Beautiful music, played by our beautiful people, so many of whom didn't survive. So glad that this recording of their joy and expressiveness has been preserved.
I read a comment on another of Molly Picon's Yiddish films made in Poland during the 30s that all of the other actors were killed during the Holocaust.
Sooo, what was it that was dropped that the musician on the far left had reached down to pick up and that the fiddler covered / stepped on and covered with his shoe. I hope it was not money. :(
Beautiful music, played by our beautiful people, so many of whom didn't survive. So glad that this recording of their joy and expressiveness has been preserved.
I am reading the book "The daughter of Auschwitz", by Tova Friedman. She said her father was an extra in this film, so I came here to see it. :)
Lovely but thinking oif Poland in ‘39 . That life was destroyed😢
Athletico Paranaense ❤🖤🌪❤🖤🌪❤🖤🌪
Dale
Consider the fate of the actors in this then budding Yiddish film industry
I read a comment on another of Molly Picon's Yiddish films made in Poland during the 30s that all of the other actors were killed during the Holocaust.
It is likely that only 4 out of 13 actors from this film survived the war
Me too! Page 48-49.
Sooo, what was it that was dropped that the musician on the far left had reached down to pick up and that the fiddler covered / stepped on and covered with his shoe. I hope it was not money. :(
Yes, it was money. They were competing for it.
The fiddler is a woman, played by Molly Picon. It's part of the story. A young woman disguises herself as a man to play with a klezmer band.
@@bluebee5266 not so much competing, as setting terms. Divided equally between all. I think.
Trzy lata przed zagładą...