Word: fiddlers
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...following question: “Why see another lame Harry Potter movie when I can go see a fantastic live version of Cabaret?” Our own Harvard-Radcliffe Dramatic Club would agree wholeheartedly, as it unleashes a mind-bending onslaught of fantastic theater this semester. With Fiddler on the Roof, The Balcony and everything in between, it’s guaranteed to be a funny, diverse and tear-jerking season with your favorite Harvard stars. Aspiring actors across campus have already begun physically and mentally preparing for their roles as strippers, kit kat boys, senile grandmothers and more...
While he was an undergraduate, Cadiff met Harold “Hal” Prince, the Broadway producer of such shows such as West Side Story, Fiddler on the Roof, Cabaret, and Phantom of the Opera...
...written as a duet for two voices. One belongs to Jonathan Safran Foer (or his fictional alter ego of the same name), who relates the history of Trachimbrod, the East European village where his ancestors lived. Trachimbrod is a lyrical, fairy-tale creation, a Yiddish idyll of the Fiddler on the Roof variety, inhabited by randy, gossipy villagers like Bitzl Bitzl the gefilte-fish monger, and the melancholy maiden Brod, the narrator's great-to-the-fifth grandmother, who precociously enumerates 613 varieties of sadness by the time she's 12 years...
...written as a duet for two voices. One belongs to Jonathan Safran Foer (or his fictional alter ego of the same name), who relates the history of Trachimbrod, the East European village where his ancestors lived. Trachimbrod is a lyrical, fairy-tale creation, a Yiddish idyll of the Fiddler on the Roof variety, inhabited by randy, gossipy villagers like Bitzl Bitzl the gefilte-fish monger, and the melancholy maiden Brod, the narrator's great-to-the-fifth grandmother, who precociously enumerates 613 varieties of sadness by the time she's 12 years...
...feel the impact you have on people," he says. "It's humbling." Now, at 51, he is set for perhaps the most humbling giant step of his career, one that may finally make people stop asking, "Henry who?" Q&A TIME: There was talk after Shylock of your doing Fiddler on the Roof, but you were reluctant to be typecast as a Jewish actor. So why Bialystock, a very Jewish role? GOODMAN: I want to celebrate being a Jewish actor, but I don't want to become trapped and ghettoized. My Jewishness is there to be tapped into when...