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Yiddish Playwrights
(partial listing)
Isaac Dov Berkowitz was born in 1885 in Slutsk, Belarus. His first work, At the eve of Yom Kippur, was published in Warsaw in 1903. In 1905, Berkowitz moved to Vilna, Poland, where he worked as an editor for the publication The Time. He met and married Sholom Aleichem's daughter in Vilna in 1906. In 1910, Berkowitz published his first Collected Stories and soon after began to translate Sholom Aleichem's writings from Yiddish into Hebrew. Two years later, he translated Leo Tolstoy's Childhood from Russian into Hebrew. Berkowitz emigrated to the United States on the eve of the First World War, and in 1916 he founded and became editor of Flagpole. Four years later, he became the editor of Shelter. In 1928, Berkowitz emigrated to the British Mandate of Palestine, where he co-edited Weights with Fishel Lachower. He also adapted several of Sholom Aleichem's plays for the Habima Theatre. In 1944, he was awarded the 'Tschernikovsky Prize' for his translations of Sholom Aleichem's Collected Works. In 1952, he was awarded the 'Bialik Prize' for his Stories and Plays. In 1958, he received the 'Israel Prize'. Berkowitz was awarded
the Bialik Prize a second time for his Childhood Chapters in 1965. He died in 1967.
Fishel Bimko was born in Keltse, Poland in 1890. He emigrated to America, where he died in 1965. Bimko was a playwright as well as a short story writer and a novelist. The most well-known of his novels was Hele Blikn [Light Glances]. When his collected works were published, they filled ten volumes. Bimko's first two plays - Ganovim [Thieves] and Dembes [Oaks] - are considered his best works.
Peretz Hirshbein, born in 1880 to a Russian miller, was instrumental in reviving Yiddish theater in Russia in 1904 following the lifting of the twenty-one year old ban on Yiddish Theatrical performances. Hirshbein became known as "the Yiddish Maeterlinck" because his plays focus more on mood than plot. From 1908-1910, the theatre troupe he founded in Odessa, Ukraine performed his own plays as well as those of Sholem Asch, David Pinski, Jacob Gordin, and Sholem Aleichem across Imperial Russia. The troupe's high literary standards and high standards of ensemble acting had an important influence on the theatre community in the region and laid much of the groundwork for the Yiddish 'Art Theatre' movement that began shortly after the end of World War I.
After the financial demise of his theatre troupe, Hirshbein traveled extensively in Europe and even visited New York, where, in 1912, he tried to make a living as a farmer in the Catskills. After a brief return to Russia, he made another attempt at farming Jewish agricultural colony in Argentina. At the onset of World War I, he was en route to New York on a British ship that was sunk by a German cruiser. He was briefly taken captive and then deposited in Brazil, from where he eventually made his way to his final home in New York.
The simplicity and modesty of a 1918 production of Hirshbein's A Farvorfen Vinkel (A Neglected Nook or A Hidden Corner) made theatrical history in New York where bravura was customary on the Yiddish stage. Together with fellow playwrights David Pinski and H. Leivick, he created Unzer Teater (Our Theater), one of the more innovative and noteworthy Yiddish theaters of the period, in the Bronx in 1925. The group folded after one season due to financial difficulties. Hirshbein died in 1948.
Hirshbein's plays include:
1906
1907
1908
1912
1916
Date Unknown
Hirshbein also wrote a Yiddish-language novel called Roite Felder (Red Fields) in 1935 and an English language screenplay called Hitler's Madman, which was directed in 1943 by Douglas Sirk.
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