Fiddler on the Roof
is a musical with music by Jerry Bock, lyrics by Sheldon Harnick, and book by Joseph Stein, set in Tsarist Russia in 1905. It is based on Tevye and his Daughters
(or Tevye the Milkman
) and other tales by Sholem Aleichem. The story centers on Tevye, the father of five daughters, and his attempts to maintain his family and religious traditions while outside influences encroach upon their lives. He must cope with both the strong-willed actions of his three older daughters—each one's choice of husband moves farther away from the customs of her faith—and with the edict of the Tsar that evicts the Jews from their village.
The original Broadway production of the show, which opened in 1964, was the first run of a musical in history to surpass the 3,000 performance mark. Fiddler
held the record for the longest-running Broadway musical for almost 10 years until Grease
surpassed its run. It remains Broadway's thirteenth longest-running show in history. The production was extraordinarily profitable and highly acclaimed. It was nominated for ten Tony Awards, winning nine, including Best Musical, score, book, direction and choreography. It spawned four Broadway revivals, a successful 1971 film adaptation, and the show has enjoyed enduring international popularity. It is also a very popular choice for school and community productions. [1]
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Background
Fiddler on the Roof
was originally entitled
Tevye
. It is based on
Tevye and his Daughters
(or
Tevye the Milkman
) and other tales by
Sholem Aleichem which he wrote in
Yiddish and published in 1894.
[2]
The musical's title stems from a painting by
Marc Chagall,
[3] one of many surreal paintings he created of Eastern European Jewish life, often including a fiddler. The Fiddler is a metaphor for survival, through tradition and joyfulness, in a life of uncertainty and imbalance.
Productions
1964 Broadway production
The original Broadway production opened on September 22, 1964 at the
Imperial Theatre, transferred in 1967 to the
Majestic Theatre and in 1970 to
The Broadway Theatre, and ran for a record-setting total of 3,242 performances. The production was directed and choreographed by
Jerome Robbins — his last original Broadway staging.
[4] The set, designed in the style of
Marc Chagall's paintings, was by
Boris Aronson.
[5] Original producer
Fred Coe was replaced by producer
Harold Prince. The cast included
Zero Mostel as Tevye the milkman,
Maria Karnilova as his wife Golde (each of whom won a Tony for their performances),
Beatrice Arthur and later
Florence Stanley as Yente the
matchmaker,
Austin Pendleton as Motel,
Bert Convy as Perchik the student revolutionary,
Gino Conforti as the fiddler, and
Julia Migenes as Hodel. Joanna Merlin originated the role of Tzeitel, which was later assumed by
Bette Midler and Mimi Turque during the original run. Carol Sawyer was Fruma-Sarah,
Adrienne Barbeau took a turn as Hodel, and
Pia Zadora played the youngest daughter, Bielke. Peg Murray made an extended appearance as Golde, while other stage actors who have played Tevye include
Herschel Bernardi (in the original Broadway run),
Theodore Bikel, and
Leonard Nimoy. Mostel's understudy in the original production,
Paul Lipson, went on to appear as Tevye in more performances than any other actor, clocking over 2,000 performances in the role in the original run as well as several revivals.
[6]
The production earned $1,574 for every dollar invested in it.
[7]
1967 London production
The original
West End production opened on February 16, 1967 at
Her Majesty's Theatre and played for 2,030 performances. It starred
Chaim Topol, who would also play Tevye in the 1971 film adaptation and the 1990 Broadway revival, and
Miriam Karlin as Golde.
Alfie Bass and
Lex Goudsmit eventually took over as Tevye. The show was revived in London in for short seasons in 1983 at The Apollo Victoria Theatre and in 1994 at The London Palladium.
1976, 1981 and 1990 Broadway revivals
The first Broadway revival opened on December 28, 1976 and ran for 176 performances at the
Winter Garden Theatre.
Zero Mostel starred as Tevye. Robbins directed and choreographed. A second Broadway revival opened on July 9, 1981 and played for a limited run (53 performances) at
Lincoln Center's
New York State Theater. It starred
Herschel Bernardi as Tevye and Karnilova as Golde. Other cast members included
Liz Larsen,
Fyvush Finkel,
Lawrence Leritz and
Paul Lipson. Robbins directed and choreographed. The third Broadway revival opened on November 18, 1990 and ran for 241 performances at the
George Gershwin Theatre. Topol starred as Tevye, and
Marcia Lewis was Golde. Robbins' production was reproduced by Ruth Mitchell and choreographer Sammy Dallas Bayes. The production won the Tony Award for Best Revival.
2004 Broadway revival
A fourth Broadway revival opened on February 26, 2004 and ran for 36 previews and 781 performances at the
Minskoff Theatre.
Alfred Molina, and later
Harvey Fierstein, starred as Tevye; and
Randy Graff, and later
Andrea Martin and
Rosie O'Donnell, was Golde. It was directed by
David Leveaux. The production was nominated for six Tonys but did not win any.
1983, 1994 and 2007 London revivals
Fiddler
was first revived in London in 1983 at the
Apollo Victoria Theatre (a four-month season starring Topol) and again in 1994 at the
London Palladium for two months and then on tour, again starring Topol, and directed and choreographed by Sammy Dallas Bayes, recreating the Robbins production.
[8]
After a two-month tryout at the Crucible Theatre in
Sheffield, England, a London revival opened on May 19, 2007 at the
Savoy Theatre starring
Henry Goodman as Tevye, Beverley Klein as Golde, Alexandra Silber as Hodel, Damian Humbley as Perchik and
Victor McGuire as Lazar Wolf. The production was directed by Lindsay Posner. Robbins' choreography was recreated by Sammy Dallas Bayes (who did the same for the 1990 Broadway revival), with additional choreography by Kate Flatt.
[9]
2003 and 2008 British national tours
A 2003 national tour played for seven months, with a radical design, directed by
Julian Woolford and choreographed by Chris Hocking. The production featured a minimalist setting, and the costumes and set were monochromatic. Fruma-Sarah was represented by a 12 foot puppet. This production was revived in 2008 starring
Joe McGann and is due to tour until September 2008.
[10]
2009 North American tour
Topol in 'Fiddler on the Roof': The Farewell Tour
opened on January 20, 2009 in
Wilmington, Delaware. This production does not include the song "The Rumor."
[11]
Synopsis
Act I
Tevye, a poor milkman with five daughters, explains the customs of the Jewish people and their lives in the Russian
shtetl
of Anatevka in 1905, where life is as precarious as the perch of a fiddler on a roof ("Tradition"). At Tevye's home, everyone is busy preparing for the
Sabbath meal. His sharp-tongued wife, Golde, orders their daughters, Tzeitel, Hodel, Chava, Shprintze and Bielke, about their tasks. Yente, the village
matchmaker, arrives to tell Golde that Lazar Wolf, the wealthy butcher, a widower older than Tevye, wants to wed Tzeitel, the eldest daughter. The next two daughters, Hodel and Chava, are excited about Yente's visit, but Tzeitel is unenthusiastic ("Matchmaker, Matchmaker"). A girl from a poor family must take whatever husband Yente brings, and Tzeitel wants to marry her childhood friend, Motel the tailor.
Tevye is delivering milk, pulling the cart himself, as his horse is lame. He asks God, who it would hurt "
If I Were a Rich Man"? Avram, the bookseller, has news from the outside world about
pogroms and expulsions. A stranger, Perchik, hears their conversation and scolds them for doing nothing more than talk. The men dismiss Perchik as a radical, but Tevye invites him home for the Sabbath meal and offers him food and a room in exchange for tutoring his two youngest daughters. Golde tells Tevye to meet Lazar after the Sabbath but does not tell him why, knowing that Tevye does not like Lazar. Tzeitel is afraid that Yente will find her a husband before Motel asks Tevye for her hand. But Motel resists: he is afraid of Tevye's temper, and tradition says that a matchmaker arranges marriages. Motel is also very poor and is saving up to buy a sewing machine before he approaches Tevye, to show that he can support a wife. The family gathers around for the "Sabbath Prayer".
After the Sabbath, Tevye meets Lazar at Mordcha's inn, assuming mistakenly that Lazar wants to buy his cow. Once the misunderstanding is cleared up, Tevye agrees to let Lazar marry Tzeitel – with a rich butcher, his daughter will never want for anything. All join in the celebration of Lazar's good fortune; even the Russian youths at the inn join in the celebration and show off their dancing skills ("To Life"). Outside the inn, Tevye bumps into the Russian Constable, who has jurisdiction over the Jews in the town. The Constable warns him that there is going to be a "demonstration" in the coming weeks (a
euphemism for a minor
pogrom). The Constable has sympathy for the Jewish community but is powerless to prevent the violence. The next morning, a
hungover Tevye delivers the news to the family that he has agreed that Tzeitel will marry Lazar Wolf. Golde is overjoyed, but Tzeitel is devastated and begs Tevye not to force her. Motel arrives and tells Tevye that he is the perfect match for Tzeitel and that he and Tzeitel gave each other a pledge to marry. He promises that Tzeitel will not starve as his wife. Tevye is stunned and outraged at this breach of tradition, but impressed that the timid tailor has stood up for himself. After some soul searching ("Tevye's Monologue"), Tevye agrees to let them marry; but he worries about how to break the news to Golde. An overjoyed Motel celebrates with Tzeitel ("Miracle of Miracles").
In bed with Golde, Tevye pretends to be waking from a nightmare. Golde offers to interpret his dream, and Tevye "describes" it ("Tevye's Dream"). Golde's grandmother Tzeitel returns from the grave to bless the marriage of her namesake, but to Motel, not to Lazar Wolf. Lazar's formidable late wife,
Fruma-Sarah, rises from her grave to warn, in graphic terms, of severe retribution if Tzeitel marries Lazar. The superstitious Golde is terrified, and she quickly counsels that Tzeitel must marry Motel. While returning from town, Tevye's middle daughter, the bookish Chava, is teased and intimidated by some Russian youths, but one of them,
Fyedka, protects her, dismissing the others. He offers Chava the loan of a book, and a secret relationship begins.
The wedding day of Tzeitel and Motel arrives, and all the Jews join the ceremony ("Sunrise, Sunset") and the celebration ("The Wedding Dance"). Lazar gives a fine gift, but an argument arises with Tevye over the broken agreement. Perchik ends the tiff by breaking another tradition: he crosses the barrier between the men and women to dance with Tevye's daughter Hodel. The celebration ends abruptly when a group of Russians rides into the village to perform the "demonstration". They disrupt the party, damaging the wedding gifts and wounding Perchik, who attempts to fight back, and wreaking more destruction in the village. Ever practical, Tevye advises everyone to clean up the mess.
Act II
Months later, Perchik tells Hodel he must return to Kiev to work for the
revolution. He proposes marriage, admitting that he loves her, and says that he will send for her. She agrees ("Now I Have Everything"). They tell Tevye that they are engaged, and he is appalled that they are flouting tradition by making their own match, especially as Perchik is leaving. When he forbids the marriage, Perchik and Hodel inform him that they do not seek his permission, only his
blessing. After more soul searching, Tevye relents – the world is changing, and he must change with it ("Tevye's Rebuttal"). He informs the young couple that he gives them his blessing
and
his permission.
Tevye explains these events to an astonished Golde. "Love", he says, "it's the new style". Tevye asks Golde, "Do You Love Me?" After dismissing Tevye's question as foolish, she eventually admits that, after 25 years of living and struggling together and raising five daughters, she does. Other events are moving apace. Yente tells Tzeitel that she saw Chava with Fyedka. News spreads quickly in Anatevka ("The Rumor"). Perchik has been arrested and exiled to
Siberia, and Hodel is determined to join him there. At the railway station, she explains to her father that her home is with her beloved, wherever he may be, yet she will always love her family ("Far from the Home I Love").
Weeks pass, Motel has purchased a used sewing machine, and he and Tzeitel have had a baby. Chava finally gathers the courage to ask Tevye to allow her marriage to Fyedka. Again Tevye reaches deep into his soul, but marriage outside the Jewish
faith is a line that he cannot cross. He forbids Chava ever to speak to Fyedka again. When Golde brings the news that Chava has
eloped with Fyedka, Tevye wonders where he went wrong ("Little Bird, Little Chaveleh"). Chava returns and tries to reason with him, but he refuses to speak to her and tells the rest of the family to consider her dead. Meanwhile, rumors are spreading of the Russians expelling Jews from their villages. While the villagers are gathered, the Constable arrives to tell everyone that they have three days to pack up and leave the town. In shock, they reminisce about the miserable town, and how hard it will be to leave what has for so long been their home ("Anatevka").
As the Jews leave Anatevka, Chava and Fyedka stop to tell her family that they too are leaving for
Krakow, unwilling to remain in a place that could do such things to others. Tevye still will not talk to her, but when Tzeitel says goodbye to Chava, Tevye prompts her to add "God be with you." Motel and Tzietel go to Poland but will join the family when they have saved up enough money. As Tevye, Golde and his two youngest daughters leave the village for America, the fiddler begins to play. Tevye beckons with a nod, and the fiddler follows them out of the village.
Musical numbers
;Act I
- Prologue: Tradition — Tevye and the Company
- Matchmaker — Tzeitel, Hodel and Chava
- If I Were a Rich Man — Tevye
- Sabbath Prayer — Tevye, Golde and the Company
- To Life — Tevye, Lazar Wolf and the Company
- Tevye's Monologue — Tevye
- Miracle of Miracles — Motel
- Tevye's Dream — Tevye, Golde, Grandma Tzeitel, Fruma-Sarah and the Company
- Sunrise, Sunset — Tevye, Golde, Perchik, Hodel and the Company
- The Bottle Dance — Instrumental
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; Act II
- Now I Have Everything — Perchik and Hodel
- Tevye's Rebuttal — Tevye
- Do You Love Me? — Tevye and Golde
- The Rumor — Yente and villagers
- Far From the Home I Love — Hodel
- Chaveleh (Little Bird) — Tevye
- Anatevka — The Company
- The Leave Taking - Tevye, Family and Fiddler
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- The 2004 revival featured a song sung by Yente and some women of the village entitled "Topsy Turvy," discussing the disappearing role of the matchmaker in society.
Awards
Tony Awards
Original Broadway production
- Best Musical (winner)
- Composer and lyricist – Jerry Bock and Sheldon Harnick (winner)
- Leading actor in a Musical – Zero Mostel (winner)
- Featured actress – Maria Karnilova (winner)
- Author – Joseph Stein (winner)
- Producer – Harold Prince (winner)
- Director – Jerome Robbins (winner)
- Choreographer – Jerome Robbins (winner)
- Costume designer – Patricia Zipprodt (winner)
- Scenic Design – Boris Aronson (nominee)
- 1972 Special Award – on becoming the longest-running musical in Broadway history
1981 Broadway revival
- Best Actor in a Musical – Herschel Bernardi (nominee)
1990 Broadway revival
- Best Revival (winner)
- Best Actor in a Musical – Topol (nominee)
2004 Broadway revival
- Best Revival of a Musical (nominee)
- Best Actor in a Musical – Alfred Molina (nominee)
- Best Featured Actor in a Musical – John Cariani (nominee)
- Best Scenic Design (nominee)
- Best Lighting Design (nominee)
- Best Orchestrations (nominee)
Drama Desk Awards
2004 Broadway revival
- Outstanding Revival of a Musical (nominee)
- Outstanding Actor in a Musical – Alfred Molina (nominee)
- Outstanding Set Design of a Musical (nominee)
Film adaptation
The film version was released in 1971, and won three
Academy Awards, including one for arranger-conductor
John Williams.
Chaim Topol played the role of Tevye.
A television adaptation was once in development with
ABC, to star
Victor Garber; however, there has been no news on this project, in recent years.
[12]
Cultural influence
{{#ifexist:Category:Articles needing additional references from December 2007
The musical's popularity has led to numerous references in popular media, including television shows (for example, in the season 5 episode of
Gilmore Girls
entitled "Jews and Chinese Food"), films (
Mrs. Doubtfire
(1993)) and even other Broadway shows (
Spamalot
, in the middle of the song "You Won't Succeed on Broadway", includes a "Grail dance", which sends up the "bottle dance" in
Fiddler's
wedding scene). Other cultural references include the following:
;Parodies
- In the late 1960s, Mad Magazine
published a parody of Fiddler
called Antenna on the Roof
, which speculated about the lives of Tevye's descendants living in an assimilated 1960s suburban America.
- Mel Brooks' 2001 Broadway musical The Producers
includes a musical number in the style of Jerry Bock; to make the spoof explicit, the scene includes an actual fiddler on a nearby roof.
- The Electric Company
had a spoof skit about a village fiddler with a fear of heights, so he is deemed "Fiddler on the Chair."
- The H. P. Lovecraft Historical Society published a parody of Fiddler on the Roof
called A Shoggoth on the Roof
, which incorporates the works of H. P. Lovecraft. It was performed in Swedish (sw. En shoggoth på taket
) during a Lovecraft convention called MiskatoniCon in 2005. It was finally performed in English at , the Trinity College, Dublin Gamers society convention, in February 2007, but with a new musical score.
- The original Broadway cast of the musical Avenue Q
and the Broadway 2004 revival cast of Fiddler on the Roof
collaborated for a Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS benefit and produced an approximately 10-minute-long show entitled "Avenue Jew" that incorporated characters from both shows, including puppets.
- Paul Jennings's story "Piddler on the Roof" is a pun on the musical's name.
- Chabad.org kicked off their with a from Fiddler on the Roof
called "Telethon!" rather than "Tradition!"
- In the Family Guy episode When You Wish Upon a Weinstein, "Fiddler on the Roof" is mentioned where William Shatner played a role as a villager in it, only to yell "Khaaaaan!" from Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan during the show.
;Song covers
- In 1964, jazz saxophonist Cannonball Adderley recorded an album entitled Fiddler on the Roof
, which featured jazz arrangements of eight songs from the musical. The album featured Nat Adderley (trumpet), Charles Lloyd (tenor saxphone, flute), Joe Zawinul (piano), Samuel Jones (bass), and Louis Hayes (drums) and was released by Capitol Records.
- In 1999, Knitting Factory Records released the Knitting on the Roof
compilation CD, featuring covers of Fiddler
songs by alternative bands such as The Residents, Negativland, and The Magnetic Fields.
- Indie rock band Bright Eyes recorded an adaptation of "Sunrise, Sunset" on their 2000 album Fevers and Mirrors
.
- In 2005, Melbourne punk band Yidcore released a reworking of the entire show called Fiddling on Ya Roof
.
- The Santa Clara Vanguard Drum and Bugle Corps often performs music from Fiddler on the Roof
, and the "Bottle Dance" has become one of the songs connected with the corps.
- In 1993, "If I Were a Rich Man" was covered as a ragga version by the British Louchie Lou & Michie One, as "Rich Girl". Lady Saw covered it in 1999, as well as Gwen Stefani and Eve for Stefani's debut solo album Love. Angel. Music. Baby.
in 2004.
- In 2008, "If I Were A Rich Man" was covered by the Capitol Steps poking fun at Illinois politics, and especially then-Governor Rod Blagojevich.
- The Big Bang Theory
episode "The Grasshopper Experiment“ refers several times to the musical. At the end of the episode Sheldon Cooper sings "To Life".
Notes
References
- ''TIME magazine'' reported in its May 26, 2008 issue, p. 51, that this musical ranked as the seventh most frequently produced musical by U.S. high schools in 2007.
- Information from the MTI website
- Miri Ben-Shalome, Kaleidoscope with Stewart Lane speaking to Miri Ben-Shalom on his Fiddler on the Roof Production, All About Jewish Theatre, undated. Accessed online 6 December 2007.
- He staged Jerome Robbins' Broadway, a "greatest hits" collection of some of his most famous stagings, at the Imperial Theatre on February 26, 1989, which ran for 633 performances.
- Rich, p. 172
- Paul Lipson, 82, Who Appeared As Tevye Over 2,000 Times
- Kantor, p. 302: "The 1960s was the decade that nurtured long-running blockbusters in unprecedented quantities: ten musicals passed the rarefied 1,000 performance mark, three of them passed the 2,000 mark (''Hello, Dolly!'', a Merrick smash, grossed $27 million on Broadway), and one, ''Fiddler on the Roof'', passed the 3,000 mark, earning back $1,574 for every dollar put into it."
- Information on the 1994 production
- Information about the 2007 London production of ''Fiddler on the Roof''
- thisistheatre listing for 2008 tour
- Official 2009 Tour Website
- Movie Watch - Fiddler on the Roof, ''thefutoncritic.tv''