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Yiddish Theatre May Get New House
[It doesn't seem that this was a success ... -- ed.]

New York Times, May 18, 1979

A new Yiddish National Theatre that would serve as a permanent home for Yiddish-language stagecraft in all of its aspects is in the cards for the theatre row that has come about on West 42nd Street, between 9th and 10th Avenues.

The Yiddish National Theatre organization, under the auspices of the Hebrew Actors Union, has been offered a house in the block by the 42nd Street Redevelopment Corporation. What is needed is money -- $150,000 to refurbish a house and bring it into operating condition.

The fund-raising will start officially at 2 P.M. on June 3, with a benefit program at the Plymouth Theatre on West 45th Street, which has been made available by the Shubert Organization. This "Broadway Salute to the Yiddish Theatre" will present such worthies as Molly Picon, Lou Jacobs, Ida Kaminska, Miriam Kressyn, Misha Raitzen in a concert-type bill of entertainment. Tickets cost $10, $15 and $25, and may be obtained through the Hebrew Actors Union 31 East Seventh Street, where the Yiddish National Theatre has temporary offices.

The new organization is headed by Herman Yablokoff, president of the Hebrew Actors Union, who is its chairman. Seymour Rexsite is executive secretary, and David Cary is co-executive secretary. The theatre would present Yiddish classics and would also foster experimental theatre and offer a platform for new works by new writers. It would house a museum of Yiddish theatre memorabilia and a school for new performers and playwrights, and it would serve as home for a Yiddish ensemble company that would travel throughout the United States and Canada.

 

 

 

 

 

 

List courtesy of YIVO (Yiddish Institute for Jewish Research).

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