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David Pinski

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Jmabel (talk | contribs) at 05:04, 25 March 2005 (A few biographical facts gleaned by rereading Liptzin, and one from a web source). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Poster: the Federal Theatre presents Pinski's "The Tailor Becomes a Storekeeper" (Chicago, 1930s)

David Pinski (18721959) was a Yiddish language playwright. At a time when Eastern Europe was only beginning to experience the industrial revolution, Pinski was the first to introduce to a its stage a drama about urban Jewish workers; a dramatist of ideas, he was notable also for writing about human sexuality in than previously unknown in Yiddish theater. He was also notable among early Yiddish playwrights in having stronger connections to German language literary traditions than Russian.

He was born in Mahiliou, then part of Imperial Russia, now in Belarus. As a young man in Warsaw (then also under Russian control, now the capital of Poland), he established a strong reputation as a writer before moving to Berlin, Germany in 1896.

In 1904, in New York City, he nearly received a doctorate from Columbia University, but his play Family Tsvi premiered on the day set for his Ph.D. examination. He failed to show up for the exam, and never received his doctorate. [1]

His naturalistic tragedy Isaac Sheftel (1899) tells of a technically creative weaver, whose employer scorns him, but exploits his inventions. He finally smashes the machines he has created, and falls into drunken self-destruction. Like many of Pinski's central characters, he is something other than a traditional hero or even a traditional tragic hero.

His dark comedy Der Oitzer (The Treasure), written in Yiddish 1902-1906 but first staged in German, by Max Reinhardt in Berlin in 1910, tells of a sequence of events in which the people of a town dig up and desecrate their own graveyard because they have come to believe there is a treasure buried somewhere in it. Rich and poor, secular and religious, all participate in the frenzy; a supernatural climax involves the souls of the dead, annoyed by the disruption.

Family Tsvi (1904), written in the wake of the Kishinev pogrom, is a call for Jews not to passively accept violence against them. In this tragedy, various Jews—a religious zealot, a socialist from the Bund, a Zionist, and a disillusioned assimilationist—resist the onslaught in different ways, and for different ideologies, but they all resist. The play could not be officially published openly performed in Imperial Russia, but circulated surreptitiously, and was even given clandestine amateur productions.

Yenkel der Schmid (Yankel the Smith, 1906) set a new level of frankness in Yiddish-language theater in dealing with sexual passions. Although Yiddish theater was more open to such themes than the English-language theater of the same era, it had mostly entered by way of works translated from miscellaneous European languages. The central couple of the play must balance their passion for each other against their marriages to other people. Ultimately, both return to their marriages, in what Sol Liptzin describes as "an acceptance of family living that neither negated the joy of the flesh nor avoided moral responsibility". [Liptzin, 1972, 86] A film based on the play was made in 1938, filmed at a Catholic monastery in New Jersey; it starred Moyshe Oysher, was the film premier of Herschel Bernardi (playing Yankel as a boy), and is also known as The Singing Blacksmith. It has also been adapted by Caraid O'Brien as the English-language play Jake the Mechanic.

He continued to explore similar themes in a series of plays, Gabri Un Die Froen (Gabri and the Women, 1908), Mary Magdalene (1910), and Professor Brenner (1911), the last of which deals with an older man in love with a young woman, again breaking Jewish theatrical tradition, because such relationships had always been considered acceptable in arranged marriages for financial or similar reasons, but socially taboo as a matter of emotional fascination.

During this same period, the one-act messianic tragedy Der Eibiger Yied (The Eternal Jew, 1906) is set at the time of the destruction of the Second Temple. A messiah is born on the same day as the destruction of the Temple, but borne away in a storm; a prophet must wander the Earth searching for him. In Moscow, in 1918 this was to be the first play ever performed by the Habima Theater, now the national theater of Israel. He revisited a similar theme in 1919 in Der Shtumer Moshiakh (The Mute Messiah); he would revisit messianic themes in further plays about Simon Bar-Kokhba, Shlomo Molcho, and Sattatai Zvi.

His work took a new turn with the highly allegorical Die Bergshteiger (The Mountain Climbers, 1912); the "mountain" in question is life itself.

During the period between the World Wars, he wrote numerous plays, mostly on biblical subjects, but continuing to engage with many of his earlier themes. For example King David and His Wives (1923?) looks at the biblical David at various points in his life: an naively idealistic, pious youth, a somewhat jaded monarch, and finally a wise and deeply pious old man.

In 1949 he emigrated to the new state of Israel; already in his eighties when he emigrated, while living in Israel he wrote a play about Samson and one about King Saul. However, this was a period in which Yiddish theater barely existed anywhere (even less so than today), and these were not staged.

The Singing Blacksmith at IMDb David Pinski at the Internet Broadway Database

References

  • Liptzin, Sol, A History of Yiddish Literature, Jonathan David Publishers, Middle Village, NY, 1972, ISBN 0-8246-0124-6, 84 et. seq.