AISLE SAY New York

FIDDLER ON THE ROOF
In Yiddish

Book by Joseph Stein
Music by Jerry Bock
Lyrics by Sheldon Harnick
Yiddish adaptation by Shraga Friedman
Directed by Joel Grey
Stage 42
Official Website

Reviewed by David Spencer

March 7, 2019

As unlikely as it may seem, less than four years after a well-regarded Broadway revival, the Yiddish-language production of Fiddler on the Roofas presented by the National Yiddish Theatre Folksbiene, that debuted this past Summer at the Museum of Jewish Heritage way downtown, featuring a cast among whose players are a number many whom any regular NYC musical theatregoer might recognize, directed by Joel Grey—himself a childhood veteran of NYC Yiddish Theatre, his father having been Yiddish star Mickey Katz—has moved uptown for an open-ended engagement at Stage 42 (formerly the Little Shubert), dead midtown on the Theatre Row strip. The Yiddish text by Shraga Friedman (having its first airing since its debut in Israel in the late 60s) is a language adaptation (i.e. colloquial and idiomatic rather than literal) of the English book by Joseph Stein and the English lyrics by Sheldon Harnick,. Where this becomes evident, fascinating and at times inevitably distracting is in the projected supertitles (which are in English and in Russian) that display not the original English text, but a literal translation of the Yiddish adaptation. (The music of Jerry Bock, of course, needs no translation, and is given sprightly, Broadway-grade zest by the cast and musical director Zalmen Mlotek. However, Don Walker’s classic orchestrations have been adapted, with no loss of punch, for a somewhat smaller orchestra by Larry Blank.)

            The fuss is not that there’s anything particularly, interpretively unique about this Fiddler; in terms of tone, pace, aesthetic. Mr. Grey’s staging and direction are straight ahead and clean: He doesn’t get in the way of the show, and the show emerges unblemished and faithfully rendered.

            But the heart of it has been given an unexpected infusion of fresh blood. Something about how the actors connect to the language and the language to the source—the Tevye stories by Sholem Aleichem, which of course were written in Yiddish—keeps this musical that so mamny of us know not just well, but intimately, from seeming familiar. In a very real sense, we’re meeting it anew. And among a just-about-perfect cast the Tevye of Steven Skybell emerges as one of the American greats, destined, I think, to become as legendary as Mostel, Bernardi or Bikel. And because of the different language, he owns it in a waythat no other American has, or yet can. I’m not entirely sure I would have said that while he was performing the show downtown (where he was, no mistake, fine; just fine)…but there are these marriages of role and performer that debut and then go underground for a while, like a great soup left in the fridge for a day or two, during which time the elements blend in a way they never could just off the stove; and when they return, there’s a fantastic, new robustness. And that’s exactly what’s happened with Skybell. His Tevye, even sung with unusual beauty, is both virile and vulnerable, an achingly real papa.

And physically the production is a bit notable: Since Broadway extravagance would be out of the question in this off-Broadway environment, Mr. Grey has taken a page from the John Doyle playbook, letting the actors create houses, rooms, large props (like a bed) and various locales in the town of Anatevka from nothing but simple tables and simple chairs. What’s quite admirable about this device is how little attention is drawn to it. There’s never a wink of Look, look, it’s all chairs standing in for real stuff! This too is matter-of-fact and straight-ahead, so much so that you barely notice, and never in the forefront of your mind, how budget-minded the production truly is. This is not only a thoroughly moving Fiddler…it’s a triumph of subtle expedience.

Right? Of course right.


Go to David Spencer's Profile
Return to Home Page

  • Road (National) Tour Review Index
  • New York City & Environs Theatre Review Index
  • Berkshire, Massachusetts Theatre Review Index
  • Boston Area Theatre Review Index
  • Florida Theatre Review Index
  • London Theatre Review Index
  • Minneapolis/St. Paul (Twin Cities) Theatre Review Index
  • Philadelphia & Environs Theatre Review Index
  • San Francisco Bay Area Theatre Review Index
  • Seattle Area Theatre Review Index
  • Toronto, Ontario (Canada) Index