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Abraham Goldfaden

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Abraham Goldfaden



 
 
Abraham Goldfaden ; (born Avrum Goldnfoden; the Romanian
Romanian language

Romanian or Daco-Romanian ; self-designation: limba rom?na, ) is a Romance languages spoken by around 24 to 28 million people, primarily in Romania and Moldova....
 spelling Avram Goldfaden is common)

(24 July 1840 in Starokostiantyniv
Starokostiantyniv

Starokostiantyniv is a city in the Khmelnytskyi Oblast of western Ukraine. Serving as the Capital of the Starokostiantynivsky Raion , the city itself is also designated as a separate raion within the oblast....
- 9 January 1908 in New York) was an Ukrainian
Ukraine

Ukraine is a country in Eastern Europe. It is bordered by Russia to the east; Belarus to the north; Poland, Slovakia, and Hungary to the west; Romania and Moldova to the southwest; and the Black Sea and Sea of Azov to the south....
-born Jew
Jew

A Jew is a member of the Jewish people, an ethnoreligious group that traces its ancestry to the Israelites or Hebrews of the Ancient Near East....
ish poet, playwright. stage director and actor in the languages Yiddish and Hebrew, author of some 40 plays. Goldfaden is considered the father of the Jewish modern theatre.

In 1876 he founded in Romania
Romania

Romania is a country located in Southeastern Europe Central Europe, North of the Balkan Peninsula, on the Lower Danube, within and outside the Carpathian Mountains, bordering on the Black Sea....
 what is generally credited as the world's first professional Yiddish-language
Yiddish language

Yiddish is a non-territorial High German languages of Jewish origin, spoken throughout the world. Unlike other such languages, Yiddish is written with the Hebrew alphabet as opposed to a Latin alphabet....
 theater troupe.






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Abraham Goldfaden ; (born Avrum Goldnfoden; the Romanian
Romanian language

Romanian or Daco-Romanian ; self-designation: limba rom?na, ) is a Romance languages spoken by around 24 to 28 million people, primarily in Romania and Moldova....
 spelling Avram Goldfaden is common)

(24 July 1840 in Starokostiantyniv
Starokostiantyniv

Starokostiantyniv is a city in the Khmelnytskyi Oblast of western Ukraine. Serving as the Capital of the Starokostiantynivsky Raion , the city itself is also designated as a separate raion within the oblast....
- 9 January 1908 in New York) was an Ukrainian
Ukraine

Ukraine is a country in Eastern Europe. It is bordered by Russia to the east; Belarus to the north; Poland, Slovakia, and Hungary to the west; Romania and Moldova to the southwest; and the Black Sea and Sea of Azov to the south....
-born Jew
Jew

A Jew is a member of the Jewish people, an ethnoreligious group that traces its ancestry to the Israelites or Hebrews of the Ancient Near East....
ish poet, playwright. stage director and actor in the languages Yiddish and Hebrew, author of some 40 plays. Goldfaden is considered the father of the Jewish modern theatre.

In 1876 he founded in Romania
Romania

Romania is a country located in Southeastern Europe Central Europe, North of the Balkan Peninsula, on the Lower Danube, within and outside the Carpathian Mountains, bordering on the Black Sea....
 what is generally credited as the world's first professional Yiddish-language
Yiddish language

Yiddish is a non-territorial High German languages of Jewish origin, spoken throughout the world. Unlike other such languages, Yiddish is written with the Hebrew alphabet as opposed to a Latin alphabet....
 theater troupe. He was also responsible for the first Hebrew-language
Hebrew language

Hebrew is a Semitic languages of the Afro-Asiatic languages. Modern Hebrew is spoken by more than seven million people in Israel and Classical Hebrew is used for prayer or study in Jews communities around the world....
 play performed in the United States. The Avram Goldfaden Festival of Iasi
Iasi

Iasi , is a Cities in Romania and Municipality in Romania in north-eastern Romania. The city was the capital of Principality of Moldavia from the 16th century until 1861 and of Romania between 1916?1918 during World War I....
, Romania, is named and held in his honour.

Jacob Sternberg
Jacob Sternberg

Yankev Shternberg was a Yiddish theater director, teacher of theater, playwright, avant-garde poet and short-story writer, best known for his theater work in Romania between the two world wars....
 called him "the Prince Charming
Prince Charming

Prince Charming is a stock character who appears in a number of fairy tales. He is the prince who comes to the rescue of the damsel in distress, and typically must engage in a quest to liberate her from an evil magic ....
 who woke up the lethargic Romanian Jewish culture". Israil Bercovici
Israil Bercovici

Israil Bercovici was a Jewish Romanian dramaturg, playwright, director, biographer, and memoirist, who served the State Jewish Theater of Romania between 1955 to 1982; he also wrote Yiddish language poetry....
 wrote that in his works "...we find points in common with what we now call 'total theater'. In many of his plays he alternates prose and verse, pantomime and dance, moments of acrobatics and some of jonglerie, and even of spiritualism..."

Youth and early manhood

Goldfaden was born in Starokonstantinov. His birthdate is sometimes given as July 12, following the "Old Style"
Julian calendar

The Julian calendar, a reform of the Roman calendar, was introduced by Julius Caesar in 46 BC, and came into force in 45 BC . It was chosen after consultation with the astronomer Sosigenes of Alexandria and was probably designed to approximate the tropical year, known at least since Hipparchus....
 calendar in use at that time in Russia. He attended a Jewish religious school (a cheder
Cheder

A Cheder is a traditional elementary school teaching the basics of Judaism and the Hebrew language....
), but his middle class family was strongly associated with the Haskalah
Haskalah

Haskalah , the Jewish Enlightenment, was a movement among European Jews in the late 18th century that advocated adopting Age of Enlightenment values, pressing for better Social integration into European society, and increasing education in secular studies, Hebrew language, and Jewish history....
, the Jewish Enlightenment, and his father, a watchmaker, arranged that he receive private lessons in German and Russian. As a child, he is said to have appreciated and imitated the performances of wedding jesters and Brody singers to the degree that he acquired the nickname Avromele Badkhen, "Abie the Jester". In 1857 he began studies at the government-run rabbinical school at Zhytomyr
Zhytomyr

Zhytomyr is a historic city in the North of the western half of Ukraine. It is the Capital city of the Zhytomyr Oblast , as well as the administrative center of the surrounding Zhytomyr Rayon ....
, from which he emerged in 1866 as a teacher and a poet (with some experience in amateur theater), but he never led a congregation.

Goldfaden's first published poem was called "Progress"; his New York Times obituary described it as "a plea for Zionism
Zionism

Zionism is the international Jewish political movement that originally supported the reestablishment of a homeland for the Jewish People in Palestine....
 years before that movement developed". In 1865 he published his first book of poetry, Zizim u-Ferahim (in Hebrew
Hebrew language

Hebrew is a Semitic languages of the Afro-Asiatic languages. Modern Hebrew is spoken by more than seven million people in Israel and Classical Hebrew is used for prayer or study in Jews communities around the world....
); The Jewish Encyclopedia (1901–1906) says that "Goldfaden's Hebrew poetry... possesses considerable merit, but it has been eclipsed by his Yiddish poetry, which, for strength of expression and for depth of true Jewish feeling, remains unrivaled." The first book of verse in Yiddish was published in 1866, and in 1867 he took a job teaching in Simferopol
Simferopol

Simferopol is the Capital of the Crimea in southern Ukraine. As the capital of Crimea, Simferopol is an important political, economic, and transport center of the peninsula....
. A year later, he moved on to Odessa
Odessa

Odessa or Odesa is the Capital of the Odessa Oblast located in southern Ukraine. The city is a major port located on the shore of the Black Sea and the fourth largest city in Ukraine with a population of 1,029,000 ....
 (in Ukraine
Ukraine

Ukraine is a country in Eastern Europe. It is bordered by Russia to the east; Belarus to the north; Poland, Slovakia, and Hungary to the west; Romania and Moldova to the southwest; and the Black Sea and Sea of Azov to the south....
), where he lived initially in his uncle's house, where a cousin who was a good pianist
Piano

The piano is a musical instrument played by means of a keyboard instrument. Widely used in Western music for solo performance, ensemble use, chamber music, and accompaniment, the piano is also very popular as an aid to musical composition and rehearsal....
 helped him set some of his poems to music.

In Odessa, Goldfaden renewed his acquaintance with fellow Yiddish-language writer Yitzhak Yoel Linetsky, whom he knew from Zhytomyr and met Hebrew-language
Hebrew language

Hebrew is a Semitic languages of the Afro-Asiatic languages. Modern Hebrew is spoken by more than seven million people in Israel and Classical Hebrew is used for prayer or study in Jews communities around the world....
 poet Eliahu Mordechai Werbel (whose daughter Paulina would become Goldfaden's wife) and published poems in the newspaper Kol-Mevaser. He also wrote his first two plays, Die Tzwei Sheines (The Two Neighbors) and Die Murneh Sosfeh (Aunt Susie), included with some verses in a modestly successful 1869 book Die Yidene (The Jewish Woman), which went through three editions in three years. At this time, he and Paulina were living mainly on his meagre teacher's salary of 18 rubles
Russian ruble

The ruble or rouble is the currency of the Russia and the two partially recognized republics of Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Formerly, the ruble was also the currency of the Soviet Union and the Russian Empire prior to their breakups....
 a year, supplemented by giving private lessons and taking a job as a cashier in a hat shop.

In 1875, Golfaden headed for Munich
Munich

Munich is the capital city of Bavaria, Germany. Munich is located on the River Isar north of the Northern Limestone Alps. Munich is the third largest city in Germany, after Berlin and Hamburg....
, intending to study medicine. This did not work out, and he headed for Lvov/Lemberg
Lviv

Lviv is a major city in western Ukraine.It is regarded as one of the main Ukrainian culture. In 2001, it had 725,000 inhabitants, of whom 88 per cent were Ukrainians, 9 per cent Russians and 1 per cent Poles....
 in Galicia
Galicia (Central Europe)

Galicia is a historical region in East Central Europe, currently divided between Poland and Ukraine, named after Ukra?ni?n city of Halych.The nucleus of historic Galicia is formed of three regions of western Ukraine: Lvivska oblast, Ternopilska oblast and Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast....
, where he again met up with Linetsky, now editor of a weekly paper, Isrulik or Der Alter Yisrulik (which was well reputed, but was soon shut by the government). A year later, he moved on to Chernivtsi
Chernivtsi

Chernivtsi is the Capital of Chernivtsi Oblast in western Ukraine. The city lies in the historic Bukovina region of Ukraine and is situated on the Prut, a tributary of the Danube....
 in Bukovina
Bukovina

Bukovina is a historical region on the northern slopes of the northeastern Carpathian Mountains and the adjoining plains. It is currently split between Romania and Ukraine....
, where he edited the Yiddish-language daily Dos Bukoviner Israelitishe Folksblatt. The limits of the economic sense of this enterprise can be gauged from his inability to pay a registration fee of 3000 ducats. He tried unsuccessfully to operate the paper under a different name, but soon moved on to Iasi
Iasi

Iasi , is a Cities in Romania and Municipality in Romania in north-eastern Romania. The city was the capital of Principality of Moldavia from the 16th century until 1861 and of Romania between 1916?1918 during World War I....
.

Iasi

Arriving in Iasi in 1876, Goldfaden was fortunate to be better known as a good poet — many of whose poems had been set to music and had become popular songs — than as a less-than-successful businessman. When he sought funds from Yitzhak Librescu for another newspaper, Librescu was uninterested in that proposition. Librescu's wife remarked that Yiddish-language journalism was just a way to starve; she suggested that there would be a lot more of a market for Yiddish-language theater. Librescu offered Goldfaden 100 francs for a public recital of his songs in the garden of Shimen Mark, Gradina Pomul Verde ("the Green Fruit-Tree Garden").

Instead of a simple recital, Goldfaden expanded this into something of a vaudeville
Vaudeville

Vaudeville was a genre of a variety show prevalent on the theatre in the United States and Canada from the early 1880s until the early 1930s. It developed from many sources, including the concert saloon, minstrel show, freak shows, dime museums, and literary burlesque....
; either this or their first indoor performance later that year in Botosani
Botosani

Botosani is the capital city of Botosani County, in northern Moldavia, Romania. Today, it is best known as the birthplace of many celebrated Romanians, including Mihai Eminescu and Nicolae Iorga....
 is generally counted as the first professional Yiddish theater performance. However, the nature of his cast indicates exactly how nominal it is to choose one performance as "the first": Goldfaden's first actor, Israel Grodner
Israel Grodner

Israel Grodner was one of the founding performers in Yiddish theater. A Lithuanian Jew who moved at the age of 16 to Berdichev, Ukraine, the Broder singer and actor was in Iasi, Romania in 1876 when Abraham Goldfaden recruited him as the first actor for what became the first professional Yiddish theater troupe....
, was already singing Goldfaden's songs (and others) in the salons of Iasi.

In fact, another candidate for consideration as the first professional Yiddish theater performance also included Grodner. He sang in a concert in Odessa
Odessa

Odessa or Odesa is the Capital of the Odessa Oblast located in southern Ukraine. The city is a major port located on the shore of the Black Sea and the fourth largest city in Ukraine with a population of 1,029,000 ....
 in 1873, which also included some of the Goldfaden's songs, although Goldfaden was not personally involved. It appears to have had significant improvised material between songs, although no actual script.

Although Goldfaden, by his own account, was familiar at this time with "practically all of Russian literature", had plenty of exposure to Russian and Polish theater, and had even seen African American
African American

African Americans or Black Americans are citizens or residents of the United States who have origins in any of the Black people populations of Africa....
 tragedian Ira Aldrich perform Shakespeare
William Shakespeare

William Shakespeare was an English people poet and playwright, widely regarded as the greatest writer in the English language and the world's preeminent dramatist....
, the performance at Gradina Pomul Verde was only a bit more of a play than Grodner had participated in three years earlier. The songs were strung together with a bit of character and plot and a good bit of improvisation. The performance by Goldfaden, Grodner, Sokher Goldstein
Sokher Goldstein

Mike Goldstein , first name also spelled Suher, Suray, ukas, or mikey boy, was a singer and actor, one of the founding performers in Yiddish theater....
, and possibly as many as three other men went over well. The first performance was either Di bobe mitn einikl (Grandmother and Granddaughter) or Dos bintl holt (The Bundle of sticks); sources disagree. (Some reports suggest that Goldfaden himself was a poor singer, or even a non-singer and poor actor; according to Bercovici, these reports stem from Goldfaden's own self-disparaging remarks or from his countenance as an old man in New York, but contemporary reports show him to have been a decent, though not earth-shattering, actor and singer.)

After that time, Goldfaden continued miscellaneous newspaper work, but the stage became his main focus.

As it happens, Mihai Eminescu
Mihai Eminescu

Mihai Eminescu , was a late Romanticism poet, novelist and journalist. He is the best-known and most influential Romanian language poet. Famous poems include Luceafarul , Oda ?n metru antic , and the five Letters ....
 saw one of their Pomul Verde performances later that summer. He records that the company had six players. (A 1905 typographical error would turn this to a much-cited sixteen, suggesting a grander beginning for Yiddish theater.) He was impressed by the quality of the singing and acting, but found the pieces "without much dramatic interest." [Bercovici, 1998, 58] His generally positive comments would seem to deserve to be taken seriously: Eminescu was "virulently antisemitic". Eminescu appears to have seen four of Goldfaden's early plays: a satiric
Satire

Satire is often strictly defined as a literary genre; although, in practice, it is also found in the graphic arts and performing arts. In satire, human or individual vices, follies, abuses, or shortcomings are held up to censure by means of ridicule, derision, burlesque, irony, or other methods, ideally with the intent to bring about improv...
 musical revue De velt a gan-edn (The World and Paradise), Der Farlibter Maskil un der Oifgheklerter Hosid (a dialogue between "an infatuated philosopher" and "an enlightened Hasid
Hasidic Judaism

Hasidic Judaism is a type of Orthodox Judaism or Haredi Judaism Orthodox Judaism religious movement. Some refer to Hasidic Judaism as Hasidism, and the adjective chasidic / hasidic applies....
"), another musical revue
Der sver mitn eidem (Father-in-law and Son-in-Law), and a comedy Fishl der balegole un zain knecht Sider (Fishel the Junkman and His Servant Sider).

The search for a theater

As the season for outdoor performances was coming to a close, Goldfaden tried and failed to rent an appropriate theater in Iasi. A theater owner named Reicher, presumably Jewish himself, told him that "a troupe of Jewish singers" would be "too dirty". Goldfaden, Grodner, and Goldstein headed first to Botosani
Botosani

Botosani is the capital city of Botosani County, in northern Moldavia, Romania. Today, it is best known as the birthplace of many celebrated Romanians, including Mihai Eminescu and Nicolae Iorga....
, where they lived in a garret and Goldfaden continued to churn out songs and plays. An initial successful performance of
Di Rekruten (The Recruits) in an indoor theater ("with loges!" as Goldfaden wrote) was followed by days of rain so torrential that no one would come out to the theater; they pawned some possessions and left for Galati
Galati

Galati is a city in eastern Romania , the capital city of Galati County on the banks of the Danube, very close to Braila forming with it the Cantemir metropolitan area....
, which was to prove a bit more auspicious, with a successful three-week run.

In Galati they acquired their first serious set designer, a housepainter known as Reb Moishe Bas. He had no formal artistic training, but he proved to be good at the job, and joined the troupe, as did Sara Segal, their first actress. She was not yet out of her teens. After seeing her perform in their Galati premiere, her mother objected to her unmarried daughter cavorting on a stage like that; Goldstein (unlike Goldfaden and Grodner) was single; he promptly married her and she remained with the troupe. (Besides being known as Sara Segal and Sofia Goldstein, she became best known as Sofia Karp, after a second marriage to actor Max Karp).

After the successful run in Galati came a less successful attempt in Braila
Braila

Braila is a city in Muntenia, eastern Romania, a port on the Danube and the capital of the Braila County, in the close vicinity of Galati. In 2002, according to the official Romanian census, the city had a population of 216,292 people in 2002, making it Romania's 10th largest city....
, but by now the company had honed its act and it was time to go to the capital, Bucharest
Bucharest

Bucharest is the capital city, industrial and commercial centre of Romania. It is the largest city in Romania, located in the southeast of the country, at , and lies on the banks of the D?mbovita River....
.

Bucharest

As in Iasi, Goldfaden arrived in Bucharest with his reputation already established. He and his players performed first in the early spring at the salon Lazar Cafegiu on Calea Vacaresti (Vacaresti
Vacaresti

Vacaresti may refer to any of the following:*the Vacarescu family of Boyar*the Bucharest neighbourhood of Vacaresti, Bucharest*the Vacaresti Monastery and the Vacaresti prison...
 Avenue, in the heart of the ghetto
Ghetto

A ghetto is described as a "portion of a city in which members of a minority group live especially because of social, legal, or economic pressure."...
), then, once the weather turned warm, at the Jignita garden, a pleasant tree-shaded beer garden
Beer garden

Beer garden is an open-air area where beverages, , and prepared food are served. It is usually attached to a drinking establishment such as a public house or a German beer hall, which in places such as Munich may serve large numbers of customers....
 on Str. Negru Voda that up until then had drawn only a neighborhood crowd. He filled out his cast from the great pool of Jewish vocal talent: synagogue cantors
Hazzan

A hazzan or chazzan is a Jewish cantor, a musician trained in the vocal arts who helps lead the synagogue in songful prayer.There are many rules relating to how a cantor should lead services, but the idea of a cantor as a paid professional does not exist in classical rabbinic sources....
. He also recruited two eminently respectable classically trained prima donna
Prima donna

Originally used in opera companies, "prima donna" is Italian language for "first lady". The term was used to designate the leading female singer in the opera company, the person to whom the prime roles would be given....
s, sisters Margaretta
Margaretta Schwartz

Margeretta Schwartz was one of the first distinguished female performers in Yiddish theater. She and her sister Annetta Schwartz shared prima donna duties in Abraham Goldfaden's troupe in Romania beginning in 1877....
 and Annetta Schwartz
Annetta Schwartz

Annetta Schwartz was one of the first distinguished female performers in Yiddish theater. She and her sister Margaretta Schwartz shared prima donna duties in Abraham Goldfaden's troupe in Romania beginning in 1877....
.

Among the cantors in his casts that year were Lazar Zuckermann (also known as Laiser Zuckerman; as a song-and-dance man, he would eventually follow Goldfaden to New York and a long stage career, Moishe Zilberman (also known as Silberman), and Simhe Dinman, but the find, soon to become a stage star, was the 18-year-old Zigmund Mogulescu (Sigmund Mogulesko), an orphan who had already made his way in the world as a singer not only as a soloist in the Great Synagogue of Bucharest, but in cafes, at parties, with a visiting French operetta
Operetta

Operetta is a genre of light opera, light in terms both of music and subject matter. It is also closely related, in English-language works, to forms of musical theatre....
 company, and even in a church choir. Before his voice changed, he had sung with Zuckerman, Dinman, and Moses Wald in the "Israelite Chorus", performing at important ceremonies in the Jewish community. Mogulescu's audition for Goldfaden was a scene from
Vladutu Mamei (Mama's Boy), which formed the basis later that year for Goldfaden's light comedy Shmendrik, oder Die Komishe Chaseneh (Shmendrik or The Comical Wedding starring Mogulescu as the almost painfully clueless and hapless young man (later, famously played in New York and elsewhere by actress Molly Picon
Molly Picon

Molly Picon was an American actress of stage, screen and television, as well as a lyricist. She was first and foremost a star in Yiddish theatre and film, but as Yiddish theatre faded she began to perform in English-language productions....
); the title is a pun on the
Chemical Wedding
Chemical Wedding

The phrase Chemical Wedding may refer to:*Chymical Wedding of Christian Rosenkreutz, a book of alchemical lore*Chemical Wedding , a 2009 in film film...
).

This recruiting of cantors was not without controversy: Cantor Cuper (also known as Kupfer), the head cantor of the Great Synagogue, considered it "impious" that cantors should perform in a secular setting, to crowds where both sexes mingled freely, keeping people up late so that they might not be on time for morning prayers.

While one may argue over which performance "started" Yiddish theater, by the end of that summer in Bucharest Yiddish theater was an established fact. The influx of Jewish merchants and middlemen to at the start of the Russo-Turkish War had greatly expanded the audience; among these new arrivals were Israel Rosenberg
Israel Rosenberg

Israel Rosenberg founded the first Yiddish theater troupe in Imperial Russia.A personable "hole-and-corner lawyer" and swindler in Odessa, Rosenberg was part of the migration of merchants and middlemen to Bucharest, Romania at the start of the Russo-Turkish War, 1877-78 in 1887....
 and Jacob Spivakovsky, the highly cultured scion of a wealthy Russian Jewish family, both of whom actually joined Goldfaden's troupe, but soon left to found the first Yiddish theater troupe in Imperial Russia.

Goldfaden was churning out a repertoire – new songs, new plays, translations of plays from Romanian, French, and other languages; in the first two years, he wrote 22 plays, and would eventually write about 40 – and while Goldfaden was not always able to retain the players in his company once they became stars in their own right, he continued for many years to recruit first-rate talent, and his company became a
de facto training ground for Yiddish theater. By the end of the year, others were writing Yiddish plays as well, such as Moses Horowitz
Moses Horowitz

Moses Ha-Levi Horowitz , also known as Moishe Hurvitz, Moishe Isaac Halevy-Hurvitz, etc., was a playwright and actor in the early years of Yiddish theater....
 with
Der tiranisher bankir, (The Tyrannical Banker) or Grodner with Curve un ganev, (Prostitute and Thief), and Yiddish theater had become big theater, with elaborate sets, duelling choruses, and extras to fill out crowd scenes.

Goldfaden was helped by Ion Ghica
Ion Ghica

Ion Ghica was a Romanian revolutionary, mathematician, diplomat and twice Prime Minister of Romania . He was a full member of the Romanian Academy and its president for four times ....
, then head of the Romanian National Theater to legally establish a "dramatic society" to handle administrative matters. From those papers, we know that the troupe at the Jignita included Moris Teich, Michel Liechman (Glückman), Lazar Zuckermann, Margareta Schwartz, Sofia Palandi, Aba Goldstein, and Clara Goldstein. We also know from similar papers that when Grodner and Mogulescu walked out on Goldfaden to start their own company, it included (besides themselves) I. Rosenberg, Y. Spivakovsky, P. Sapira, M. Banderevsky, Anetta Grodner, and Rosa Friedman.

Ion Ghica was a valuable ally for Yiddish theater in Bucharest. On several occasions he expressed his favorable view of the quality of acting, and even more of the technical aspects of the Yiddish theater. In 1881, he obtained for the National Theater the costumes that had been used for a Yiddish pageant on the coronation of King Solomon, which had been timed in tribute to the actual coronation of Carol I of Romania
Carol I of Romania

Carol I of Romania, original name Prince Karl Eitel Friedrich Zephyrinus Ludwig of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen, later simply of Hohenzollern , German prince, was elected Domnitor of Romania on 20 April 1866 following the overthrow of Alexander John Cuza by a palace coup; following the defeat of the Ottoman Empire in the Russo-Turkis...
.

A turn to the serious

While light comedy and satire might have established Yiddish theater as a commercially successful medium, it would never have established Goldfaden as "the Yiddish Shakespeare" (which the
New York Times called him at his death in 1908). As a man broadly read in several languages, he was acutely aware that there was no Eastern European Jewish tradition of dramatic literature, his audience was used to seeking just "a good glass of Odobesti and a song". Years later, he would paraphrase the typical Yiddish theatergoer of the time as saying to him, "We don't go to the theater to make our head swim with sad things. We have enough troubles at home... We go to the theater to cheer ourselves up. We pay up a coin and hope to be distracted, we want to laugh from the heart."

Goldfaden wrote that this attitude put him "pure and simply at war with the public". His stage was not to be merely "...a masquerade. No, brothers. If I have arrived at having a stage, I want it to be a school for you. In youth you didn't have time to learn and cultivate yourself... Laugh heartily if I amuse you with my jokes, while I, watching you, feel my heart crying. Then, brothers, I'll give you a drama, a tragedy drawn from life, and you, too, shall cry – while my heart shall be glad." Nonetheless, his "war with the public" was based on understanding that public. He would also write, "I wrote
Di kishefmakhern (The Witch
The Witch of Botosani

The Witch of Botosani or simply The Witch or The Sorceress was an 1878, or possibly 1877, play by Abraham Goldfaden. Like most of Goldfaden's major works, it was an operetta....
) in Romania, where the populace – Jews as much as Romanians – believe strongly in witches." Local superstitions and concerns always made good subject matter, and, as Bercovici remarks, however strong his inspirational and didactic intent, his historical pieces were always connected to contemporary concerns.

Even in the first couple of years of his company, Goldfaden did not shy away from serious themes: his rained-out vaudeville in Botosani had been
Di Rekruten (The Recruits), playing with the theme of the press gang
Impressment

Impressment is the act of compelling people to serve in the military, usually by force and without notice. Unlike "shanghaiing", impressment is carried out by law, or under color #Color of law, and forces the impressed person into military rather than commercial sea service....
s working the streets of that town to conscript
Conscription

Conscription is a general term for involuntary labor demanded by an established authority. It is most often used in the specific sense of government policies that require citizens to serve in the military....
 young men into the army. Before the end of 1876, Goldfaden had already translated
Desolate Island by August von Kotzebue; thus, a play by a German aristocrat and Russian spy became the first non-comic play performed professionally in Yiddish. After his initial burst of mostly vaudevilles and light comedies (although Shmendrik and The Two Kuni-Lemls were reasonably sophisticated plays), Goldfaden would go on to write many serious Yiddish-language plays on Jewish themes, perhaps the most famous being Shulamith
Shulamith

Shulamis or Shulamit is the feminine form of the Hebrew language name Solomon , related to the word "shalom" , or "peace". See Salome ....
, also from 1880. Golfaden himself suggested that this increasingly serious turn became possible because he had educated his audience. Nahma Sandrow suggests that it may have had equally much to do with the arrival in Romania of Russian Jews at the time of the Russo-Turkish War, who had been exposed to more sophisticated Russian language
Russian language

Russian is the most geographically widespread language of Eurasia, the most widely spoken of the Slavic languages, and the largest native language in Europe....
 theater. Goldfaden's strong turn toward almost uniformly serious subject matter roughly coincided with bringing his troupe to Odessa
Odessa

Odessa or Odesa is the Capital of the Odessa Oblast located in southern Ukraine. The city is a major port located on the shore of the Black Sea and the fourth largest city in Ukraine with a population of 1,029,000 ....
.

Goldfaden was both a theoretician and a practitioner of theater. That he was in no small measure a theoretician – for example, he was interested almost from the start in having set design seriously support the themes of his plays – relates to a key property of Yiddish theater at the time of its birth: in general, writes Bercovici, theory ran ahead of practice. Much of the Jewish community, Goldfaden included, were already familiar with contemporary theater in other languages. The initial itinerary of Goldfaden's company – Iasi, Botosani, Galati, Braila, Bucharest – could as easily have been the itinerary of a Romanian-language troupe. Yiddish theater may have been seen from the outset as an expression of a Jewish national character, but the theatrical values of Goldfaden's company were in many ways those of a good Romanian theater of the time. Also, Yiddish was a German dialect and a well-known language even among non-Jews in Moldavia
Moldavia

Moldavia is a geographic and historical region and former principality in Eastern Europe, corresponding to the territory between the Eastern Carpathians and the Dniester river....
 (and Transylvania
Transylvania

Transylvania is a historical region in the central part of Romania. Bounded on the east and south by the Carpathian mountains, historical Transylvania extended in the west to the Apuseni Mountains; however, the term frequently encompasses not only Transylvania proper, but also the historical regions of Crisana, Maramures, and Banat....
), an important language of commerce; the fact that one of the first to write about Yiddish theater was Romania's national poet, Mihai Eminescu
Mihai Eminescu

Mihai Eminescu , was a late Romanticism poet, novelist and journalist. He is the best-known and most influential Romanian language poet. Famous poems include Luceafarul , Oda ?n metru antic , and the five Letters ....
, is testimony that interest in Yiddish theater went beyond the Jewish community.

Almost from the first, Yiddish theater drew a level of theater criticism comparable to any other European theater of its time. Bercovici cites a "brochure" by one G. Abramski, published in 1877. Abramski described and gave critiques of all of Goldfaden's plays of that year, discussed what a Yiddish theater ought to be, speculated that this might be a moment comparable to the Elizabethan era
Elizabethan era

The Elizabethan era is associated with Elizabeth I of England's reign and is often considered to be the Golden Age in History of England. It was the height of the English Renaissance and saw the flowering of English poetry and English literature....
 for English theater, noted the many sources of this emerging form (ranging from Purim plays to circus
Circus

File:Faroe stamp 416 circus.jpgA circus is commonly a traveling company of performers that may include acrobatics, clowns, trained animals, trapeze acts, hoopers, tightrope walkers, juggling, unicyclists and other stunt-oriented artists....
 pantomime
Pantomime

Pantomime is a musical-comedy theatrical production traditionally found in Great Britain, Canada, Jamaica, Australia, South Africa, New Zealand, Zimbabwe, Republic of Ireland, Gibraltar and Republic of Malta, and is usually performed during the Christmas and New Year season....
), praised the strong female roles, but criticized where he saw weaknesses: a male actor unconvincingly playing the mother in
Shmendrik, or the entire play Di shtume kale (The Mute Bride) — a play apparently written to accommodate a pretty, young actress who was too nervous to deliver her lines — saying of it that the only evidence of Goldfaden's authorship was his name.

Russia

Goldfaden's father wrote him to solicit the troupe to come to Odessa
Odessa

Odessa or Odesa is the Capital of the Odessa Oblast located in southern Ukraine. The city is a major port located on the shore of the Black Sea and the fourth largest city in Ukraine with a population of 1,029,000 ....
 in Ukraine
Ukraine

Ukraine is a country in Eastern Europe. It is bordered by Russia to the east; Belarus to the north; Poland, Slovakia, and Hungary to the west; Romania and Moldova to the southwest; and the Black Sea and Sea of Azov to the south....
, which was then part of Imperial Russia. The timing was opportune: the end of the war meant that much of his best audience were now in Odessa rather than Bucharest; Rosenberg had already quit Goldfaden's troupe and was performing the Goldfadenian repertoire in Odessa.

With a loan from Librescu, Goldfaden headed east with a group of 42 people, including performers, musicians, and their families. After the end of the Russo-Turkish War he and his troupe travelled extensively through Imperial Russia, notably to Kharkov (also in Ukraine), Moscow, and Saint Petersburg
Saint Petersburg

Saint Petersburg is a types of inhabited localities in Russia and a federal subjects of Russia of Russia located on the Neva River at the head of the Gulf of Finland on the Baltic Sea....
. Jacob Adler
Jacob Adler

Jacob Adler may refer to:* Jacob Pavlovich Adler , Russo/Ukrainian-American actor; star of New York Yiddish theater; progenitor of show-business family...
 later described him at this time as "a
bon vivant", "a cavalier", "as difficult to approach as an emperor". He continued to turn out plays at a prolific pace, now mostly serious pieces such as Doctor Almasada, oder Die Yiden in Palermo (Doctor Almasada, or The Jews of Palermo), Shulamith
Shulamith

Shulamis or Shulamit is the feminine form of the Hebrew language name Solomon , related to the word "shalom" , or "peace". See Salome ....
, and Bar Kokhba, the last being a rather dark operetta about Bar Kokhba's revolt
Bar Kokhba's revolt

The Bar Kokhba revolt against the Roman Empire was a second major rebellion by the Jews of Iudaea Province and the last of the Jewish-Roman Wars....
, written after the pogrom
Pogrom

A pogrom is a form of riot directed against a particular group, whether ethnic, religious, or other, and characterized by the killing and destruction of their homes, businesses, and religious centers....
s following the 1881 assassination of Czar Alexander II
Alexander II of Russia

Alexander II Nikolaevich , also known as Alexander the Liberator was the List of Russian rulers of the Russian Empire from 3 March 1855 until his assassination in 1881....
, as the tide turned against Jewish emancipation.

As it happens, a Frenchman
France

France , officially the French Republic , is a country whose Metropolitan France is located in Western Europe and that also comprises various Overseas departments and territories of France....
 named Victor Tissot happened to be in Berdichev when Goldfaden's company was there. He saw two plays –
Di Rekruten, first premiered in Botosani, and the later Di Shvebleh (Matches), a play of intrigue. Tissot's account of what he saw gives an interesting picture of the theaters and audiences Goldfaden's troupe encountered outside of the big cities. "Berdichev," he begins, "has not one cafe, not one restaurant. Berdichev, which is a boring and sad city, nonetheless has a theatrical hall, a big building made of rough boards, where theater troupes passing through now and then put on a play." Although there was a proper stage with a curtain, the cheap seats were bare benches, the more expensive ones were benches covered in red percale. Although there were many full beards, "there were no long caftans, no skullcaps." Some of the audience were quite poor, but these were assimilated Jews, basically secular. The audience also included Russian officers with their wives or girlfriends.

In Russia, Goldfaden and his troupe drew large audiences and were generally popular with progressive Jewish intellectuals, but slowly ran afoul of both the Czarist government and conservative elements in the Jewish community. Goldfaden was calling for change in the Jewish world:

Wake up my people
From your sleep, wake up
And believe no more in foolishness.


A call like this might be a bit ambiguous, but it was unsettling to those who were on the side of the
status quo. Yiddish theater was banned in Russia starting September 14, 1883 as part of the anti-Jewish reaction following the assassination of Czar Alexander II
Alexander II of Russia

Alexander II Nikolaevich , also known as Alexander the Liberator was the List of Russian rulers of the Russian Empire from 3 March 1855 until his assassination in 1881....
. Goldfaden and his troupe were left adrift in Saint Petersburg. They headed various directions, some to England, some to New York City, some to Poland, some to Romania.

The prophet adrift

While Yiddish theater continued successfully in various places, Goldfaden was not on the best terms at this time with Mogulescu. They had quarrelled (and settled) several times over rights to plays, and Mogulescu and his partner Moishe "Maurice" Finkel
Moishe Finkel

Moishe Finkel was a prominent figure in the early years of Yiddish theater. He was business partner first of Abraham Goldfaden and later of Sigmund Mogulesko and, for a time, was married to prima donna Annetta Schwartz....
 now dominated Yiddish theater in Romania, with about ten lesser companies competing as well. Mogulescu was a towering figure in Bucharest theater at this point, lauded on a level comparable to the actors of the National Theater, performing at times in Romanian as well as Yiddish, drawing an audience that went well beyond the Jewish community.

Goldfaden seems, in Bercovici's words, to have lost "his theatrical elan" in this period. He briefly put together a theater company in 1886 in Warsaw
Warsaw

Warsaw is the Capital and World's largest cities of Poland. It is located on the Vistula River roughly from both the Baltic Sea coast and the Carpathian Mountains....
, with no notable success. In 1887 he went to New York (as did Mogulescu, independently). After extensive negotiations and great anticipation in the Yiddish-language press in New York ("Goldfaden in America", read the headline in the January 11, 1888 edition of the
New Yorker Yiddishe Ilustrirte Zaitung), he briefly took on the job of director of Mogulescu's new Rumanian Opera House; they parted ways again after the failure of their first play, whose production values were apparently not up to New York standards. Goldfaden attempted (unsuccessfully) to found a theater school, then headed in 1889 for Paris, rather low on funds. There he wrote some poetry, worked on a play that he didn't finish at that time, and put together a theater company that never got to the point of putting on a play (because the cashier made off with all of their funds [Adler, 1999, 262 commentary]). In October 1889 he scraped together the money to get to Lvov
Lviv

Lviv is a major city in western Ukraine.It is regarded as one of the main Ukrainian culture. In 2001, it had 725,000 inhabitants, of whom 88 per cent were Ukrainians, 9 per cent Russians and 1 per cent Poles....
, where his reputation as a poet again came to his rescue.

Lvov

Lvov was not exactly a dramatist's dream. Leon Dreykurs described audiences bringing meals into the theater, rustling paper, treating the theater like a beer garden. He also quotes Jacob Schatzky: "All in all, the Galician milieu was not favorable to Yiddish theater. The intellectuals were assimilated, but the masses were fanatically religious and they viewed Jewish 'comedians' with disdain."

Nonetheless, Iacob Ber Ghimpel, who owned a Yiddish theater there, was glad to have a figure of Goldfaden's stature. Goldfaden completed the play he'd started in Paris,
Rabi Yoselman, oder Die Gzerot fun Alsas ("Rabbi Yoselman, or The Alsatian Decree"), in five acts and 23 scenes, based on the life of Josel of Rosheim
Josel of Rosheim

Josel of Rosheim was the great advocate of the Germany and Poland Jews during the reigns of the Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor and Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor....
. At this time he also wrote an operetta
Rothschild and a semi-autobiographical play called Mashiach Tzeiten (Messiah Times) that gave a less-than-optimistic view of America.

Kalman Juvelier, an actor in Ber Ghimpel's company, credited Goldfaden's brief time in Lvov as greatly strengthening the caliber of performance there, working with every actor on understanding his or her character, making sure that the play was more than just a series of songs and effects, respected by all.

Back to Bucharest

Buoyed by his success in Lvov, he returned to Bucharest in 1892, as director of the Jignita theater. His new company again included Lazar Zuckermann; other players were Marcu (Mordechai) Segalescu, and later Iacob Kalich, Carol Schramek, Malvina Treitler-Löbel and her father H. Goldenbers. Among his notable plays from this period were
Dos zenteh Gebot, oder Lo tachmod (The Tenth Commandment, or Thou Shalt Not Covet), Judas Maccabaeus, and Judith and Holfernes and a translation of Johann Strauss
Johann Strauss

Johann Strauss is the name of three Austrian composers:*Johann Strauss I , or Johann Strauss Sr., composer, popularizer of the waltz*Johann Strauss II , or Johann Strauss Jr., composer, known as the "Waltz King", son of Johann I...
's
Gypsy Baron.

However, it was not a propitious time to return to Romania. Yiddish theater had become a business there, with slickly written advertisements, coordinated performances in multiple cities using the same publicity materials, and cutthroat competition: on one occasion in 1895, a young man named Bernfeld attended multiple performances of Goldfaden's
Story of Isaac, memorized it all (including the songs), and took the whole package to Kalman Juvilier, who put on an unauthorized production in Iasi. Such outright theft was possible because once Ion Ghica headed off on a diplomatic career, the National Theater, which was supposed to adjudicate issues like unauthorized performances of plays, was no longer paying much attention to Yiddish theater. (Juvilier and Goldfaden finally reached an out-of-court settlement.)

Cutthroat competition was nothing to what was to follow. The 1890s were a tough time for the Romanian economy, and a rising tide of anti-Semitism made it an even tougher time for the Jews. One quarter of the Jewish population emigrated, with intellecuals particularly likely to leave, and those intellecuals who remained were more interested in politics than in theater: this was a period of social ferment, with Jewish socialists
Socialism

Socialism refers to a broad set of economic theories of social organization advocating public or state ownership and administration of the means of production and distribution of goods, and a society characterized by equality for all individuals, with a fair or Egalitarianism method of compensation....
 in Iasi starting
Der Veker (The Awakener).

Goldfaden left Romania in 1896; soon Juvilier's was the only active Yiddish theater troupe in the country, and foreign troupes had almost entirely ceased coming to the country. Although Lateiner, Horowitz, and Shumer kept writing, and occasionally managed to put on a play, it was not a good time for Yiddish theater – or any theater – in Romania, and would only become worse as the economy continued to decline.

Goldfaden wandered Europe as a poet and journalist. His plays continued to be performed in Europe and America, but rarely, if ever, did anyone send him royalties. His health deteriorated – a 1903 letter refers to asthma
Asthma

Asthma is a common chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, in which the Lung constrict, become inflammation, and are lined with excessive amounts of thickened mucus, often in response to one or more triggers....
 and spitting up blood – and he was running out of money. In 1903, he wrote Jacob Dinesohn from Paris, authorizing him to sell his remaining possessions in Romania, clothes and all. This gave him the money to head once more to New York in 1904.

New York

In America, he again tried his hand at journalism, but a brief stint as editor of the
New Yorker Yiddishe Ilustrirte Zaitung resulted only in getting the paper suspended and landing himself a rather large fine. On March 31, 1905, he recited poetry at a benefit performance at Cooper Union
Cooper Union

The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art is a privately-funded college in Downtown Manhattan, New York City. Cooper Union, founded in 1859, established a radical new model of American higher education....
 to raise a pension for Yiddish poet Eliakum Zunser
Eliakum Zunser

Eliakum Zunser was a Lithuanian Jewish Yiddish-language poet, songwriter, and badchen who lived out the last part of his life in United States of America....
, even worse off than himself because he had found himself unable to write since coming to America in 1889. Shortly afterwards, he met a group of young people who had a Hebrew language association at the Dr. Herzl
Theodor Herzl

Theodor Herzl was an Austria-Hungary journalist who was the father of modern political Zionism.Herzl was born in Pest, Hungary, the Kingdom of Hungary to a Jewish people family originally from Zemun, the Kingdom of Hungary ....
 Zion Club, and wrote a Hebrew-language play
David ba-Milchama (David in the War), which they performed in March 1906, the first Hebrew-language play to be performed in America. Repeat performances in March 1907 and April 1908 drew successively larger crowds.

He also wrote the spoken portions of
Ben Ami, loosely based on George Eliot
George Eliot

Mary Anne Evans , better known by her pen name George Eliot, was an England novelist. She was one of the leading writers of the Victorian era....
's
Daniel Deronda
Daniel Deronda

Daniel Deronda is a novel by George Eliot, first published in 1876. It was the last novel she completed and the only one set in the contemporary Victorian society of her day....
. After Goldfaden's former bit player Jacob Adler
Jacob Adler

Jacob Adler may refer to:* Jacob Pavlovich Adler , Russo/Ukrainian-American actor; star of New York Yiddish theater; progenitor of show-business family...
 — by now the owner of a prominent New York Yiddish theater — optioned and ignored it, even accusing Goldfaden of being "senile", it premiered successfully at rival Boris Thomashefsky
Boris Thomashefsky

Boris Thomashefsky was a Ukraine-born Jewish singer and actor who became one of the biggest stars in Yiddish theatre; born in Tarashcha , a shtetl near Kiev, Ukraine, he emigrated to the U.S....
's People's Theater December 25, 1907, with music by H. Friedzel and lyrics by Mogulescu, who was by this time an international star.

He died in New York City in 1908. At the time of his death, the
New York Times called him not only "the Yiddish Shakespeare", but "both a poet and a prophet", and added that "...there is more evidence of genuine sympathy with and admiration for the man and his work than is likely to be manifested at the funeral of any poet now writing in the English language in this country." An estimated 75,000 attended his funeral procession from the People's Theater in the Bowery
Bowery, Manhattan

The Bowery is the name of a street and a small neighborhood in the southern portion of the New York City borough of Manhattan. The neighborhood's boundaries are East 4th Street and the East Village, Manhattan to the north, Canal Street and Chinatown, Manhattan to the South, Allen Street and the Lower East Side, Manhattan to the east and B...
 to Washington Cemetery in Brooklyn
Brooklyn

Brooklyn is one of the five Borough of New York City, located at the western end of Long Island. An independent city until its consolidation with New York in 1898, Brooklyn is New York City's most populous borough, with 2.5 million residents, and second largest in area....
.

Goldfaden and Zionism

Goldfaden had an on-again off-again relationship with Zionism
Zionism

Zionism is the international Jewish political movement that originally supported the reestablishment of a homeland for the Jewish People in Palestine....
. Some of his earliest poetry was Zionist
avant la lettre and one of his last plays was written in Hebrew; several of his plays were implicitly or explicitly Zionist (Shulamith set in Jerusalem
Jerusalem

Jerusalem is the capital of Israel and its List of Israeli cities in both population and area, with a population of 747,600 residents over an area of if Positions on Jerusalem East Jerusalem is included....
,
Mashiach Tzeiten?! ending with its protagonists abandoning New York for Palestine
Palestine

Palestine is a name which has been widely used since Roman times to refer to the region between the Mediterranean Sea and the Jordan River. It is derived from a name used already much earlier for a narrower geographical region, mainly along the coastal region....
); he served as a delegate from Paris to the World Zionist Congress in 1900. Still, he spent most of his life (and set slightly more than half of his plays) in the Pale of Settlement
Pale of Settlement

The Pale of Settlement was the term given to a region of Russian Empire, along its western border, in which permanent residence of Jews was allowed, and beyond which Jewish residence was generally prohibited....
 and in the adjoining Jewish areas in Romania, and when he left it was never to go to Palestine, but to cities such as New York, London or Paris.

Works


Plays

Sources disagree about the dates (and even the names) of some of Goldfaden's plays. As usual in transcribing Yiddish, spellings vary wildly.

  • Die Mumeh Soseh (Aunt Susie) wr. 1869
  • Die Tzwei Sheines (The Two Neighbours) wr. 1869 (possibly the same as Die Sheines 1877
  • Polyeh Shikor (Polyeh, the Drunkard) 1871
  • Anonimeh Komedyeh (Anonymous Comedy) 1876
  • Die Rekruten (The Recruits) 1876, 1877
  • Dos Bintl Holtz (The Bundle of Sticks) 1876
  • Fishl der balegole un zain knecht Sider (Fishel the Junkman and His Servant Sider) 1876
  • Die Velt a Gan-Edn (The World and Paradise) 1876
  • Der Farlibter Maskil un der Oifgheklerter Hosid (The Infatuated Philosopher and the Enlightened Hasid) 1876
  • Der Shver mitn eidem (Father-in-Law and Son-in-Law) 1876
  • Die Bobeh mit dem Einikel (The Grandmother and the Granddaughter) 1876, 1879
  • The Desolate Isle, Yiddish translation of a play by August von Kotzebue, 1876
  • Die Intrigeh oder Dvosie di pliotkemahern (The Intrigue or Dvoisie Intrigued) 1876, 1877
  • A Gloz Vaser (A Glass of Water) 1877
  • Hotje-mir un Zaitje-mir (Leftovers) 1877
  • Shmendrik, oder Die komishe Chaseneh (Schmendrik or The Comical Wedding) 1877, 1879
  • Shuster un Shnaider (Shoemaker and Tailor) 1877
  • Die Kaprizneh Kaleh, oder Kaptsnzon un Hungerman (The Capricious Bride or Pauper-son and Hunger-man) 1877 presumably the same play as Die kaprizneh Kaleh-Moid (The Capricious Bridemaid) 1887
  • Yontl Shnaider (Yontl the Tailor) 1877
  • Vos tut men? (What Did He Do?) 1877
  • Die Shtumeh Kaleh (The Dumb Bride) 1877, 1887
  • Die Tzwei Toibe (The Two Deaf Men) 1877
  • Der Ghekoifter Shlof (The Purchased Sleep) 1877
  • Die Sheines (The Neighbors) 1877
  • Yukel un Yekel (Yukel and Yekel) 1877
  • Der Katar (Catarrh) 1877
  • Ix-Mix-Drix, 1877
  • Die Mumeh Sose (Mute Susie) 1877
  • Braindele Kozak (Breindele Cossack
    Breindele Cossack

    Breindele Cossack was a darkly comic 1887 Yiddish-language operetta by Abraham Goldfaden, generally accounted one of the best of his early works....
    ), 1877
  • Der Podriatshik (The Purveyor), 1877
  • Die Alte Moid (The Old Maid) 1877
  • Die Tzvei fardulte (The Two Scatter-Brains) 1877
  • Die Shvebeleh (Matches) 1877
  • Fir Portselaiene Teler (Four Porcelain Plates) 1877
  • Der Shpigl (The Mirror) 1877
  • Toib, Shtum un Blind (Deaf, Dumb and Blind) 1878
  • Der Ligner, oder Todres Bloz (The Liar, or, Todres, Blow) (or Todres the Trombonist) 1878
  • Ni-be-ni-me-ni-cucurigu
    Ni-be-ni-me-ni-cucurigu

    Ni-be-ni-me-ni-cucurigu is an 1878 play by Abraham Goldfaden. The somewhat nonsensical Yiddish title is variously translated as Not Me, Not You, Not Cock-a-Doodle-Doo or Neither This, Nor That, nor Kukerikoo; Lulla Rosenfeld says it had an alternate title The Struggle of Culture with Fanaticism....
    (Not Me, Not You, Not Cock-a-Doodle-Doo or Neither This, Nor That, nor Kukerikoo; Lulla Rosenfeld also gives the alternate title The Struggle of Culture with Fanaticism) 1878
  • Der Heker un der Bleher-iung (The Butcher and the Tinker) 1878
  • Die Kishufmacherin (The Sorceress, also known as The Witch of Botosani
    The Witch of Botosani

    The Witch of Botosani or simply The Witch or The Sorceress was an 1878, or possibly 1877, play by Abraham Goldfaden. Like most of Goldfaden's major works, it was an operetta....
    )
    1878, 1887
  • Soufflé, 1878
  • Doi Intriganten (Two Intriguers) 1878
  • Die tzwei Kuni-lemels (The Fanatic, or The Two Kuni-Lemls) 1880
  • Thiat Hametim (The Winter of Death) 1881
  • Shulamith (Shulamith
    Shulamith

    Shulamis or Shulamit is the feminine form of the Hebrew language name Solomon , related to the word "shalom" , or "peace". See Salome ....
    or The Daughter of Jerusalem) wr. 1880,
    1881
  • Dos Zenteh Gebot, oder Lo Tachmod (The Tenth Commandment, or Thou Shalt Not Covet) 1882, 1887
  • Der Sambatien (Sambation
    Sambation

    According to rabbinic literature, the Sambation is the river beyond which the Ten Lost Tribes of Kingdom of Israel were exiled by the Assyrian king Shalmaneser V....
    ) 1882
  • Doctor Almasada, oder Die Yiden in Palermo (Doctor Almasada, or The Jews of Palermo also known as Doctor Almasado, Doctor Almaraso, Doctor Almasaro
    Doctor Almasaro

    Doctor Almasaro, or The Jews of Palermo is an historical, dramatic operetta in rhymed couplets by Abraham Goldfaden, written some time between 1880 and 1883....
    ) 1880, 1883
  • Bar Kokhba, 1883, 1885
  • Akejdos Jzchuk (The Sacrifice of Isaac), 1891
  • Dos Finfteh Gebot, oder Kibed Ov (The Fifth Commandment, or Thou Shalt Not Kill), 1892
  • Rabi Yoselman, oder Die Gzerot fun Alsas (Rabbi Yoselman, or The Alsatian Decree) 1877, 1892
  • Judas Maccabeus, 1892
  • Judith and Holofernes, 1892
  • Mashiach Tzeiten?! (The Messianic Era?!) 1891 1893
  • Yiddish translation of Johann Strauss
    Johann Strauss

    Johann Strauss is the name of three Austrian composers:*Johann Strauss I , or Johann Strauss Sr., composer, popularizer of the waltz*Johann Strauss II , or Johann Strauss Jr., composer, known as the "Waltz King", son of Johann I...
    's
    Gypsy Baron 1894
  • Sdom Veamora (Sodom and Gomorrah) 1895
  • Die Catastrofe fun Braila (The Catastrophe in Braila) 1895
  • Meilits Ioisher (The Messenger of Justice) 1897
  • David ba-Milchama (David in the War) 1906, in Hebrew
  • Ben Ami (Son of My People) 1907, 1908


Songs and poetry

Goldfaden wrote hundreds of songs and poems. Among his most famous are:
  • "Der Malekh" ("The Angel")
  • "Royzhinkes mit mandlen" (Raisins and Almonds
    Raisins and Almonds

    "Raisins and Almonds" is a Jewish lullaby by Abraham Goldfaden, so well known that it has assumed the status of a folk song. It has been recorded as both a vocal and instrumental by many artists over the years, including Itzhak Perlman and Benita Valente....
    )
  • "Shabes, Yontev, un Rosh Khoydesh" ("Sabbath, Festival, and New Moon")
  • "Tsu Dayn Geburtstag!" ("To Your Birthday!")


See also

  • Yiddish theater
  • List of Jewish Romanians
  • Avram Goldfaden Festival


External links

  • McBee, Richard . The Jewish Press (New York) January 7, 2004: review of a 2003 performance of Goldfaden's operetta
    Operetta

    Operetta is a genre of light opera, light in terms both of music and subject matter. It is also closely related, in English-language works, to forms of musical theatre....
     
    Akeydes Yitskhok ("The Sacrifice of Isaac
    Isaac

    According to the Hebrew Bible, Isaac The New Testament contains few references to Isaac. The Early Christianity views Abraham's willingness to follow God's command to Binding of Isaac as an example of faith and obedience....
    ").
  • on the site of the Jewish Museum (London)
    Jewish Museum (Camden)

    The Jewish Museum is a museum of Jewish life and art, in the London Borough of Camden, on the northern fringes of central London, England. It was founded in 1932, in the Jewish communal headquarters in Bloomsbury, and in 1995 moved to its current site in Camden Town....
    .