Jewish Themes in Broadway Musicals 1920-50
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Transcript of Jewish Themes in Broadway Musicals 1920-50
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Jewish Themes in Mainstream Broadway Musicals: 1920-1960
Deborah Bletstein Master’s Thesis for the Master’s Degree in Sacred Music
H.L. Miller Cantorial School Jewish Theological Seminary
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Acknowledgements
I would like to thank the following people for their assistance with my thesis:
Dr. Gerald Cohen, thesis advisor
Dr. R. Thomas Hunter, grammar and form consultant
Hazzan Henry Rosenblum, dean of H.L. Miller Cantorial School
Marty Jacobs, Broadway music librarian, MCNY
Gina Genova, former research assistant, Milken Archive of American Jewish Music, NY
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Table of Contents
Introduction……………………………………………………………………….1
“The Roaring ‘20s”: The Variety Show Era………………………………......3
“Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?:” the ‘30s Depression-era……………..11
Wartime and the Rodgers and Hammerstein era of the ‘40s………………18
Nu? Yinglish, Assimilation and the Musicals of the ‘50s…………………23
Conclusion………………………………………………………………………32
Commentary on the Bibliographies…………………………………………...34
Bibliography of Musical Works………………………………………………...35
Bibliography of Books and Articles……………………………………………45
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Introduction
At the end of the 19th century and early 20th century, the Yiddish theatre of
Second Avenue displayed the talents of Jewish composers and lyricists, singers, actors
and dancers. These productions were a central fixture of the Lower East-side culture,
providing the primary form of entertainment for the New York Jewish community. By the
1960s, Jewish life had come to be popularized in mainstream Broadway theatre,
particularly with shows like Milk and Honey in 1961, book by Don Appell and music by
Jerry Herman, and most significantly, Fiddler on the Roof, book by Joseph Stein, music
by Jerry Bock, lyrics by Sheldon Harnick, which opened in 1964, set in a shtetl, a poor
Jewish neighborhood, during 1905 Tsarist Russia.
During the period between 1920 and the late 1950s, Broadway musicals did not
publicize Jewish themes but rather buried them within the context of typically non-
Jewish mainstream story lines. Audience members had to be adept in absorbing the
subtle Jewish content via the characters, certain nuances in dialogue, and cleverly
crafted lyrics of well-placed songs within the shows. The place of Jewish content in
musical theatre reflected the Jewish American experience in general. Due to the anti-
Semitic climate in the United States throughout the decades between 1920 and 1960,
Jews faced numerous hardships, both personally and professionally. Early in their
careers, many prolific Jewish composers and lyricists such as George and Ira
Gershwin, Irving Berlin, and Alan Jay Lerner, often chose to write in a non-Jewish
context for the sake of being employable during an era when being Jewish was frowned
upon.
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Despite the success of some of the Jewish performers who crossed over into
mainstream Broadway roles, this time period rejected the display of blatant Jewish
themes. Jewish Broadway authority Andrea Most observes, “The Broadway stage was
a space on which Jews envisioned an ideal America and subtly wrote themselves into
that scenario as accepted members of mainstream American community.” (Most, We
Know, iv) However, the reality at the time was that the Jewish performer who made it
onto the Broadway stage did so largely as the comic relief, the loser, the one constantly
being poked and prodded at, and the scapegoat. Despite the distinction between
Yiddish Theatre of Second Avenue and the mainstream Broadway musicals of Forty-
Second Street, there was undoubtedly a Jewish influence on the conventional
Broadway musical reflected in its characters, story-lines, music and lyrics, based largely
on the fact that many Jews had a hand at writing the material.
This thesis will examine many of the instances where Jewish themes appear in
the mainstream Broadway musical during each decade from 1920 through 1960. There
will be a noticeable difference in the subtlety of Jewish ideas from shows in the earlier
periods, as opposed to the 1950s progressing towards the “Fiddler on the Roof era”
when Jewish themes become blatant. In addition to the search for specific Jewish
religious and cultural content, there will be emphasis placed on other variables including
the religious background of the authors and composers, political and social challenges
that affected the foundation these musicals were built on, and how all of these factors
influenced the authors’ treatment of the song lyrics and characters in these works.
Attention will be paid to whether or not there is an isolated incident of a character or
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song appearing in the show, or if the occurrence of something Jewish succeeded in
affecting the overall tone, environment, or story line in which the show was based.
Two volumes of A Chronology of Musical Theatre by Richard C. Norton provided
a starting point to gain knowledge on relevant show and song titles. Support for claims
of a Jewish connection in Broadway shows throughout the time periods examined have
appeared in various books and articles on Broadway theatre and Jewish culture written
by authorities in the field. In addition, internet sources provided general historical
information on the decades. Finally, based on show and song titles collected from
Norton’s reference books, an extensive search for sheet music in show files at the
Museum of the City of New York (MCNY) sought to discover music that was suspected
of having Jewish influence or content.
“The Roaring ‘20s”: The Variety Show Era
The historical backdrop of the 1920s was diverse and significant in many ways.
In 1920, the first commercial radio broadcast aired, and towards the end of the decade
came the invention of talking picture shows or “talkies.” In 1923, ten years before
coming to power in Germany, Adolf Hitler’s failed “Beer Hall Putsch” landed him in jail,
and just two years later, he published the first volume of Mein Kampf, a combination
autobiography/political treatise, conveying his hatred for what he viewed as the two evils
in the world: Judaism and Communism. In 1924, J. Edgar Hoover was appointed the
first director of the FBI. Important innovations in health care took place in the 1920s
with the discovery of penicillin and insulin. Baseball player Babe Ruth, made a home-
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run record in 1927, and later in the 1940s he was also included in a group of German-
Americans who spoke out in protest against the Holocaust.
In his book examining the musicals of the 1920s, noted Broadway historian
Ethan Mordden states:
“The 1920s represented a turning point in the history of the Broadway musical, breaking with the vaudeville traditions of the early twentieth century to anticipate the more complex, sophisticated musicals of today. Productions became more elaborate, with dazzling sets, tumultuous choreography, and staging tricks, all woven into tightly constructed story lines.” (Mordden, Make Believe cover) With regard to the music itself, author David Ewen states: “Most of the leading
popular song composers of the twenties brought to their writing a vigorous and varied
rhythmic pulse, strong and changing accentuations, alternating meters, distinct jazz
colorations.” (Qtd. Pessen 183) The 1920s were characterized by melodramas and
review shows. The main producers of these reviews were Florenz Ziegfeld (Follies)
George White (Scandals) and Earl Carroll (Varieties).
The Ziegfeld Follies, in particular, were an enormous part of theatre culture in the
1920s. The Follies launched the careers of many performers, particularly Jewish, of the
day. Despite not being Jewish himself, Florenz Ziegfeld was known for employing
Jewish performers like Nora Bayes, Sophie Tucker, Fanny Brice, Eddie Cantor, Al
Shean, Ed Wynn, Belle Baker and Jack Pearl. Thus, Ziegfeld was instrumental in
bringing both Jewish performers and Jewish themes into mainstream theatre culture.
According to Mordden, “It was the performers, in fact, who kept reminding the
public who they really were, sitting across the footlights in [Fanny] Brice’s patently
Yiddish diction and true-to-life characters like Rose of Washington Square (who ‘Got no
future, but oy! What a past!’) or Second Hand Rose (‘from Second Avenue’).” (Mordden,
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Make Believe 135) Consider an excerpt from the lyrics of “Second Hand Rose,” from
Ziegfeld Follies of 1921 which paints a scene from Jewish life on Second Avenue:
Father has a business, strictly second hand Ev’rything from toothpicks to a baby grand Stuff in our apartment came from Father’s store Even things I’m wearing someone wore before It’s no wonder that I feel abused I never have a thing that ain’t been used I’m wearing second hand hats, second hand clothes That’s why they call me second hand Rose Even our piano in the parlor Father bought for ten cents on the dollar Second hand pearls I’m wearing second hand curls I never get a single thing that’s new Even Jake the plumber, he’s the man I adore Had the guts to tell me he’s been married before Ev’ryone knows that I’m just second hand Rose from Second Avenue Second Avenue was a hotbed of Yiddish theatre, Jewish life and culture in New
York. These song lyrics indicate the typical hardships of the poor Eastern European
Jewish family under pressure to make ends meet on the Lower East Side of Manhattan.
Rose’s father is characterized as the stereotypical mercantile owner. Rose dramatizes
the “woe-is-me” life of the poor, young Jewish girl struggling to hold on to her dreams of
a better life. The reference to “Jake the plumber,” implies “the nice Jewish boy next
door,” the prescribed Jewish value of marriage, and the unmistakable desire for every
young Jewish woman, and that of her family, to have her “married off.”
Ethan Mordden calls attention to an important point regarding the performance of
Fanny Brice as Second Hand Rose in The Ziegfeld Follies. Why was Fanny Brice using
Yiddish inflection in a non-Yiddish, non-Second Avenue production like The Ziegfeld
Follies on Broadway? Clearly, Brice drew upon her own Jewish background immersed
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in Eastern-European dialect to give life to Rose—an unmistakably Jewish character--on
stage. The Rose of Second Avenue sketch is just one of many Jewish-themed
vignettes that were played out regularly in The Ziegfeld Follies and other variety shows
of the 1920s. It’s clear that the influence from Second Avenue Jewish life taking place
just southeast of Times Square was significant enough on the radar of both Jewish and
non-Jewish people for it to be alive and well on the Broadway stage.
Towards the later part of the 1920s, the Broadway show began to turn away from
revue-style to that of having a “book” or literally, a story, where there is development of
both a plot and characters. Andrea Most observes:
The musicals of the 1920s and 30s, many of them written and performed by Jews from immigrant backgrounds, likewise suggest a vehement opposition to rigid radical categorizations, advocating instead a more fluid conception of identity. Emerging from immigrant families and desperate to become Americans, Jewish performers in particular understood the crucial importance of being able to adopt whatever personae they chose. (Most, Big Chief 1) Most calls our attention to two important shows during this period: Whoopee
(1929) by Walter Donaldson and Gus Kahn and Girl Crazy (1930) by George and Ira
Gershwin:
Both musicals feature specifically Jewish comic characters who depend on their witty performance skills to insure their survival. They are always dressing up in order to get out of trouble. In a flash they don Indian headdresses, blackface makeup or women’s dresses to outwit their pursuers. Using these performance techniques, these self-conscious and highly theatrical Jewish characters not only evade their would-be captors but triumph over them. The unlikely presence of an urban Jewish immigrant in the Wild West is funny then precisely because the Jew, with his superior theatrical skills, is capable of outwitting and outperforming the cowboys. (Most, Big Chief 2) Whereas writers usually created fictitious characters in make-believe worlds, one
figure cited in The Bible that attracted interest from the Jewish composers and lyricists
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of the period was Gabriel. The angel Gabriel holds significance in many different
religious traditions, but its origins are rooted in Judaism. Gabriel is found in the Tanakh,
the Hebrew Bible, in the book of Daniel, and also in the Talmud, the commentaries on
the Torah, in Sanhedrin 95b. In the Tanakh, Daniel describes his encounter with
Gabriel:
While I, Daniel, was seeing the vision, and trying to understand it, there appeared before me one who looked like a man. I heard a human voice from the middle of Ulai calling out, “Gabriel, make that man understand the vision.” He came near to where I was standing, and as he came I was terrified, and fell prostrate. He said to me, “Understand, O man, that the vision refers to the time of the end.” (Dan. 8:15-17) The stories surrounding Gabriel enjoyed popularity on the Broadway stage in a
couple of musicals, the first, Merry-Go-Round in 1927 and later Anything Goes in 1934.
In Merry-Go-Round, music by Henry Souvaine and Jay Gorney, book and lyrics by
Morrie Ryskind and Howard Dietz there is a black spiritual, entitled simply, “Gabriel:”
Come ebryone to Black Man’s Hebben Come get dere ‘bout half-past ‘leben When Gabriel starts to blowin’ his horn I’ll tell you it’s a sight worth seein’ Darky angels jubileen’ When Gabriel starts blowin’ his horn (and they say) David does that do-do-do while playin’ on his harp Dat’s de cue for you-you-you to see you git der sharp Come git gay in Black Man’s hebben When Gabriel starts blowin’ his horn (hebben, hebben) The lyric “Gabriel starts blowin’ his horn” could be connected to the sounding of
the shofar (ram’s horn) cited in The Book of Exodus when the Israelites heard from God
at the foot of Mount Sinai:
On the third day, as morning dawned, there was thunder, and lightning, and a dense cloud upon the mountain and a very loud blast of the horn. (Ex. 19:16)
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In addition, the reference to David is clearly King David, the author of the Jewish
Tehillim, Psalms, who in these writings, spoke regularly of the playing of a variety of
instruments. Furthermore, the song lyrics, with their description of “Gabriel blowin’ his
horn” and “David playin’ his harp,” provide detailed references to the biblical use of the
horn and the harp, both primary instruments used in praise of God during Temple times,
and throughout the era of the psalmists, as illustrated in Psalm 150 included in the daily
morning service, P’sukei D’Zimra, Verses of Song:
Praise Him with blasts of the horn; Praise Him with harp and lyre. (Ps. 150:3) Even more intriguing is the lyric, “David does that do-do-do” which suggests the
idea of a niggun, a melody without words, basically sung on a syllable—an important
Jewish music practice still in existence today. With the blending of Jewish and African-
American influences in the song, “Gabriel,” one could go further and propose that this
might be an instance of “Jewish scat-singing.” Book-writer and lyricists Morrie Ryskind
and Howard Dietz were both Jewish. The references of both Gabriel and David in the
song lyric presuppose a familiarity with Tanakh such as would occur in the course of a
Jewish upbringing. Furthermore, this is a prime example of the connection between the
African-American and Jewish cultures and their musical traditions being popularized
during this time by many composers, including Harold Arlen, the son of a cantor.
The combination of Jewish and African-American cultures in the instance of the
show Merry-Go-Round highlights the fact that real-life content was now being portrayed
in the stereotypical make-believe world found in the Broadway musical. In her
dissertation on Jewish composers and lyricists in American theatre, Jill Yvonne Gold
Wright cites this relationship: “There is a long-time alliance between the music of the
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Jews and that of the African-Americans.” (Wright 114) Consequently, Jewish
composers and lyricists were no strangers to depicting black culture in musicals, and in
particular for writing for white actors in blackface. Perhaps the prime example of a Jew,
and even more compelling, a Cantor in blackface, is Al Jolson in The Jazz Singer stage
production of 1925, and also the film, the first “talkie,” by the same title in 1927. The
unusual aspect of the song “Gabriel” from Merry-Go-Round by Jewish writers Ryskind
and Dietz, illustrates that one biblical idea had the ability to cross over different religious
and ethnic backgrounds.
Gabriel also appears in the prominent musical, Anything Goes in 1934, with
music and lyrics by Cole Porter, who “was acutely aware of being a Gentile in a world
that seemed to be dominated by Jews.” (Wright, 17) In a conversation with his friend
and colleague, Richard Rodgers, Porter told Rodgers that he had found the secret to
writing successful theater music. “’What is it?’ asked Rodgers. ‘Simplicity itself,’ said
Porter. ‘I’ll write Jewish tunes’” (Qtd. in Steyn 76-77)
Ethel Merman as the character, Reno, led the cast in one of the main production
numbers in Anything Goes, “Blow, Gabriel, Blow.” “’Blow’ fixes Merman as that singing
evangelist, profanely combining the two least harmonious forces, jazz and religion.”
(Mordden, Sing for Your Supper 72)
And now I'm all ready to fly, Yes, to fly higher and higher! 'Cause I've gone through brimstone And I've been through the fire, And I purged my soul And my heart too, So climb up the mountaintop And start to blow, Gabriel, blow
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Blow, Gabriel, blow I wanna join your happy band And play all day in the Promised Land Similarly to his colleagues Ryskind and Dietz, Cole Porter’s lyrics highlight the
events at Mount Sinai in the Tanakh. The Book of Exodus describes the Revelation at
Mount Sinai, when the Israelites, led by Moses, encountered the presence of God
through a dense cloud and the blast of a ram’s horn, or shofar, an instrument commonly
used in Jewish Temple practices, and still today during Jewish High Holy Day services.
God prepares Moses with instructions:
When the ram’s horn sounds a long blast, they [the Israelites] may go up on the mountain. (Ex. 19:13)
And a few verses later, the miracle was revealed: Now Mount Sinai was all in smoke, for the Lord had come down upon it in fire; the smoke rose like the smoke of a kiln, and the whole mountain trembled violently. The blare of the horn grew louder and louder. As Moses spoke, God answered him in thunder. The Lord came down upon Mount Sinai, on the top of the mountain, and the Lord called Moses to the top of the mountain and he went up. (Ex. 19:18-20)
The productions of the 1920s officially began the kick-off to the Broadway theatre
phenomenon and some of its production elements are as relevant as ever today.
Beginning with Al Jolson’s monumental performance in The Jazz Singer, the shows of
this era illustrated the important connection between Jewish and African-American
culture, and brought this relationship to the forefront. The popular Jewish stars of the
day crossed over seamlessly from Second Avenue to the mainstream Broadway
productions and helped bring Jewish life to the American stage.
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“Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?:” the ‘30s Depression-era Anything Goes was one of the important Broadway musicals of the new decade
of the 1930s. The 1930s were fraught with a multitude of major historical events around
the world which influenced musical theatre. The Stock Market crash on October 29,
1929, known as Black Tuesday, launched The Great Depression--a complete
devastation to the American economy which continued throughout the next decade.
This had enormous impact on the musical theatre world’s ability to finance shows. Adolf
Hitler became Chancellor and the Third Reich emerged under his regime in 1933.
During this time, Hitler was already laying the groundwork for the greatest genocide
against humankind, the Final Solution, also known as the Holocaust, a deliberate
extermination plot against the Jewish people that was responsible for the murder of
more than 6,000,000 Jews throughout Europe. This was enacted years before Nazi
Germany’s invasion of Poland on September 1 1939, which officially launched World
War II. During Hitler’s reign, “all compositions written by Jews or by those persons
suspected of being sympathizers were banned.” (FCIT)
Jews have historically been entrepreneurial, and have been both envied and
hated because of it. Despite the hardships of the American economy, some still found a
way to be successful in business. During the early 1900s, a young Hungarian-Jewish
immigrant by the name of Joe Leblang, owned a tobacco shop on the lower east-side,
where he received free theatre tickets in exchange for displaying show posters in his
store windows. Joe came up with an idea to send his brothers around town buying up
all of the other “freebies” at a cheap price and then selling them at half-price to
theatergoers. Shortly after, the Leblangs moved their operation to the basement of
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Gray’s Drugstore at the corner of 43rd and Broadway, where theatres would now send
their unsold tickets to be sold at half-price an hour before curtain time, selling about
2,000 tickets per night. In addition, Joe and his wife, Tillie (also a Broadway show
producer) saved many of the financially ailing shows during the 1920s. At the time of
his sudden death of a heart-attack in 1931, Joe Leblang was reported to have left a
fortune of $15 million. Joe Leblang’s cut-rate theatre empire was likely the prototype for
today’s “TKTS,” a half-price box-office in Times Square run by the Theatre Development
Fund. (Eisenhour/NY Times)
Many of the productions of the 1930s illustrated a combination of Judaism and
American politics in the story lines. A musical at the beginning of the decade, Of Thee I
Sing which premiered in 1931, was created by a team of Jewish writers: Morrie Ryskind,
and George S. Kaufman, and Ira Gershwin and Jewish composer, George Gershwin.
“Of Thee I Sing becomes the first song-and dance show to win the Pulitzer Prize as the
best play—not just the best musical—of the season. With its 441 performances, it
would also become the longest-running book musical of the decade.” (Green 41) A
satire on American politics and focused on fictional presidential candidate, John P.
Wintergreen, Of Thee I Sing opened with a campaign song that reflected the cultural
dynamics of the foursome’s environment in New York:
Wintergreen for President! Wintergreen for President! He’s the man the people choose; Loves the Irish and the Jews. Author and composer Jack Gottlieb, who specializes in the Jewish connection to
American popular music, alerts us to the Jewish influence that appears elsewhere in the
show:
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Wintergreen admires girls who ‘are good at blintzes,’ but he prefers girls who can ‘make corn muffins.’ Less direct, the vox populi refers to the Supreme Court Justices as ‘the A.K.s who give the O.K.s.’ A.K.s is the abbreviation for the Yiddish vulgarism alte kockers (old shitters), meaning curmudgeonly old men. And when the French soldiers introduce their ambassador, they sing: ‘A vous toot dir veh, a vous?’ mixing what sounds like French for Yiddish: ‘Are you [vous] hurting?’ Or: ‘Where [vu] are you hurting?’ (Qtd. in Gottlieb 8) Like Of Thee I Sing, many of the musicals of the 1930s were politically based—
leftist to be exact--as were most of the Jewish artists of the day. Beth Wenger, author
of New York Jews and the Great Depression remarks, “Left-wing organizations
supported plays like The Cradle Will Rock and Pins and Needles, which popularized
their ideals. Jews were a strong presence in all phases of the left-wing movements,
from union organizing to theatre productions.” (Qtd. in Most, Making Americans 75)
While the shows of the 1920s were light on content and propelled by fantastic
performers, great music, and hot choreography, the shows of the 1930s made the
subject matter a priority and sought to make blatant statements about the complexities
of the political, economic and social hardships of the decade.
The most significant year of the decade was 1937, when three major shows were
premiered, The Eternal Road, The Cradle Will Rock, and Pins and Needles. The
Eternal Road, written by Kurt Weill who was the son of the cantor of the Neue Dessauer
Synagoge, premiered at the Manhattan Opera House on January 7, 1937. The show is
best described by Dr. Neil W. Levin, artistic director of the Milken Archive of American
Jewish Music:
The Eternal Road was the brainchild of the flamboyant impresario, producer, promoter, and mainstream Zionist activist and leader, Meyer Weisgal. He conceived the project with a threefold interrelated purpose: to respond to the state-sponsored persecution of Jews in Germany following the National Socialist Party electoral victory in 1933 with the
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appointment of Hitler as chancellor; to relate through reenacted biblical accounts the age-old historical wandering and suffering of the Jewish people; and to suggest a messianic national hope, enshrined in the still young Zionist enterprise. (Levin 8) The unique aspect of The Eternal Road making it stand out on its own from all
other shows surveyed in this thesis is that the entire piece is Jewish-themed. It is a
biblical epic or pageant and according to Neil W. Levin has even been described as a
“Jewish passion play.” This is actually remarkable given the fact that in these earlier
decades, such a deliberate display of Jewish content had not been exhibited in other
works.
It took only five weeks for Marc Blitzstein to write The Cradle Will Rock in 1936,
but no theatre company would touch the production due to the sensitive political
material it contained. It was finally picked up by FTP, the Federal Theatre Project, who
was also under scrutiny at that time by right-wing Congressman. The FTP was a
theatre initiative being funded by the WPA, the Works Progress Administration, to
sustain live theatre during the Depression era.
The Cradle Will Rock cast of characters included a Jewish musician named
Yasha and a Jewish immigrant couple, Gus and Sadie Polock. In scene five entitled,
“Drugstore,” the store is owned by Mr. Mister, but being run by Harry Druggist and his
son Stevie. A hit man comes in demanding to know if they’ve seen
Hit man: Do you know a Polock who comes here every Sunday? Harry: A Polock? Hit man: Sure, a punk, with his wife he comes here Stevie: You know pop, he means that Polish fella The hit man goes on to describe how the scenario will play out when the couple
arrives at the store. He tells Harry and Stevie not to say a word. When the Polock
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leaves the store there will be a big noise outside. The hit man again reiterates that they
are to say nothing. He goes on to say, “when they ask you later who done it you say,
‘this here Polock.’” Obviously there is a play on words here with the Jewish couple
being named “Polock,” the slang used to describe for immigrants from Poland. The
characters described here are just a few of the array of personalities that contribute to
this allegory of corruption, corporate greed, and the social and political unrest of the
day.
Under the direction of Orson Welles and producer, John Houseman, The Cradle
Will Rock was set to open on June 16, 1937, however, just six days prior, word came
from the WPA that due to “budget cuts” there would be no new show openings before
July 1st. The reality of course, was that the production was being shut down due to its
favorable communist slant. The production went on regardless that same evening at
the Venice Theatre, with Blitzstein himself at the piano, singing eight roles himself along
with some of the other actors singing their roles from the audience as Actor’s Equity
prohibited them from performing “on stage.”
Just a few months later, perhaps the biggest hit among the political theatrical
endeavors, Pins and Needles opened on November 27, 1937. The music and lyrics
were written by Harold J. (Jacob) Rome, with book and sketches by numerous Jewish
writers including Marc Blitzstein. The show was commissioned by the ILGWU, the
International Ladies Garment Worker’s Union, who had taken over the Princess building
which housed a theatre, for a meeting and recreation hall. This would be the first time
that complete unknowns, the garment workers themselves, would perform in a
Broadway production.
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The show rehearsed at night and originally opened playing only on Friday and
Saturday nights due to the work schedules in the garment district. The cast was made
up of mostly Jewish garment workers, including Fred Schmidt, who played a character
named, Schmaltz, the Yiddish word for chicken fat. The production also included the
story of “Bertha the Sewing Machine Girl” in a burlesque number entitled, “It’s Better
with a Union Man.” In an article published in the Jewish newspaper, The Forward,
Michael Bronski remarked: “Rome portrayed the plight of working women and men—
almost always with a Yiddish intonation and a Jewish sense of humor—but never
looked for sympathy, only respect.” (Bronski 2)
One of the most striking of the political and social statements offered in Pins and
Needles is in the lyrics of “Four Little Angels of Peace” which Mordden states,
“presented winged replicas of Anthony Eden, Hitler, Mussolini, and an unnamed
Japanese warlord, all bragging of the enormities they’ve committed.” (Mordden, Sing for
Your Supper 189) The song’s Anti-Semitic Hitler rant is as follows:
Though I fall for the urge Of a nice bloody purge And living my way I was carrying on Though I clean up my Schmutz Would I hear Nazi putz It is all for the sake of the Aryan My ambitions are small I want nothing at all My plans wouldn't be any littler Now that Austria's Nazi It will be hazy-gazy To put the whole world under Hitler The creators of Pins and Needles continued to revise the sketches and musical
numbers throughout the run of the show. One of the important songs added by Harold
Rome two years after the premier, entitled “Mene, mene, tekel,” continued to address
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Nazism while also describing the demise of King Belshezzar’s reign. An excerpt of the
lyrics reads:
He was a tyrant took delight in Startin’ wars and doin’ fightin’ Sons of Israel he called scamps Sent them all to makin’ bricks in concentration camps
Mene, mene, tekel, tekel, tekel Mene, mene, Upharson Says so in the bible Right there in the bible
The tribes of Judah from below Heard the saxophones and trumpets blow Sore and weary laid them down While Belshazzar’s party kept a goin’ to town
The King of Babylon was slain But the children of the Lord remain All his idols turned to rust Crumbled are his kingdom and his powers to dust Pins and Needles was so successful that the garment workers eventually quit
their day jobs and began a regular eight-show per week schedule. The show moved
over to the much larger Windsor Theatre, and by the end of its run in 1940 Pins and
Needles had undergone four permutations and closed at 1,108 performances. The
common thread binding all of the shows of the 1930s Depression era, is unmistakably
the economic and political issues that faced the American people and in many specific
instances, American Jews.
Wartime and the Rodgers and Hammerstein era of the ‘40s
Moving into the new decade, the 1940’s began with most of Europe and Asia
embroiled in World War II (1939-1945). On December 7, 1941 the United States
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entered the war when Japan launched a surprise attack on America’s Pacific naval fleet
at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. The entire country mobilized to defeat Germany, Italy, and
Japan. The entertainment industry followed as well with patriotism as the common
theme. Nazi Germany’s mass genocide of the Jews, known as the Holocaust, also took
place during World War II. The Nazis formally launched their “Final Solution of the
Jewish Problem” at the Wannsee Conference on January 20, 1942 where fifteen mid-
level government officials worked through the enormous logistics of exterminating over
six million people.
President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s administration (1933-1945) did little to
intervene in the Holocaust believing that a rapid end to the war was the best remedy.
Furthermore, his administration discouraged European Jewish immigration to the United
States due to widespread anti-Semitism there. Roosevelt, however, employed more
Jews in high-level government positions than any other president before him. In August
of 1945 the U.S. brought the war with Japan to an end when it dropped an atomic bomb
on both Hiroshima and Nagasaki. This precipitated a nuclear arms race and the
beginning of the so-called “Cold War” between the United States and the Soviet Union,
which lasted more than forty years (1945-1989).
In 1946, with the return of millions of war veterans, the U.S. experienced two
phenomena, the post war “baby boom” and the greatest economic expansion in its
history. American industry was in full gear supplying eager consumers with housing,
automobiles, and every manner of both necessities and luxuries that the war-starved
economy had denied them. On November 29, 1947 the United Nations voted to
partition The British Mandate of Palestine creating the State of Israel. Israel declared its
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independence on May 14, 1948 (5 Iyar, 5708). The British Mandate of Palestine ended
on May 15, 1948 and the Israeli War of Independence with the Arab countries began. A
formal armistice was agreed to in 1949.
The 1940’s were a time of great suffering for people around the globe. The
Jewish people especially suffered with the onslaught of the Holocaust. One of the great
tragedies of this time was the loss of Jewish music. The Nazis burned down almost
every synagogue and Jewish school in Europe. They burned countless numbers of
Torahs, books and scores of Jewish music also went up in flames. The Holocaust
Museum in Farmington Hills, Michigan, with the help of local cantors, is attempting to
organize and restore a large collection of Jewish sheet music that was saved from the
Nazis.
The decade of the 1940s marked a dramatic shift in both the ideology and
execution of the musical. In Beautiful Mornin’, Mordden explains:
The 1940s is in certain ways the unique decade in the musical’s history…it was the first to leave substantial documentation in the form of cast recordings. This was also the first decade to produce an impressive amount of undisputed classics regularly performed today. (Mordden, Beautiful Mornin’ 3)
Irving Berlin, born Izzy Baline, the son of a cantor and the Jewish composer
responsible for one of the most famous non-Jewish holiday tunes, “White Christmas,”
showed a connection to his Jewish roots in other facets of his work. Berlin himself said:
“I suppose it was singing in shul [synagogue] with my father that gave me my musical
background. It was in my blood.” (Qtd. in Gottlieb 161) In Berlin’s 1940 musical
comedy, Louisiana Purchase, the song, “What Chance Have I (with Love),” sung by the
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character Senator Oliver P. Loganberry, references Sampson, (note the slight variation
on the spelling of the biblical figure, Samson, from Tanakh):
What chance have I with love Look at what it did to Sampson ‘Til he lost his hair he was brave. If a haircut could weaken Sampson They could murder me with a shave!
It’s likely that Berlin’s Jewish upbringing provided him with knowledge of the
famous biblical story of Samson and Delilah from the Book of Judges in the Hebrew
Bible. Samson, confiding in Delilah in Judges 16:17, proclaims: “No razor has ever
touched my head, for I have been a nazirite to God since I was in my mother’s womb. If
my hair were cut, my strength would leave me and I should become as weak as an
ordinary man.” There is not even a hint of subtlety in Berlin’s lyrics as he describes the
tragedy that is to befall on Samson at the command of Delilah:
Sensing that he had confided everything to her, Delilah sent for the lords of the Philistines, with this message: ‘Come up once more, for he has confided everything in me.’ And the lords of the Philistines came up and brought the money with them. She lulled him to sleep on her lap. Then she called in a man, and she had him cut off the seven locks of his head; thus she weakened him and made him helpless: his strength slipped away from him. (Judges 16:18-19)
In the story, the Philistines go on to seize Samson, gouge out his eyes, and
enslave him. The fact that this degree of content could be expressed in a musical—a
comedy no less—illustrates the expanded dimensions that the shows of the 1940s were
willing to take on. The productions of the 1940s reflected the seriousness of the times:
economic depression, war, and political instability. Furthermore, Berlin, Morrie Ryskind
(book), and Buddy DeSylva (story) gave audiences a history lesson about political
corruption with the story of Huey Pierce Long, Jr., governor of Louisiana from 1928-32,
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and later a U.S. Senator. The days of Vaudeville and the Variety Show fluff had truly
passed.
A few months later on Christmas Day of 1940, Pal Joey, based on a series of
short stories by John O’Hara originally run in The New Yorker, with music and lyrics by
Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart, opened on Broadway. The posters billed it as “An
uninhibited musical comedy.” One of the songs, entitled, “Zip,” is a brilliant poetic
rambling of political, religious, social and cultural accounts, including these lyrics:
I have read the great Cabala And I simply worship Allah Zip! I am just a mystic This brief lyric not only speaks of a Jewish idea, that of Kabbalah, Jewish
Mysticism, but also of a neighboring Middle-Eastern religion, Islam, and the worship of
Allah, Arabic for God. The mystical theme carries over into another one of the major
musicals of the decade, Carousel, written by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein,
which opened on Broadway in April of 1945. One of the lesser known songs in the
show, “The Highest Judge of All,” reveals these lyrics:
Take me beyond the pearly gates Through a beautiful marble hall Take me before the highest throne And let me be judged by the highest judge of all. This song lyric resembles the principle of a pre-Kabbalah Jewish mysticism
following the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 C.E. called heichalot, palaces.
The title, heichalot, derives from the divine abodes seen by the practitioner following
a long period of ritual purification, self-mortification, and ecstatic prayer and
meditation. In their visions, these mystics would enter into the celestial realms and
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journey through the seven stages of mystical ascent: the Seven Heavens and seven
throne rooms.
God as judge on throne appears in places throughout Tanakh, including the Book
of Isaiah:
In the year that King Uzzah died, I beheld my Lord seated on a high and lofty throne; and the skirts of his robe filled the Temple. (Isaiah 6:1) Moses Maimonides, known to Jews as the Rambam, a 12th century rabbi,
physician, and philosopher also addresses the concept of God on throne in his treatise
The Guide for the Perplexed. Translated from the original Arabic, Maimonides wrote:
Since men of greatness and authority, as e.g., kings, use the throne as a seat, and “the throne” thus indicates the rank, dignity, and position of the person for whom it is made, the Sanctuary has been styled “the throne” inasmuch as it likewise indicates the superiority of Him who manifests Himself, and causes His light and glory to dwell therein. (Maimonides 21) Another significant Rodgers and Hammerstein musical of the decade, South
Pacific, was based on James A. Michener’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel Tales of the
South Pacific. The musical was considered revolutionary due to its radical treatment of
racial issues on the Broadway stage. Andrea Most points out:
Rodgers and Hammerstein use the different backgrounds of the characters as a way of promoting racial tolerance. By offering a character who has never been a racist (Emile), one who discovers he’s a racist (Cable), and one who successfully overcomes her racism (Nellie), Rodgers and Hammerstein aim to show they ways in which, through education and love, prejudice can be overcome. (Most, Making Americans 156) The relationships throughout the musical are completely determined by racial
prejudices. Cable refuses to marry Liat due to race and Nellie breaks off her
engagement to Emile for the same reason. Andrea Most describes the character of
Emile, reasoning that there is a Jewish connection:
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Who is Emile in the American landscape of the 1940s? A political fugitive, a radical antifascist, an intellectual with a high-culture background—in fact, Emile strongly evokes the European (mostly German) intellectuals who fled to America in the 1930s and 1940s to escape Nazi persecution. Many of these refugees were connected with the worlds of theater, film, music, and literature, and most were Jews. (Most, Making Americans 170) Rodgers and Hammerstein “have been credited with ‘irreversibly changing the
face of American musical comedy.’” (Qtd. in Most, Making Americans 103). This
historic partnership’s impact on the decade was monumental due to their string of hits
Oklahoma (1943), Carousel (1945), South Pacific (1949). They would continue to
influence the musical theatre climate of the 1950s with The King and I (1951) and The
Sound of Music (1959).
The shows of the 1940s crossed over into pageantry; with much more elaborate
scores, and particularly in the case of South Pacific, began to employ opera singers.
Race, religion, war, politics, and all of the hot-button issues of the day (including the
Jewish themes, now more than ever due to Hitler and the Holocaust) were now being
exposed on the American stage. The musicals of this decade have been sustained well
via musical scores and cast recordings, and are often revived on Broadway today.
Nu? Yinglish, Assimilation and the Musicals of the ‘50s
The 1950s were a very tumultuous time in American history in which numerous
remarkable things took place politically and artistically. The decade began tragically
with the Korean War on June 25, 1950. The threat of communism spreading in the
United States spawned the infamous Senator Joseph McCarthy investigations, which
began in February of 1950. This was heightened in 1953, when Americans witnessed
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the conviction and execution of American Communists, Julius Rosenberg and Ethel
Greenglass Rosenberg for their conveyance of nuclear secrets to the Russians. This
had a particularly negative impact on Jews in the United States because it fueled the
implication of a strong Jewish connection to communism.
The decade continued with the surprise launching of the Russian satellite Sputnik
I on October 4, 1957, coupled with the failed two Project Vanguard attempts, which
caused a panic about the inadequacies in American education. In February of 1959,
the world watched Fidel Castro’s Communist take-over of Cuba at the young age of 32.
The new decade rang in with the excitement of the election of John F. Kennedy as
President in November of 1960.
The 1950s were no less exciting theatrically than they were politically. The
decade opens with Tony Award Winning, Guys and Dolls, by Frank Loesser. It’s likely
that the character, Nathan Detroit is Jewish, due to his frequent displays of “Yinglish”
Yiddish mixed with English (also referred to as “Yingish” throughout Jack Gottlieb’s
work) for example, in the song "Sue Me,” he sings the lyric, “All right already, I’m just a
no-goodnik. All right already it’s true. So nu?”
My own grandfather, of blessed memory, an uncultured man but steeped in
Yiddishkeit, Jewishness, thought the song “A Bushel and a Peck” from Guys and Dolls,
was Jewish, and he often sang it to me as a child: “I love you a bushel and a peck, a
bushel and a peck and a hug around the neck.” The influence of this random piece of
musical culture is remarkable given that a non-theatre-going man somehow absorbed
song lyrics from a Broadway musical, and integrated them into his interaction with his
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grandchildren, genuinely believing them to be part of his heritage. In fact, it could very
well have been the intent of the composer or lyricist to create this kind of atmosphere:
If a creative artist produces something which in kind, in content, and in form corresponds to his cultural community, so that through that product he can be accepted as belonging to, or in affinity with, that community, then the product can be regarded as belonging to that particular group. (Rothmüller 286-287) The King and I, music by Richard Rodgers, book and lyrics by Oscar
Hammerstein appeared on the musical theatre scene in 1951. The King and I focuses
on themes of education and multiculturalism. A governess is brought to Siam to teach
the many children of the king. The children naturally fall in love with their new
governess and learn many things from her about the outside world. This aspect of the
children is not unlike the cloistered Yeshiva students immersed in Talmud and not being
aware of the culture of the surrounding communities. Andrea Most comments:
Rodgers and Hammerstein chose to rewrite the Jewish immigrant myth as a model for other immigrant groups. In doing so, they asserted not only that Jews born in the United States were fully assimilated Americans, but that their assimilation experience could set the standard for the making of new Americans. By shifting the elements of the Jewish immigration story onto Asian subjects The King and I rejects the image of the Jew as alien threat and argues that the Jewish model of immigration and assimilation is actually the best template for creating Americans and hence defeating Communism. (Most, Making Americans 186)
The king’s children, in an effort to please their new governess, decide to produce
a play based on the book, Uncle Tom’s Cabin, by Harriet Beecher Stowe. In the
children’s interpretation, the story begins with the most evil king in America, Simon
Legree, in the kingdom of Kentucky. Eliza, her lover George, and their baby are slaves
who live in the house of Uncle Thomas. King Simon decides to sell George and send
him away to the faraway province of “Oheeo.” As a result, Eliza takes her baby and
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flees the kingdom to be reunited with George. In the scene called “Ice Skating Dance,”
Eliza approaches a river and prays to the god Buddha to help her cross it. God then
freezes the river over allowing Eliza to pass. King Simon and his slaves and dogs race
across the river in hot pursuit. The lyric reads, “Buddha has called out the sun! Sun
has made the water soft. The wicked Simon and his slaves fall in the river and are
drowned.” This is a direct retelling of the story of Moses and the Israelites crossing the
Red Sea found in the biblical Book of Exodus.
Moses held out his arm over the sea, and at daybreak the sea returned to its normal state, and the Egyptians fled at its approach. But the Lord hurled the Egyptians into the sea. The waters turned back and covered the chariots and the horsemen—Pharoah’s entire army that followed them into the sea; not one of them remained. (Ex. 14:27-28) The scene of the Exodus of the Hebrews from Egypt in the 1956 film, The Ten
Commandments, is one of the most spectacular in all of film. Elmer Bernstein, the
prolific Jewish film composer, composed the music for the film. Along with many in
Hollywood, Bernstein faced censure during the McCarthy era of the 1950s. He was
"gray-listed" (not banned, but kept off major projects) due to sympathy with left-wing
causes, and had to work on low-budget science fiction films such as Robot Monster and
Cat-Women of the Moon. The McCarthy investigations ruined the lives and careers of
many people in the entertainment industry. The infamous “black lists” prevented many
Jewish artists from working in various facets of mainstream society.
Debuting on Broadway in 1956, Candide, a story by Lillian Hellman, was set to
music by Jewish composer, Leonard Bernstein, with lyrics by Richard Wilbur, John
Latouche and Stephen Sondheim. It was based on a satirical work by the philosopher
Voltaire. Mordden remarks, “There is no question that Voltaire was one of the world’s
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great liberal pioneers. When new, the novel Candide was dangerous, democratic, and
rational, and Lillian Hellman and Leonard Bernstein fixed on it as the source of a show
they would write to defy McCarthyism as Voltaire had defied the hypocrites of his day.”
(Mordden, Coming Up Roses 172)
From an instrumental standpoint, Leonard Bernstein shows a connection to his
Jewish roots by inserting shofar calls in a number of places in the score. “In Bernstein’s
Candide, trumpeters are instructed to play “like a shofar.” A battle scene is announced
by a fanfare blast of tekiah gedolah [the big blast], the same configuration that opens
the Overture to Candide, probably Bernstein’s most performed concert work.” (Gottlieb
179)
There are also some compelling Jewish ideas in the lyrics. In the song, “The
Best of All Possible Worlds,” from Candide the lyrics are undeniably biblical:
T’was Snake that tempted Mother Eve Because of Snake we now believe that though depraved We can be saved from hellfire and damnation If Snake had not seduced our lot, and primed us from salvation Jehovah could not pardon all the sins we call cardinal Involving bed and bottle
This is another example in which the song lyrics cross over religions. In the
Hebrew Bible in the Book of Genesis, the serpent’s temptation serves to test Eve, as
seen in instances throughout Tanakh, where God imposes tests to determine whether
or not His instructions will be obeyed and the people will fear Him. In Christianity, the
story of Adam and Eve forms the basis for the Christian doctrine of original sin.
Candide also addressed assimilation, an issue of great significance to the Jewish
community, and other religious and cultural groups. Encyclopedia Britannica offers this
definition of assimilation:
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The process whereby individuals or groups of differing ethnic heritage are absorbed into the dominant culture of a society. Usually they are immigrants or hitherto isolated minorities who, through contact and participation in the larger culture, gradually give up most of their former culture traits and take on the new traits to such a degree that socially they become indistinguishable from other members of the society. (Encyclopedia)
In the number entitled, “I Am Easily Assimilated,” the lyrics expressed the ever-
present cultural assimilation in the 1950s:
It’s easy, it’s ever so easy! I’m Spanish, I’m suddenly Spanish and you must be Spanish too Do like the natives do These days you have to be in the majority I am easily assimilated
According to Ethan Mordden, “’I Am Easily Assimilated,’ the Old Lady’s
opportunistic credo, is all-basic Candide, Bernstein’s campy genius (he wrote the lyrics)
gaming with something really dangerous—the self-satisfaction of the Jewish immigrant
who has no idea that Hitler is in the wings.” (Mordden, Coming Up Roses 180) As
Jews, businessmen and artists, Bernstein and Sondheim were clearly in touch with the
trend of assimilation during the 1950s, when Jews in all walks of workplace and social
circles went as far as changing their names to blend in with the rest of society. In fact,
Andrea Most adds:
Jewish writers and composers developed a new genre of musical theatre best described as musical comedy, which uses comic structure, love plots, tacit and overt ethnic characters, and the distinct separation of dialogue and song to respond to and represent theatrically the experience of Jewish assimilation in America. (Most, Making Americans 3) Today, even more so than in the 1950s, assimilation has grown and now
presents the most immediate danger to the continuity of the Jewish people. The
Council of Jewish Federations' 1990 National Jewish Population Survey reports that of
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5.6 million Jews, 2 million American Jews live in households identified as non-Jewish,
and since 1985, 52% of Jews are intermarried. (Buchwald)
West Side Story opened on Broadway 1957 based on a conception by Jerome
Rabinowitz, better known as Jerome Robbins, who also directed and choreographed
the production. The book was written by Arthur Laurents, with music by Leonard
Bernstein, and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim, all of whom are Jewish. Although most of
us are familiar with the well-known love story amidst conflict between two New York
gangs, one White and the other Puerto Rican, the original intent for a cultural clash was
quite different as Ethan Mordden explains:
West Side Story owns an especially dispiriting gestation story, because it very nearly never happened. It started as an updated Romeo and Juliet called East Side Story, about friction between Jewish people and Catholics. It was Jerome Robbins’ idea, and, from the start, Leonard Bernstein was to write both lyrics and music to Arthur Laurents’ book. But in fact there was no story there, for the Jewish East Side of memory had vanished long before—and where, today, in New York, was there a Jewish-Catholic hostility? On the contrary, the cultural assimilation of Jewish and Catholic immigrants and their issue was a New York success story. (Mordden, Coming Up Roses 238)
In fact, Bernstein’s own diary entry in early 1949 confirms the original idea: Jerry R. [Jerome Robbins] called today with a noble idea: a modern version of Romeo and Juliet set in slums at the coincidence of Easter-Passover celebrations. Feelings run high between Jews and Catholics. Former, Capulets, latter: Montagues. Juliet is Jewish. Friar Lawrence is the neighborhood druggist. Street brawls, double death—it all fits. But it’s all much less important than the bigger idea of making a musical that tells a tragic story in musical comedy terms. (Qtd. in Whitfield 81)
Consequently, the four Jewish authors maintained their intention of the Jewish-
Catholic conflict throughout West Side Story in a variety of ways. There is true art in
using language to create an atmosphere in a brilliantly subtle way in a song lyric. They
began by giving one of the gangs a “J” name—slang often used to denote a Jew. In the
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lyrics of the song, “When You’re A Jet,” there is an interesting parallel between the
feeling of community in a gang and the essential framework of community that Jews
experience:
When you're a Jet, If the spit hits the fan, You got brothers around, You're a family man! You're never alone, You're never disconnected! You're home with your own: When company's expected, You're well protected! Then you are set With a capital J, Which you'll never forget ‘Til they cart you away. The sense of community is illustrated in the lyrics when the Jets speak of
brotherhood, family, and unity via a common identity. The Jewish influence throughout
the show carried on and even ventured into the mystical as illustrated in the lyrics of
“Something’s Coming” from West Side Story, which declare a potentially Messianic
theme of Redemption throughout:
Could be! Who knows? There’s something due any day; I will know right away soon as it shows. It may come cannonballin’ down through the sky, gleam in its eye, bright as a rose! Who knows? It’s only just out of reach, down the block, on a beach, under a tree. I got a feelin’ there’s a miracle due, gonna come true, comin’ to me! Could it be? Yes, it could. Something’s coming, something’ good, if I can wait! Something’s comin’, I don’t know what it is but it is gonna be great! With a click, with a shock, phone’ll jingle, door’ll knock open the latch! Something’s comin’, don’t know when, but it’s soon--catch the moon, one-handed catch! Around the corner, Or whistling’ down the river, Come on--deliver to me! Will it be? Yes, it will. Maybe just by holdin’ still it’ll be there! Come on, something’, come on in, don’t be shy, meet a guy, pull up a chair! The air is hummin’, and something’ great is comin’! Who knows? It’s only just out of reach, down the block, on a beach. Maybe tonight.
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Historically, Jews have been waiting for and continue to hope for the coming of
the Messiah who is to bring with him/her olam haba, the world to come, and a time of
eternal life when the dead will be resurrected. The lyrics of “Something’s Coming”
create that mystical feeling of the unknown—we believe something good is coming, but
we don’t know exactly what it is, when it will come, or how precisely it will be revealed to
us. Certainly, someone like Leonard Bernstein who was brought up in a Jewish home
would know of this phenomenon as much as he would know about the melodies of the
traditional High Holy Day music and the sound of the shofar.
As seen in Guys and Dolls, Bernstein and his lyricists had a similar sense of
humor with his use of “Yinglish” in West Side Story, this quite derogatory, as in the
song, “Gee, Officer Krupke,” when the character, Action sings:
Dear kindly social worker, they say go earn a buck Like be a soda jerker, which means like be a schumck
In Yiddish, the word schumck literally meaning penis, refers to a fool, jerk, or
contemptible person. This reference and many other instances of Jewish influences
that bleed into what is supposed to be a “White/Puerto Rican story” cannot be passed
off as insignificant. In fact some of these instances in West Side Story are far less
subtle than early decades as the show edges close to the early sixties when Jewish
themes in Broadway musicals became obvious.
Furthermore, as in the case of Candide, Bernstein uses shofar calls in
Symphonic Dances from West Side Story. In his book, Jack Gottlieb shows a total of
four musically notated examples of these shofar calls: two in Candide, one in Jubilee
Games (Mvt. 1) from Concerto for Orchestra, and one in West Side Story. “This is proof
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positive for those who always suspected that the whistles alerting the gangs in West
Side Story are based on shofar calls. There is no doubt that two of Bernstein’s most
acclaimed shows begin with a Jewish call to worship.” (Gottlieb 180)
When reflecting on the overall climate of the Judaism in the musicals of the
1950s, one can find an interesting paradox. On the one hand, the Jewish references
were no longer subtle as in earlier decades—quite the contrary—they were often
pushed front and center. On the other hand, from a cultural standpoint, many Jews
were opting for assimilation and sometimes trying to hide their identities altogether, to fit
in to a society that never fully accepted them in the first place. This is reminiscent of the
shows of the 1920s and 1930s when it was not “fashionable” to exhibit Jewish ideas in a
deliberate manner.
Conclusion
This thesis proves that there is plentiful evidence of Jewish theme and content
existing in mainstream Broadway shows from the 1920s through the late 1950s,
particularly when penned by Jewish authors and composers. Each decade put its own
unique stamp on the Broadway musical in terms of the social, political, and economic
influences. The roaring ‘20s brought Vaudeville and the variety show—productions that
were low in content but high on spectacle. The popular performers of the day drew the
big crowds, as did the flashy sets, costumes and choreography. George and Ira
Gershwin were the predominant Jewish writing team of the era. By the 1930s, politics
became the driving force behind the ideas that were brought to the Broadway stage.
Cole Porter was one of the dominant artists of the day; however, Jewish composer Marc
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Blitzstein’s The Cradle Will Rock was one of the most memorable shows the decade
produced. Economically the decade was a disaster and show attendance was down.
This carried over into the 1940s and was further aggravated by World War II and the
Holocaust. However, advances in technology in the 1940s became a factor in
preserving many of the classics we now cherish today. Ethan Mordden remarks: “it was
the decade in which the musical’s artistry changed most decisively and even most
suddenly, in what we might call ‘the Rodgers and Hammerstein revolution.’” (Mordden,
Beautiful Mornin’ 3)
Finally, despite McCarthyism in the 1950s “the musical then was central to
American culture.” (Mordden, Coming Up Roses 3) Rodgers and Hammerstein II were
still a force, but the big names that emerged were Leonard Bernstein and Stephen
Sondheim. Candide and West Side Story were two of the most important shows of the
period, and were paramount to bringing the issues of race, religion, and culture out from
hiding in the previous decades to the forefront in the 1950s.
In all of the works examined, the influence of Jewish culture either in the
upbringing or in the overall environment of the artists carried over significantly into the
premise of these shows and was also reflected in specific characters, lyrics, melodies,
or other subtle Jewish ideas present in otherwise non-Jewish productions. As
expected, the shows that appeared in the later decades revealed more obvious Jewish
content, particularly in the 1950s as the timeline edged closer to the 1960s which finally
brought Jewish life front and center in the productions of Milk and Honey and Fiddler on
the Roof.
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Commentary on the Bibliographies
The use of historical information derived from books and articles on Broadway
theatre and Jewish culture, as well as internet findings and recordings of soundtracks
proved to be the most useful and revealed the majority of relevant references used to
support the thesis. Gina Genova, former research specialist at the Milken Archive office
in New York City suggested contacting Marty Jacobs, the musical theatre librarian at the
Museum of the City of New York (MCNY), which houses an extensive collection of files
on Broadway shows. While the research of show files at MCNY was interesting, most
songs on the list compiled were unavailable, and many that were found, proved to be
inapplicable or unsupportive of the overall thesis topic. However, a number of pieces
were collected and have since been filed with Dr. Neil W. Levin at the Milken Archive
office. The research completed at MCNY is provided in detail in the bibliography of
musical works at the end of this paper.
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Bibliography of Musical Works All music, if available, acquired from Museum of the City of New York (MCNY),
Musical Theatre Collection, other sources noted. 1920: Show: Poor Little Ritz Girl, (song by the same name) book by George Campbell/Lew Fields, music by Richard C. Rodgers/Sigmund Romberg, lyrics by Lorenz M. Hart/Alex Gerber. Notes: Music not available. Show: Mary, starring George M. Cohan’s Comedians, book by Otto Harbach/Frank Mandel, music by Louis A. Hirsch, lyrics by Otto Harbach Songs: “That May Have Satisfied Grandma,” “Money, Money, Money” Notes: Songs have Irish content only. Show: Her Family Tree, book by Al Weeks/’Bugs’ Baer, music and lyrics by Seymour Simons Song: “The Gold Diggers,” “Why Worry,” (scene outside of Noah’s Ark) Notes: These songs not available, MCNY has only, “As we sow, so shall we reap.” The song entitled, “Gold Diggers,” also appears in a show by the same name from 1923. 1921: Show: Love Birds, book by Edgar Allen Woolf, music by Sigmund Romberg, lyrics by Ballard MacDonald Song: “Girl like Grandma” Notes: Music not available. Song: “Irene Rosensteen” music by Malvin Franklin, lyrics by Alex Gerber, song added to the 2nd engagement in a scene called “The Delicatessen Shoppe” from The Broadway Whirl, a musical review. Notes: Music not available. Song: “Take Me Down to Coney” music/lyrics by Lew Pollack/Ed Rose/Richard A. Whiting from Ziegfeld Follies of 1921 Notes: This song not available, song entitled, “Second Hand Rose” acquired. Song: “An Interview with Irving Berlin,” music/lyrics by Irving Berlin from Music Box Review (1921-1922) Notes: Music not available.
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1922: Song: “My Yiddisha Mammy” music/lyrics by Jean Schwartz/Eddie Cantor/Alex Gerber, listed as one of Eddie Cantor’s “specialty songs” added later to Act 1 of Make It Snappy, musical review. Notes: This song not available, but MCNY has “Sophie” and “The Sheik of Araby,” neither have Jewish content. Song: “The Samson and Delilah Melody,” music by Frank H. Grey, lyrics by Bide Dudley from Sue, Dear. Notes: Music not available. Show: George White’s Scandals of 1922, book by George White/W.C. Fields/Andy Rice, music by George Gershwin, lyrics by Buddy G. DeSylva/E. Ray Goetz/Arthur Francis. Scene 1: Garden of Eden, possible song “Neath the Shade of the Old Apple Tree,” Scene 2: The Modern Eves (no songs listed). Song: “There’s an Eve in Ev’ry Garden,” music by Milton Schwarzwald/Tom Johnstone from Molly Darling, book by Otto Harbach/William Cary Duncan. Notes: This song not available, MCNY has “Only When All Your Castles Come Tumbling Down,” lyrics by Arthur Francis. No Jewish content. Song: “Forbidden Fruit,” a duet dropped during the run of The Yankee Princess, book by William Le Baron, music by Emmerich Kálmán, lyrics by Buddy G. DeSylva. Notes: Music not available. Show: The Clinging Vine, book/lyrics by Zelda Sears, music by Harold Levey. Songs: “Grandma,” “Roumania.” Notes: These songs not available, but “Omar Khayam was Right” was acquired. Song: “The Upper Crust,” music by Harry Tierney, lyrics by Joseph McCarthy from Glory, musical comedy. Notes: This song not available, MCNY has “Glory.” No Jewish content. MCNY info suggests a show year of 1923. 1923: Song: “(And) Her Mother Came Too,” sung by Jack Buchanan, an actor/singer dubbed, “The British Fred Astaire.” Music/lyrics by Ivor Novello from Jack and Jill, but originally written and performed in the London Revue, A TO Z. Notes: Music not available. Show date may be 1921. Song: “There Is Nothing Too Good for You,” music by George Gershwin, lyrics by Buddy G. DeSylva/ E. Ray Goetz from George White’s Scandals (1923).
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Song: “(Since Ma Is Playing) Mah Jong,” music/lyrics by Con Conrad/Billy Rose, performed by Eddie Cantor in Kid Boots, book by William Anthony McGuire/Otto Harbach. Notes: This song not available, but “Reuben, Reuben, where have you been?” acquired. 1924: Song: “Don’t Send Me Back (to Petrograd),” music/lyrics by Irving Berlin. Performed by Fanny Brice in Music Box Review (1924-1925). Notes: Music not available. This song may have also appeared in the 1925 production, Lady Be Good. 1925: Song: “Nobody But Fanny,” music/lyrics by Con Conrad/Al Jolson/Buddy G. DeSylva, from Big Boy, book by Harold Atteridge. Notes: Music not available. Al Jolson appeared in Blackface, show is not Jewish. Songs: “Irish Jewish Jubilee,” music/lyrics by Bert Kalmar/Harry Ruby and “The Lady Osteopath,” music/lyrics by Blanche Merrill from Puzzles of 1925, musical review. Notes: Music not available. Show: Tell Me More! Book by Fred Thompson/William K. Wells, music by George Gershwin, lyrics by Buddy G. DeSylva/Ira Gershwin. Songs: “Mr. and Mrs. Sipkin,” When the Debbies Go By.” Notes: MCNY had a number of songs in file, but none have Jewish content. Show: Kosher Kitty Kelly, (song by same name), book/music/lyrics by Leon DeCosta. Notes: Program in file lists show year as 1925. Lyrics to this song are ironically, not Jewish: “Pretty Kitty Kelly, your big Irish eyes.” Song: “Bertie,” music by Sigmund Romberg, lyrics by Clifford Grey from Ziegfeld Follies of 1925 (Summer Edition). Notes: Music not available. Song: “My Doctor,” music by Vincent Youmans, lyrics by Otto Harbach from No, No Nanette. Notes: Music not available. Show contains a song entitled, “Santa Claus.” Song: “The Cossack Love Song,” music by George Gershwin/Herbert Stothart from Song Of The Flame, book/lyrics by Otto Harbach/Oscar Hammerstein II. Notes: The above listed song is also known as: “Don’t Forget Me.” The program lists the show year as 1926. Many songs in file but none have Jewish content.
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1926: Songs: “Kosher Kleagle,” music by Philip Charig, lyrics by J.P. McEvoy and “Tabloid Papers,” music by Con Conrad, lyrics by J.P. McEvoy from Americana (1926). Notes: Music not available. Song: “Reuben,” from Twinkle, Twinkle. Book/lyrics by Harlan Thompson, music by Harry Archer. Notes: Music not available. Show: Betsy, book by Irving Caesar/David Freedman, music by Richard Rodgers, lyrics by Lorenz Hart. Songs: “The Kitzel Engagement,” “Stonewall Moscowitz March,” The Tales of Hoffman,” “Leave It to Levy.” Notes: Music not available. 1927: Song: “Mockowitz, Gogelich, Babblekroit & Svonk,” (The Four Lawyers) from Merry-Go-Round, book/lyrics by Morrie Ryskind/Howard Dietz, music by Henry Souvaine/Jay Gorney. Notes: This song not available but “Gabriel” lyrics were acquired. Show: Funny Face, appeared as Smarty at the NY Alvin Theatre with Fred Astaire. Includes well known songs as “S’wonderful,” and “How long has this been going on.” Notes: Song entitled, “The Babbitt and the Bromide” acquired. 1928: Show: Hold Everything, book by Buddy G. DeSylva/John McGowan, music/lyrics by Buddy G. DeSylva/Lew Brown/Ray Henderson. Songs: “We’re Calling on Mr. Brooks,” “You’re the Cream in My Coffee,” “Genealogy.” Notes” Acquired “You’re the Cream in My Coffee,” also known as “You’re My Necessity (I’d Be Lost without You).” Song: “Jericho,” music by Richard Myers, lyrics by Leo Robin from Hello Yourself!!!! musical review. Notes: Show not in archive, may have also been known as Hello Hero!! 1929: Show: Whoopee!, book by William McGuire, music by Walter Donaldson, lyrics by Gus Kahn, produced by Florenz Ziegfeld. Notes: Vocal selections available at NYPL Performing Arts Branch. Call number: Mus 784 D, second floor.
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1930: Song: “Mademoiselle in New Rochelle,” from Strike Up The Band, book by Morrie Ryskind, music by George Gershwin, lyrics by Ira Gershwin. Notes: Music acquired. Song: “Sam and Delilah,” sung by Ethel Merman, who portrayed Kate Fothergill in Girl Crazy, book by Guy Bolton/John McGowan, music by George Gershwin, lyrics by Ira Gershwin. Notes: This song acquired. Girl Crazy also included the popular Gershwin songs: “I’ve Got Rhythm,” “But Not for Me,” and “Embraceable You.” Song: “I’m One of God’s Children,” from Ballyhoo, book/lyrics by Harry Ruskin/Leighton K. Brill, music by Louis Alter, lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II/ Harry Ruskin. Notes: Music acquired. 1931: Song: (Yiddish) Folk Song (“The Cantor”-Ohf Shabbes) performed by Al Jolson in The Wonder Bar, book by Irving Caesar/Aben Kandel, music by Robert Katscher, lyrics by Irving Caesar. Notes: This song not available but file contains, “Trav’lin All Alone.” Song: “I Found a Million Dollar Baby in a Five and Ten Cent Store,” music by Harry Warren, lyrics by Billy Rose/Mort Dixon from Billy Rose’s Crazy Quilt. Notes: This song was in file but did not have Jewish content. Show: The Singing Rabbi, book by Bores and Harry Thomashefsky, music by J. Rumshinsky/Harry Lubin, lyrics by L. Wolfe Gilbert. Notes: Music not available. 1932: Song: “Satan’s Little Lamb,” music by Harold Arlen, lyrics by E.Y. Harburg/Johnny Mercer from (J.P. McEvoy’s) Americana. Notes: Music not available. Song, “I Got Religion,” music by Vincent Youmans, lyrics by Buddy G. DeDylva, performed by Ethel Merman as Wanda Brill in Take A Chance. Notes: This song not available but “Eadie Was a Lady” from Act II acquired. 1933: Song: “All the Mothers of the Nation,” music by George Gershwin, lyrics by Ira Gershwin from Let ‘Em Eat Cake, book by George S Kaufman/Morrie Ryskind. Notes: Music not available, a war themed show.
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1934: Song: “Blow, Gabriel, Blow,” music/lyrics by Cole Porter. Performed by Ethel Merman in Anything Goes. Notes: Music available on 2nd floor, NYPL Performing Arts Branch. Song: “The Stein-Way,” by William K. Wells from Calling All Stars, musical review. Notes: Music not available. 1935: Song, “Send for the Militia,” music/lyrics by Marc Blitzstein from Parade, a satirical review. Notes: Music not available. Song: “Adam and Eve,” music by Pearl Lippmann, lyrics by Arthur Lippmann from Continental Varieties of 1936. Notes: Music not available. 1936: Song: “It Must Be Religion,” music/lyrics by Forman Brown from New Faces of 1936. Notes: Music not available, but file contains, “My Last Affair,” no Jewish theme. 1937: Show: The Eternal Road, music by Kurt Weill. Notes: Music readily available, recording at Milken Archive. Song: “Goodbye Jonah,” from Virginia, music by Arthur Schwartz, lyrics by Albert Stillman. Notes: Show not in archive at MCNY. 1938: Show: No More Peace, an anti-war comedy, music by Max Hirschfield, lyrics by W.H. Auden. All characters listed in cast have biblical names. Notes: Music not available. 1939: Song: “I’ll Pay the Check,” music by Arthur Schwartz, lyrics by Dorothy Fields. Sung by Ethel Merman as Jeanette Adair in Stars in Your Eyes, book by J.P. McEvoy. Notes: Show referred to as a “Musical Jamboree.” Music acquired.
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1940: Show: Panama Hattie, book by Herbert Fields/Buddy G. DeSylva, music/lyrics by Cole Porter. Songs: “My Mother Would Love You,” “I’ve Still Got My Health,” both sung by Ethel Merman. Notes: Music not available. 1941: Show: No For An Answer, book/music/lyrics by Marc Blitzstein. Notes: Music not available. Show: Lady in the Dark, book by Moss Hart, music by Kurt Weill, lyrics by Ira Gershwin. (Show also listed in 1943) Notes: Script and entire vocal score is in file at MCNY. Show: Let’s Face It, book by Herbert & Dorothy Fields, music/lyrics by Cole Porter. Notes: Acquired a number of songs, unsure of Jewish content. Songs: “You Irritate Me So,” “I Hate You Darling,” “Farming,” and “Ace in the Hole.” 1942: Show: Of V We Sing, multiple composers/lyricists. Songs: “Queen Esther,” music by George Kleinsinger, lyrics by Beatrice Goldsmith. “Gertie, the Stool Pigeon’s Daughter,” music by Ned Lehack [Lehak], lyrics by Joe Darion. Notes: Show not in archive at MCNY. Shows: Keep ‘Em Laughing and Top-Notchers, assembled by Clifford C. Fischer, shows share many of the same songs, opened one month apart. Notes: Neither shows in archive at MCNY. Show: By Jupiter, book/music/lyrics by Richard Rodgers/Lorenz Hart. Starred Ray Bolger. Notes: Show has theme of Greek Gods, not Jewish. Some songs in file. Show: This is the Army, conceived by, music/lyrics by Irving Berlin. Notes: Songs available are: “I Left My Heart at the Stage Door Canteen,” and “This is the Army, Mr. Jones.” Neither have Jewish content. Show: Let Freedom Sing, music/lyrics mostly by Harold Rome. Song: “Mittel Europa,” music/lyrics by Jay Gurney/Henry Myers/Edward Eliscu. Notes: No Music available. Show: Oy Is Dus A Leben! (Oh, What a Life!), based on the life of Molly Picon and Jacob Kalich. Book by Jacob Kalich, music by J. Rumshinsky, lyrics by Molly Picon. Notes: Title song was acquired in two versions with different Yiddish lyrics.
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1943: Show: Something for the Boys, book by Herbert & Dorothy Fields, music/lyrics by Cole Porter. Notes: Show not in archive at MCNY. Show: Artists and Models (of 1943), music/lyrics by Dan Shapiro/Milton Pascal/Phil Charig. Songs: “Swing Low, Sweet Harriet,” “Ile of Manasooris.” Notes: Show not in archive at MCNY. 1944: Show: Bloomer Girl, book by Sig Herzig/Fred Saidy, music by Harold Arlen, lyrics by E.Y. Harburg. Songs: “It Was Good Enough For Grandma,” “Simon Legree.” Notes: Appears to have been a black show. The above songs were not available but the file contains, “The Eagle and Me,” and “Right as the Rain.” Note that the character Simon Legree appears in The King and I. 1945: Show: The Day Before Spring, book/lyrics by Alan Jay Lerner, music by Frederick Loewe. Notes: No music available. 1946: Show: A Flag is Born, play by Ben Hecht, music by Kurt Weill. Notes: No music available. Show: Naughty Naught, book by John Van Antwerp [Jerrold Krimsky], music by Richard Lewine, lyrics by Ted Fetter. Notes: No music available. Show: Park Avenue, music by Arthur Schwartz, lyrics by Ira Gershwin, book directed by George S. Kaufman. Notes: The only song available is: “There’s No Holding Me,” no Jewish content. Show: If the Shoe Fits, book by June Carroll/Robert Duke, music by David Raskin, lyrics by June Carroll. Notes: Show not in archive at MCNY. 1947: Show: Barefoot Boy with Cheek, book by Max Shulman, music by Sidney Lippman, lyrics by Sylvia Dee. Notes: No music available.
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1948: Show: Make Mine Manhattan, sketches/lyrics by Arnold B. Horwitt, music by Richard Lewine. Song: “My Brudder and Me.” Notes: This song acquired and also, “Phil the Fiddler.” 1949: Show: Lost in the Stars, book/lyrics by Maxwell Anderson, music by Kurt Weill. Notes: Title song available and script is in file at MCNY. 1950: Show: Happy as Larry, book/lyrics by Donagh MacDonagh, music by Mischa & Wesley Portnoff. Notes: No music available. Show: Great to be Alive!, book by Walter Bullock/Sylvia Reagan, music by Abraham Ellstein, lyrics by Walter Bullock. Notes: Three songs are in file: “It’s a Long Time Till Tomorrow,” “What a Day!” and “Dreams Ago.” None have Jewish content. Show: Call Me Madam, book by Howard Lindsay/Russel Crouse, music/lyrics by Irving Berlin. Starring Ethel Merman. Notes: Acquired song, “The Hostess with the Mostes’ on the Ball.” 1951: Show: Bagels and Yox, songs by Sholom Secunda/Hy Jacobson, additional lyrics by Millie Alpert. Notes: Show not in archive at MCNY. Show: Borscht Capades, directed by Mickey Katz, music for dances by J. Rumshinsky. Notes: Show not in archive at MCNY. 1952: Show: Wish You Were Here, book by Arthur Kober/Joshua Logan, music/lyrics by Harold Rome. Notes: Program lists show year as 1953. Only title song available, no Jewish content. Show: The Fifth Season, by Sylvia Reagan. Notes: No music available at MCNY. NYPL CATNYP lists a show year of 1953, availability unknown.
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Show: Two’s Company, music by Vernon Duke (Sheldon Harnick), lyrics by Ogden Nash (Sammy Cahn, Sheldon Harnick). Notes: Show not in archive at MCNY. 1953: Show: The Flowering Peach, book by Clifford Odets, incidental music by Alan Hovhaness. Act II is set in Noah’s home; the ark. Notes: Show not in archive at MCNY.
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Bibliography of Books and Articles Buchwald, Rabbi Ephraim. Simple to Remember: Judaism Online. http://www.simpletoremember.com/vitals/intermarriage-statistics.htm Bronski, Michael. Love’s Labor’s Lost. http://www.forward.com/articles/8600/ Eisenhour, Jerry. Joe Leblang’s Cut-Rate Ticket Empire and the Broadway Theatre 1894-1931. http://www.nytimes.com/imagepages/2008/03/07/opinion/08oped.ready.html Encyclopedia--Britannica Online Encyclopedia http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/39328/assimilation#tab=active~checked%2Citems~checked&title=assimilation%20--%20Britannica%20Online%20Encyclopedia Florida Center for Instructional Technology (FCIT). A Teacher’s Guide to the Holocaust. http://fcit.usf.edu/Holocaust/arts/music.htm Green, Stanley. Ring Bells! Sing Songs! Broadway Musicals of the 1930’s. New York City: Galahad Books, 1971. Gottlieb, Jack. Funny, It Doesn’t Sound Jewish: How Yiddish Songs and Synagogue Melodies Influenced Tin Pan Alley, Broadway, and Hollywood. State University of New York in association with The Library of Congress, 2004. JPS Hebrew-English Tanakh: The traditional Hebrew text and the new JPS translation, 2nd edition. Philadelphia: The Jewish Publication Society, 1999. Daniel 8:15-17, 9:21; Exodus 14:27-28, 19:13, 16, 18-20; Isaiah 6:1; Judges 16:17-19; Psalms 150:3. Levin, Neil W. Program notes from the sound recording: Weill, Kurt, The Eternal Road (highlights). Milken Archive of American Jewish Music, 2003. Maimonides, Moses. The Guide for the Perplexed. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul Ltd., 1904. Mordden, Ethan. Beautiful Mornin’: The Broadway Musical in the 1940s. New York: Oxford University Press, 1999.
Coming Up Roses: The Broadway Musical in the 1950s. New York: Oxford University Press, 1998.
Make Believe: The Broadway Musical in the 1920s. New York: Oxford University Press, 1997.
Sing for Your Supper: The Broadway Musical in the 1930s. New York: Oxford University Press, 1997.
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Most, Andrea. “’Big Chief Izzy Horowitz’: Theatricality and Jewish Identity in the Wild West.” American Jewish Historical Society, 2000. http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/american_jewish_history/v087/87.4most.html
Making Americans: Jews and the Broadway Musical. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2004.
“We Know We Belong to the Land:” Jews and the American Musical Theater. Michigan: UMI Dissertation Services, a Bell & Howell Company, 2001.
Norton, Richard C. A Chronology of American Musical Theatre, vol. 2 (1912-1952) and 3 (1952-2001). New York: Oxford University Press, 2002. Pessen, Edward. “The Great Songwriters of Tin Pan Alley’s Golden Age: A Social, Occupational, and Aesthetic Inquiry.” Illinois: The Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois, 1985. Rothmüller, Aron Marko. The Music of the Jews: An Historic Appreciation. Rev. ed. South Brunswick: A.S. Barnes and Co., Inc., 1967. Steyn, Mark. Broadway Babies Say Goodnight: Musicals Then and Now. New York: Routledge, 1999. Whitfield, Stephen J. In Search of American Jewish Culture. New Hampshire: Brandeis University Press/University Press of New England, 1999. Wright, Jill Yvonne Gold. Creating America on Stage: How Jewish Composers and Lyricists Pioneered American Musical Theater. Michigan: UMI Dissertation Services, a ProQuest Company, 2003.