It's time to close up CSC's third annual Black Box Festival with the show that played to sold out audiences in last year's New York Fringe Festival. The Essence: A Yiddish Theatre Dim Sum is a rollicking comedy that lets audiences in on the best kept secret-Yiddish is actually cool-and it's playing November 21-24 in the Kutz Theatre of the Lackland Center. The Essence... is a fast-moving revue for people who know nothing about Yiddish and couldn't imagine attending a show with Yiddish in it. It's about the most expressive and theatrical language in the world, with scenes, sketches, songs, and oddball diversions with an irreverent introduction to all things Yiddish.
Actor and Director Allen Lewis Rickman invites audiences to "see what happens when you sin with a shiksa, come jam to Soviet Yiddish Rock, and hear Einstein's theory debated by imbeciles." Rickman and fellow actor Yelena Shmulenson are better known as the shtetl couple from the Coen brothers' Oscar-nominated A Serious Man and are joined on the stage by Broadway veteran Steve Sterner.
Described by its creators as "a crash course" in Jewish culture, The Essence... features drama, melodrama, music, peculiarities of the language, and the Yiddish New Testament. "This is not one of those nostalgia shows for the Jewish elderly, not at all," said Rickman. "We translate the Yiddish sections with supertitles, so it's kind of like they're watching a wise-assed foreign movie."
Beyond A Serious Man, Rickman is familiar from his work in Barry Levinson's Emmy-winning You Don't Know Jack and his recurring role on HBO's Boardwalk Empire. Broadway-goers might have also seen him in Relatively Speaking. Shmulenson has appeared in The Good Shepherd and on ABC's Life On Mars and also made an appearance on Boardwalk Empire. Sterner, also the show's musical director, appeared on Broadway in Oh, Brother and The Sheik of Avenue B, and is perhaps New York's best-known silent film accompanist.
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