As the Drama Desk Award-winning National Yiddish Theatre Folksbiene gears up for the U.S. premiere of "Gimpel Tam," a new musical adaptation of the Nobel laureate Isaac Bashevis Singer's classic story about an innocent's victimization by a cruel world, a question looms: how will Folksbiene make a show in Yiddish appeal to a broad audience?
The answers will be amply clear at the press previews for the show's five-week engagement running from Sunday November 23 at 2pm through Sunday December 28 at 6pm at the JCC in Manhattan, 334 Amsterdam Avenue. Written and directed by Moshe Yassur, who directed the show's world premiere at the Jewish State Theatre in Bucharest, Romania in 2007, with a score by Radu Captari, and musical direction by Zalmen Mlotek, "Gimpel Tam" opens Off-Broadway Thursday December 4 at 8pm. Tickets are currently on sale by phone at (800) 595-4849, or online at www.folksbiene.org.Members of the press are welcome to attend the following performances:Tuesday November 25 at 8pm Wednesday November 26 at 2pm & 8pm Saturday November 29 at 8pm Sunday November 30 at 2pm & 6pm Wednesday December 3 at 2pm & 8pm Thursday December 4 at 2pm & 8pm.But since you ask, here are the clues: First, the familiarity factor: Readers everywhere know "Gimpel Tam," especially in the English-speaking world thanks to Saul Bellow's highly regarded English translation. Second, the artistic ambition factor: Folksbiene's bold, contemporary production of "Gimpel Tam" reaches beyond the folksy mysticism normally associated with Singer. This is a witty, freewheeling staging that will help cast the story of Gimpel in a new light, and reveal its very modern relevance.Artwork by David Stein, courtesy Folksbiene
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