{"title":"Maurice Schwartz","authors":"Edna Nahshon","doi":"10.1093/obo/9780199840731-0186","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The actor-manager Maurice Schwartz (b. 1888–d. 1960) was a towering figure of the modern Yiddish stage. Born Moshe Schwartz in Sudilkov, a small town in the Ukraine, Schwartz came to America in 1901, and within a few years he launched a successful acting career. In 1918 he founded the Yiddish Art Theatre (Yidish Kunst Teater), a New York City-based company that was devoted to the sophisticated production of quality drama in Yiddish. At the time, the idea of a Yiddish art theater was in the air, promoted by the cultural elite of the American Jewish immigrant community, who were dissatisfied with the prevalence of what they termed shund (trash), namely popular escapist melodramas and operettas. Schwartz produced, directed, and starred in most of his productions, his name practically synonymous with that of his company. The Yiddish Art Theatre was widely recognized as a prestigious communal institution. It gained critical acclaim and international renown and, despite the rapid Americanization of the Yiddish-speaking community in the U.S., it managed to remain active (albeit with some hiatuses) until the mid-1950s. Schwartz’s inexhaustible energy, unflagging commitment to his mission, and astute managerial skills made this longevity possible in the face of growing financial and sociological odds. All told, the Yiddish Art Theatre staged nearly two hundred plays. The repertoire included works by major Yiddish playwrights and by major Russian and European dramatists. In the 1930s the repertoire became almost exclusively Jewish in content, offering depictions of the Old World of eastern Europe, plays directly or implicitly related to contemporary concerns, and dramas about Jewish historical personalities and events. Plays based on I. B. Singer’s novels—The Brothers Ashkenazi (1931), The Family Carnovsky (1931), and Yoshe Kalb (1932)—were particularly well received. The latter proved a sensational success and drew unprecedented interest at home and abroad. Schwartz’s productions had reputations as unabashedly theatrical—full of color, movement, emotion, and pathos. This theatricality gained the admiration of many Anglo critics, notably Brooks Atkinson of the New York Times. Schwartz was a gifted character actor. While always the star of his productions, he also surrounded himself with top talent. Notable performers associated with his theater include Ludwig Satz, Jacob Ben-Ami, Celia Adler, Stella Adler, Jacob Buloff, Paul Muni, Bertha Gerstein, and many others. Schwartz also worked with top-notch musical directors and stage designers. His collaboration with Boris Aronson, later one of Broadway’s most celebrated set designers, is particularly striking. A standout experiment was their 1926 revival of Abraham Goldfaden’s musical farce TheTenth Commandment as an avant-garde extravaganza produced for the opening of Schwartz’s new playhouse, an elegant neo-Moorish construction built on Second Avenue and Twelfth Street in New York City. The playhouse is the only surviving Yiddish theater on Second Avenue, an entertainment area that was the nerve center of the American Yiddish theater. Schwartz also had a career in Yiddish films. He starred in four, all based on stage productions produced by his Yiddish Art Theatre: Yisker (1924), Broken Hearts (1926), Uncle Moses (1926), and Tevye (1939). He both directed and cowrote the latter. It is considered his best and most lasting cinematic work. Schwartz also played secondary parts in several less consequential English-language films. Hundreds of articles and reviews on Schwartz and his theatrical productions were published in the Yiddish and English press of the time. However, the only book-length monograph on Schwartz is Bialin’s Moris Shṿarts un der Idisher Ḳunsṭ ṭeaṭer (New York: Farlag Biderman, 1934). Written for a popular readership, it tends toward the hagiographic and, as suggested by its date of publication, covers only part of Schwartz’s career. An excellent source for factual information on Schwartz’s theater work is Volume 3 of Zylbercweig’s Leksikon fun yidishn theater (New York: Farlag Elishevam, 1931), as well as Volume 7, which has remained unpublished. Though there exists no comprehensive volume devoted to Schwartz, several book chapters and essays that focus on particular aspects on his enterprise are available. This bibliography consists of three subsections. Section 1, Books, lists chapters or book sections that discuss the overall career of Schwartz and the Yiddish Art Theatre. Section 2 lists Articles that focus on specific productions and on the physical aspects of the Yiddish Art Theatre playhouse. Section 3, Film, is devoted to Schwartz’s Yiddish films, notably Tevye (1939), which has earned special attention because it is based on the play by Sholem Aleichem, whose Tevye stories were the basis for the immensely popular musical Fiddler on the Roof.","PeriodicalId":41057,"journal":{"name":"Nordisk Judaistik-Scandinavian Jewish Studies","volume":"90 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2019-05-29","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Nordisk Judaistik-Scandinavian Jewish Studies","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1093/obo/9780199840731-0186","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
摘要
演员兼经理莫里斯·施瓦茨(生于1888年至1888年)1960年)是现代意第绪语舞台上的杰出人物。出生于乌克兰小镇苏迪尔科夫的摩西·施瓦茨于1901年来到美国,并在几年内开始了成功的演艺生涯。1918年,他创立了意第绪艺术剧院(Yidish Kunst Teater),这是一家总部位于纽约的公司,致力于用意第绪语制作高质量的戏剧。当时,意第绪语艺术剧院的想法正在酝酿之中,这是由美国犹太移民社区的文化精英推动的,他们对他们所谓的“垃圾”(shund)的流行感到不满,即流行的逃避现实的情节剧和轻歌剧。施瓦茨制作、导演并主演了他的大部分作品,他的名字几乎与他的公司同义。意第绪艺术剧院被广泛认为是一个享有盛誉的公共机构。它获得了评论界的好评和国际声誉,尽管美国讲意第绪语的社区迅速美国化,但它一直保持活跃(尽管有一些中断),直到20世纪50年代中期。施瓦茨用之不竭的精力,对使命的不懈承诺,以及精明的管理技巧,使他在面对日益增长的金融和社会不利因素时能够长寿。意第绪艺术剧院总共上演了近200部戏剧。剧目包括主要意第绪语剧作家和主要俄罗斯和欧洲剧作家的作品。在20世纪30年代,剧目的内容几乎完全是犹太的,提供对东欧旧世界的描绘,直接或间接地与当代关注有关的戏剧,以及关于犹太历史人物和事件的戏剧。根据辛格的小说改编的戏剧——《阿什肯纳兹兄弟》(1931)、《卡尔诺夫斯基家族》(1931)和《尤什·卡尔布》(1932)——尤其受到好评。后者取得了轰动的成功,在国内外引起了前所未有的兴趣。施瓦茨的作品以毫不掩饰的戏剧性而闻名——充满色彩、动感、情感和悲情。这种戏剧性赢得了许多盎格鲁评论家的赞赏,尤其是《纽约时报》的布鲁克斯·阿特金森。施瓦茨是一个有天赋的角色演员。虽然他一直是他作品中的明星,但他也被顶级人才包围。与他的剧院有关的著名演员包括路德维希·萨茨、雅各布·本·阿米、西莉亚·阿德勒、斯特拉·阿德勒、雅各布·布洛夫、保罗·穆尼、伯莎·格斯坦等。施瓦茨还与一流的音乐导演和舞台设计师合作。他与鲍里斯·阿伦森(Boris Aronson)的合作尤其引人注目,后者后来成为百老汇最著名的布景设计师之一。1926年,亚伯拉罕·戈德法登(Abraham Goldfaden)的音乐闹剧《第十诫》(the 10th commandments)在施瓦茨(Schwartz)的新剧院开幕典礼上上演,这是一个杰出的实验。施瓦茨的新剧院位于纽约市第二大道和第十二街,是一座优雅的新摩尔风格建筑。这个剧院是第二大道上唯一幸存的意第绪语剧院,这是一个娱乐区域,是美国意第绪语剧院的神经中枢。施瓦茨还从事意第绪语电影。他主演了四部舞台剧,都是根据他的意第绪语艺术剧院制作的舞台剧改编的:《伊斯克》(1924年)、《心碎》(1926年)、《摩西叔叔》(1926年)和《特维耶》(1939年)。他既是导演又是编剧。这被认为是他最好的和最持久的电影作品。施瓦茨还在几部不那么重要的英语电影中扮演配角。数百篇关于施瓦茨和他的戏剧作品的文章和评论发表在当时的意第绪语和英语报刊上。然而,关于施瓦茨的唯一一本书长度的专著是Bialin的Moris Shṿarts under Idisher Ḳunsṭ ṭeaṭer(纽约:Farlag Biderman, 1934)。这本书是为大众读者写的,它倾向于圣徒传记,正如它的出版日期所暗示的那样,它只涵盖了施瓦茨职业生涯的一部分。关于施瓦茨戏剧作品的真实信息,一个极好的来源是齐尔贝尔韦格的《犹太戏剧》(Leksikon fun yidish theater)的第三卷(纽约:Farlag Elishevam出版社,1931年),以及尚未出版的第七卷。虽然没有专门研究施瓦茨的综合书籍,但有几本书的章节和文章集中在他的企业的特定方面。这个参考书目由三个小节组成。第1部分,书籍,列出了讨论施瓦茨和意第绪艺术剧院的整个职业生涯的章节或书籍部分。第2节列出了关注具体作品和意第绪艺术剧院剧场物理方面的文章。第三部分,电影,专门介绍施瓦兹的意第语电影,尤其是《特维耶》(1939),这部电影受到特别关注,因为它是根据舒尔姆·阿莱奇姆的戏剧改编的,他的特维耶故事是非常受欢迎的音乐剧《屋顶上的提琴手》的基础。
The actor-manager Maurice Schwartz (b. 1888–d. 1960) was a towering figure of the modern Yiddish stage. Born Moshe Schwartz in Sudilkov, a small town in the Ukraine, Schwartz came to America in 1901, and within a few years he launched a successful acting career. In 1918 he founded the Yiddish Art Theatre (Yidish Kunst Teater), a New York City-based company that was devoted to the sophisticated production of quality drama in Yiddish. At the time, the idea of a Yiddish art theater was in the air, promoted by the cultural elite of the American Jewish immigrant community, who were dissatisfied with the prevalence of what they termed shund (trash), namely popular escapist melodramas and operettas. Schwartz produced, directed, and starred in most of his productions, his name practically synonymous with that of his company. The Yiddish Art Theatre was widely recognized as a prestigious communal institution. It gained critical acclaim and international renown and, despite the rapid Americanization of the Yiddish-speaking community in the U.S., it managed to remain active (albeit with some hiatuses) until the mid-1950s. Schwartz’s inexhaustible energy, unflagging commitment to his mission, and astute managerial skills made this longevity possible in the face of growing financial and sociological odds. All told, the Yiddish Art Theatre staged nearly two hundred plays. The repertoire included works by major Yiddish playwrights and by major Russian and European dramatists. In the 1930s the repertoire became almost exclusively Jewish in content, offering depictions of the Old World of eastern Europe, plays directly or implicitly related to contemporary concerns, and dramas about Jewish historical personalities and events. Plays based on I. B. Singer’s novels—The Brothers Ashkenazi (1931), The Family Carnovsky (1931), and Yoshe Kalb (1932)—were particularly well received. The latter proved a sensational success and drew unprecedented interest at home and abroad. Schwartz’s productions had reputations as unabashedly theatrical—full of color, movement, emotion, and pathos. This theatricality gained the admiration of many Anglo critics, notably Brooks Atkinson of the New York Times. Schwartz was a gifted character actor. While always the star of his productions, he also surrounded himself with top talent. Notable performers associated with his theater include Ludwig Satz, Jacob Ben-Ami, Celia Adler, Stella Adler, Jacob Buloff, Paul Muni, Bertha Gerstein, and many others. Schwartz also worked with top-notch musical directors and stage designers. His collaboration with Boris Aronson, later one of Broadway’s most celebrated set designers, is particularly striking. A standout experiment was their 1926 revival of Abraham Goldfaden’s musical farce TheTenth Commandment as an avant-garde extravaganza produced for the opening of Schwartz’s new playhouse, an elegant neo-Moorish construction built on Second Avenue and Twelfth Street in New York City. The playhouse is the only surviving Yiddish theater on Second Avenue, an entertainment area that was the nerve center of the American Yiddish theater. Schwartz also had a career in Yiddish films. He starred in four, all based on stage productions produced by his Yiddish Art Theatre: Yisker (1924), Broken Hearts (1926), Uncle Moses (1926), and Tevye (1939). He both directed and cowrote the latter. It is considered his best and most lasting cinematic work. Schwartz also played secondary parts in several less consequential English-language films. Hundreds of articles and reviews on Schwartz and his theatrical productions were published in the Yiddish and English press of the time. However, the only book-length monograph on Schwartz is Bialin’s Moris Shṿarts un der Idisher Ḳunsṭ ṭeaṭer (New York: Farlag Biderman, 1934). Written for a popular readership, it tends toward the hagiographic and, as suggested by its date of publication, covers only part of Schwartz’s career. An excellent source for factual information on Schwartz’s theater work is Volume 3 of Zylbercweig’s Leksikon fun yidishn theater (New York: Farlag Elishevam, 1931), as well as Volume 7, which has remained unpublished. Though there exists no comprehensive volume devoted to Schwartz, several book chapters and essays that focus on particular aspects on his enterprise are available. This bibliography consists of three subsections. Section 1, Books, lists chapters or book sections that discuss the overall career of Schwartz and the Yiddish Art Theatre. Section 2 lists Articles that focus on specific productions and on the physical aspects of the Yiddish Art Theatre playhouse. Section 3, Film, is devoted to Schwartz’s Yiddish films, notably Tevye (1939), which has earned special attention because it is based on the play by Sholem Aleichem, whose Tevye stories were the basis for the immensely popular musical Fiddler on the Roof.