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  1. The Yiddish King Lear (Yiddish: דער ייִדישער קעניג ליר Der Yidisher Kenig Lir, also known as The Jewish King Lear) was an 1892 play by Jacob Gordin, and is generally seen as ushering in the first great era of Yiddish theater in New York City’s Yiddish Theater District, in which serious drama gained prominence ...

  2. The Yiddish King Lear, directed by Harry Tomashefsky in 1934, is an 80-minute American movie in Yiddish with English subtitles. It is based on a play in Yiddish ( Der Yudisher Kenig Lir) by Jacob Gordin, a Russian Jewish playwright and poet, written in 1892.

  3. The Yiddish King Lear: Directed by Harry Thomashefsky. With Esther Adler, Jacob Bergreen, Miriam Grossman, Maurice Krohner. Setting off from Vilna to spend his last days in the Holy Land, an arrogant old man spurns the youngest of his three daughters and leaves his fortune in the wrong hands.

    • (24)
    • Drama
    • Harry Thomashefsky
    • 1935
  4. After Chariff orders Toibelle out and also tells Hanna Lear to get out when she cries, David leaves with Shomoi. Having lost his eyesight, David wanders with Shomoi asking charity. Later, at Joffe and Toibelle's wedding, Joffe refuses Chariff's gift of a gold watch and chain and orders him to leave when Chariff derides Toibelle's dream of building a hospital for the poor.

  5. THE YIDDISH KING LEAR. Directed by. Harry Thomashefsky. United States, 1934. Drama. 70. Synopsis. Setting off from Vilna to spend his last days in the Holy Land, an ...

  6. 2 de ene. de 2018 · Written in 1892, Jacob Gordin's Yiddish King Lear is a legend of the Yiddish theater. It was the signature role of the great actor Jacob Adler (father of Stella Adler). Gordin’s groundbreaking opus was a fresh interpretation of the story of a patriarch with three daughters who are unkind and disloyal to him.

  7. The 1935 production of prominent Yiddish playwright Jacob Gordin’s 1892 play “The Yiddish King Lear” will be screened in Manhattan at CUNY’s Martin E. Segal Theatre Center on December 15.