Broken Barriers (1919 film)
Broken Barriers aka Khava חוה n is a 1919 American Yiddish silent film, based on author Sholem Aleichem's stock character טבֿיה דער מילכיקער Tevye der milkhiker.
Broken Barriers - A Love Drama of the Ukraine | |
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Directed by | Charles E. Davenport |
Produced by | Jules Burnstein |
Written by | Maurice Schwartz |
Starring | Maurice Schwartz |
Distributed by | Zion Films Inc., Leopold Khelmann (father of Hannah) |
Release date |
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Country | United States |
Language | Yiddish Russian |
Cast
- Alice Hastings – Khava (Chava)
- Alexander Tenenholtz – Fedka (Fyedka )
- Giacomo Masuroff – Tobias (Tevye)
- Billie Wilson – Khava's Mother (Golde)
- Sonia Radin – Parasha
- Ivan, Fedka's Father
- Hanna (Ganna Kehlmann) Kay – Khavah's Sister (Tzeitel)
- Raymond (John Raymond) Friedgen – Fedka's chum (friend)
Production
The script was adapted by Maurice Schwartz from the Sholem Aleichem play based on his own book. The film was made the same year (1919) Schwartz directed his stage production of Tevye.[1][2] The two 1919 projects were used to create the 1939 version of Tevya.
Release and restoration
Long thought to be a lost film, an original copy was donated to The National Center for Jewish Film at Brandeis University for restoration by a descendant of one of the actors.[3] The same story was the basis of the 1964 stage musical Fiddler on the Roof and its 1971 film version, though the fate of Chava in the ending was changed for the change in attitudes by that time.
See also
References
- Bridge of Light: Yiddish Film Between Two Worlds by J Hobermann. New York, 1991, ISBN 9781584658702. pp. 53–54.
- Laughter Through Tears: The Yiddish Cinema by Judith N Goldberg. 1983. ISBN 9780838630747. pp. 97–98.
- "Broken Barriers (1919)". IMDb. Archived from the original on November 25, 2016. Retrieved July 1, 2018.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Broken Barriers (1919 film). |
- Broken Barriers on IMDb
- Marat Grinberg, Rolling in Dust: Maurice Schwartz's Tevye (1939) And Its Ambiguities.
- Thomas Pryor, A Ukrainian Village Is Erected on a Long Island Farm for a Yiddish Film Drama, The New York Times, July 30, 1939.