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  1. 12 de oct. de 2021 · Romeo and Juliet in Yiddish accesses Yiddish from a wide range of perspectives, deploying language, Jewish rituals, Yiddish language klezmer music and tradition to underscore the relevancies of Shakespeare’s text to ex-Orthodox constituencies.

  2. 8 de jul. de 2011 · July 7, 2011. “Romeo & Juliet in Yiddish” tucks Shakespeare’s tale of greatest woe into a story of intra-Judaic culture clash in present-day Brooklyn. The film, written and directed by Eve...

  3. 8 de jul. de 2011 · With Lazer Weiss, Melissa Weisz, Mendy Zafir, Bubbles Yoeli Weiss. Romeo and Juliet in Yiddish is a gritty, funny love story about charismatic and wayward Satmar Hasid youth who encounter Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet when they help a jaded NYC emergency room nurse with the play's translation.

    • (60)
    • Comedy, Drama
    • Eve Annenberg
    • 2011-07-08
  4. Like her husband, Capulet, Lady Capulet is obsessed with appearances and with advancing Juliets social station. She is ignorant of her daughter’s true feelings most of the time, and, even when confronted with them, attempts to steamroll Juliets emotions and urge her daughter to put on a brave face, accept fate, and comply with her ...

  5. www.playshakespeare.com › romeo-and-julietLady Capulet

    Lady Capulet is approximately 28, and makes mock of her aged husband’s pretensions to fighting. She is not entirely certain of how to broach the subject of marriage to her daughter, and is rather over-elaborate in her instructions of how to look at Paris during the night’s feast. She is Tybalt’s aunt, and much devoted to him; when the ...

  6. Lady Capulet: Solman Wiser ... Capulet / Faigie's Father: Luzer Twersky ... Paris: Aaron Keller ... Aaron / Peter: Aron Keller ... Aaron / Peter: David Germano ... Zalman: Noam Harary ... Mohammed: Reyna Schaechter ... Juliet's Sister / Rivke: James Rutledge ... Attorney: Dennis Wit ... Professor: Lynda Rodolitz

  7. 13 de ene. de 2011 · In Eve Annenberg’s ­cinematic retelling of “­Romeo and Juliet” the warring Montague and Capulet clans have been replaced by Hasidic sects. And Juliets famous “Wherefore art thou?” soliloquy is delivered from a Brooklyn fire escape, in Yiddish.