I.L. Peretz is a taste of the future, as a new generation of Yiddish Theatre artists make their mark at the Folksbiene.

New Worlds Video

A Weekend in the Hamptons

By Bradley A. Cherna

On eastern Long Island, in the Village of Westhampton, The National Yiddish Theatre– Folksbiene recently entertained and was feted by The Hampton Synagogue for its Fifth Annual ‘Yiddish-in-the-Hamptons’ Concert. The groundbreaking event featured multicultural performances by Jewish and African-American stars of the New York stage under the banner Soul to Soul: Yiddish and African-American Music Meet in a Celebration of Two Cultures.

In The HamptonsIntroduced as the “annual cultural highlight of our summer” by Hampton Synagogue Rabbi Marc Schneier and Assistant Rabbi Avraham Bronstein, the walls of the sanctuary had to be opened to seat an overflow audience. The evening began when Maxine Wiesenfeld presented in perfect Yiddish her father, Jeffrey Wiesenfeld, Chairman of the Board of the Folksbiene, who warmed the crowd with Yiddish humor and encouraged support of America’s premier Yiddish theatre company, the Folksbiene. Artistic Director Zalmen Mlotek kicked off the night’s program with a slideshow prelude highlighting the stars of the Yiddish stage past and present and their celebrated performances.
African-America performers Tony Perry and Elmore James presented fresh, personal interpretations of treasured Yiddish classics. Tony Perry wowed with his rendition of Tkvos iz Gevorn Fun Mayn Shtetele, which included an awe-inspiring moment of cantorial chanting of scripture, while Elmore James brought down the house with his performance of a Cab Calloway’s version of the Yiddish folk song Ot Azoy and a Yiddish rendition of Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony. They were joined by cantorial soloist, virtuosic trumpeter,
and internationally-renowned singer Magda Fishman, who accompanied clarinetist Dmitri ‘Zisl’ Slepovitch with what can only be described as probably one of the most rousing instrumental breaks in recent Yiddish theatre. Together, the evening’s three marquee vocalists fused the passion of Yiddish song with the soulful legacy of African-American music. It was a treat to hear Louis Armstrong’s hit What a Wonderful World sung in Yiddish,
Hebrew, and English- as well as an encore medley of African-American spirituals and Yiddish classics, sung-along to by an enraptured audience. The show was nearly stolen by Maxine Wiesenfeld and Sarah Mlotek, daughter of Zalmen Mlotek, who broke  hrough the aisles onto the stage to perform, in costumes that can only be described as shtetl-chic, My Yiddishe Mamma – the audience, brought to tears by the promise that Yiddish would persist in
the voices of our youth, rewarded the two young shoy shpilers with multiple standing ovations.

A brunch was held in honor of The National Yiddish Theatre – Folksbiene the following afternoon at the home of Hampton Synagogue President and Founding Members Michael and Gail Weisbrod. Star theatre supporters Gloria and Harvey Kailey, Florence and Michael Edelstein, and Folksbiene friends joined artists, musicians, and staff to celebrate the mission that the 96-year-old company pursues: championing the Yiddish language and
theatre as an essential part of our historical legacy.

New Voices of the Yiddish Stage

Musical Direction by Zalmen Mlotek

In Yiddish with English and Russian translation supertitles

September 14, 2010, 7:00 PM @ Queens College, Lefrak Concert Hall
For Information Call (718) 793-8080

September 16, 2010 2:00 @ Lehman College, Lovinger Theater
(718) 960-8024

September 21, 2010 12:30 PM @ Brooklyn College, Whitman Theater
For Information Call (718) 951-4500

September 21, 2010 7:00 PM @ Hunter College, Kaye Playhouse
For Information Call  (212) 772-4448

TO BOOK YOUR GROUP CALL ITZY FIRESTONE (212) 213-2120 X 204

Check out this sneak peek at Hershele

“The Adventures of Hershele Ostropolyer” begins previews on May 25th, and our red-carpet opening is June 3rd!

Can’t wait? Check out this sneak peek video of our amazing cast.  Then book your tickets!

Our Gala Honorees- Aaron Lansky and Bryna Wasserman

At our May 2nd Gala, the Foksbiene will be awarding the Mlotek Prize for Yiddish Culture to two outstanding individuals who have had a lasting and continuing affect on the renewal of Yiddish culture throughout the world.

We invite you to learn more about our two honorees.

Aaron Lansky

Born in New Bedford, Massachusetts in 1955, Aaron Lansky grew up in a Jewish home where books were valued, and where Yiddish was mostly a “secret language” spoken by his mother and grandmother when they wanted to keep something hidden from him and his two brothers.  It wasn’t until 1973, when as a student at Hampshire College he took one of the first courses ever offered on the Holocaust, that Lansky developed a passionate interest in the culture the Nazis had sought to destroy. “I was 19 when I began studying Yiddish,” Lansky recalls. “Suddenly an entire universe opened up to me. It was like discovering Atlantis, a lost continent, a treasure-trove of Jewish tradition and culture, sensibility, wisdom and passion, all locked up in this amazing modern literature.”

After graduating from Hampshire College in 1977 with a B.A. in modern Jewish history, Lansky enrolled in a graduate program in East European Jewish studies at McGill University in Montreal. There he discovered that large numbers of Yiddish books were being destroyed – not by anti-Semites, but by Jews who could not read the language of their own parents and grandparents. Convinced that someone had to save those books, Lansky, ignoring the cautions of experts who considered the task impossible, left McGill and started what he then called the National Yiddish Book Exchange.

In 1980, when Aaron Lansky issued his first public appeal for old Yiddish books, it was estimated that only 70,000 Yiddish volumes were extant and recoverable. He rescued that many within six months. Today the National Yiddish Book Center’s collection totals over a million volumes, with the core collection stored in our state-of-the-art repository and 11,000 titles available online from our Virtual Yiddish Library. The Book Center also sponsors public events, internships and a wide range of cultural and educational programs designed to “open up” the treasures of Yiddish culture for a new generation.

Aaron’s work has been widely featured on National Public Radio and network television, and was the subject of articles in Time, Smithsonian, The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, and countless other publications. Esquire Magazine, in 1984, included Lansky in its list of “The Best of the New Generation: Men and Women Under 40 Who Are Changing America.” He has since received numerous awards and recognitions, including a National Jewish Book Award, honorary doctorates from Amherst College and the State University of New York, and a 1989 “Genius Grant” from the MacArthur Foundation. His first book, Outwitting History, is a “rollicking readable account” of the Book Center’s founding, and has received numerous awards since its publication by Algonquin Press in October 2004. Aaron lives in Amherst with his wife Gail, and their two daughters, Sasha and Chava.

Bryna Wasserman

CTE photo

She grew up around productions at the Yiddish, which her mother, Dora , founded and directed until suffering a stroke in 1996. She studied at the Tisch School of Fine Arts (NYU) before working at theatres around the world

including the Vivian Beaumont at Lincoln Centre, Mercer Street, Vancouver Opera House, American Place and four seasons at the Folksbiene Playhouse. Among her New York credits are Arrabal’s The Architect and the Emperor of Assyria, Narrow Road to the Deep South, Wözzeck, The House of Bernarda Alba and Bernstein on Broadway.

In New York she directed The Architect and the Emperor of Assyria, The Karl Marx Play, Wojzeck and The House of Bernarda Alba among others.

Among the productions she has directed at the Yiddish are Mirele Efros, The Sages of Chelm, The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz, The Threepenny Opera, The Dybbuk and Old Wicked Songs.

An ideal director of large-cast community theatre (recently, the huge The Great Houdini – March, 2000), Ms Wasserman has also proven herself a subtle, thoroughly professional and intelligent director of small drama (Wicked…). She is also supportive of developing artistic talent and to this end directs Young Actors for Young Audiences and includes emerging theatre professionals in all her productions.

Ms Wasserman instituted a series of exciting initiatives, for her 1999-2000 season as head of the SBC, including bringing in Soulpepper , housing Bill Glassco ‘s new Montreal Young Company at the house, and co-producing with Winnipeg Jewish Theatre . For this, she received the Montreal English Critics Circle Award for distinction (her production of Houdini… also won the award for best production, amateur or semi-professional).

Preproduction for Gala May 2nd in full swing

Things are under way for this year’s special gala “From The Promised Land to The  Golden Land.” We’re at an incredible new venue this year, The Fredrick P. Rose Concert Hall.

First of all, I am very excited that we  bringing the amazing Chava Alberstein to New York.  One of Israel’s most beloved artists, Chava is one of the most soulful singers in the world today- in any language she sings in.  Because mameloshn is so very special to her personally – her Yiddish singing is incredible.

In addition to her countless Yiddish recordings she also produced a film about the generation of Yiddish poets living in Israel. It is a beautiful, artfully made tribute and we are thrilled that she will bashayn undzer simkhe.

I am also very excited that after many years we will be able to bring Shmulik Atzmon, and the Yiddishpeil, Israel’s nationally supported Yiddish Theater here for a visit.

For the gala Shmuel will be joined by his daughter Anat Atzmon, a well known Israeli moviestar-  as well as Monica Vardimon.

They will be here to give us a farzukh of their work, so that our audiences can get a taste of what is going on in Israel.  Shmulik has made Yiddishpiel into an important theater company that tours Europe regularly, and we hope to bring them here with one of their full productions in the future.

Last night, I had a wonderful rehearsal with Allen Rickman and his wife Yelena Shmulenson.  You may have seen them speaking Yiddish in this year’s Oscar Nominated Film “A Serious Man” opposite our dear friend Fyvush Finkel.

As a tribute to our dearly missed Mina Bern , Allen and Yelena will be performing a duet from her vast repetorie, Vos Dergeystu Mir Di Yorn (Why Are You Making My Life Crazy?).

Oh, and speaking of Fyvush, he will also be performing, and sharing MC duties with friend Eleanor Reissa, who is also hard at work directing our upcoming production of  “The Adventures Of Hershele Ostropolyer.”

In addition to the legendary talent I’ve just mentioned we also have an incredible array of young artists, who have become such a large part of the Yiddish cultural renaissance of the past two decades.

The amazing Frank London and his Klezmer Brass Allstars will be there.  Frank always rocks any house he plays, most recently the Haiti concert at the Stephen Wise Synagogue a few months ago.

I’m also very excited to be working with a wonderful ensemble of young performers- who will be performing an excerpt from mine and Moishe Rosenfeld’s musical The Golden Land. A production that we’re hoping to bring back next year, which would coincide with the 100th anniversary of the tragic Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire.

The ensemble includes past Folksbiene actors and actresses- as well as some Kids and Yiddish cast album alumni- specifically Rachel Yucht, and my son Avram,  and my niece Missy (Marissa) Mlotek.

Also in the ensemble will be Stuart Marshall, who was in our evening of Murray Schisgal plays in The Pushcart Peddlers, and Nimrod (Nimmy) Weisbrod who will be making his Folksbiene debut this spring in “The Adventures of Hershele Ostropolyer”

Others is the ensemble include Dani Marcus who wowed us all with her rendition of Malke (Mabel) in Di Yam Gazlonim (The Pirates Of Penzance) and Folksbiene troupe member Daniella Rabbani, who was recently seen in our production of Gimpl Tam.

We will also include a special tribute to the great Yiddish poet Avrom Sutskever. Daniella Rabbani will perform one of his most beautiful poems “Yiddishe Gas”  which was set to music by mother Chana.

So much goes in to making these events happen, but with this exciting program, its all worth it.  Remember, May 2nd coming soon and seats are going fast, so reserve your tickets today.

A Zisn Pesach, A gutn moed  and I look forward to seeing you at the gala!

Zalmen

From Second Avenue to 125th Street

The Hamptons annual Yiddish concert
at The Westhampton Synagogue
presents

The National Yiddish Theater-Folksbiene

in

From Second Avenue to 125th Street

Where Yiddish and African-American music meet!

Starring

Tsiidi



Elmore James


and Tony Perry

with Zalmen Mlotek musical director

Coming August 28th 2010