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Living A Double Life – The Jazz Singer (1980)
The story of the jazz singer is about aan who wants to live a more autheoc and creative version of himself, while feeling suppressed by his father and others around him. Together well explore this retelling with Neil Diamond, and why this story continues to resonate for decades.
CHAPTERS
0:00 The Jazz Singer
1:58 Jesse's Story
5:33 Living A Double Life
10:44 Intermarriage
12:35 Know where you come from, to know where you're going
18:50 Legacy
22:50 Why It Resonates
Переглядів: 492

Відео

Why Am I Suffering - A Serious Man (2009)
Переглядів 2 тис.Місяць тому
'A Serious Man' explores a Jewish perspective of suffering, through the story of Larry Gopnik. This Coen Brother movie is a great way to explore some deep topics in time for the Jewish high holidays. CHAPTERS 0:00 Theodicy of A Serious Man 2:50 The Book of Job 6:04 Duality 9:50 The Uncertainty Principle 12:12 A Serious Man 14:36 Simplicity
Why Fiddler On The Roof is misunderstood
Переглядів 207 тис.3 місяці тому
Tevye opens the movie with a song about tradition, yet the town and his children are changing. Explore the story of how tradition must bend in changing times without breaking, in Norman Jewison's 1971 movie: Fiddler On The Roof. THE MOVIE ua-cam.com/video/Nhj-EgDGhh4/v-deo.htmlsi=pgPs-nPHlh2MUXD_ ABOUT FIDDLER ua-cam.com/video/2t2mDLr535A/v-deo.htmlsi=mVIep6hpoRfkD9eq ua-cam.com/video/jISwIV92g...
Jewish American vs American Jew - An American Pickle (2020)
Переглядів 43 тис.3 місяці тому
A man falls into a barrel of pickles and wakes up a 100 years later to meet his great grandson. This silly story addresses a deep question of: what does it mean to be a Jew in America? ua-cam.com/video/FqxG4OJmaE0/v-deo.html&pp=ygUPYW1lcmljYW4gcGlja2xl CHAPTERS 0:00 Hershel Greenbaum 1:41 Bog Mummies 2:50 Schlupsk 4:06 Rip Van Winkle Moment 6:34 Jewish Integration in America 9:31 Mourning 14:26...
Boro Park History | walking tour
Переглядів 1,6 тис.4 місяці тому
Follow me on a working tour of historic Jewish neighborhood - Borough Park in Brooklyn, NYC as we get to know the TWO Jewish neighborhoods in ONE area. CHAPTERS 0:00 2 Neighborhoods 1:50 Borough Park 3:10 Yeshiva Etz Chaim 5:03 Temple Emmanuel & The Y 6:33 Menorah Temple 7:09 Temple Beth El 8:03 Chevra Anshei Lubawitz 11:08 Shomrei Emunah 12:30 Yankel Am Haaretz 13:13 Shomer Shabbos & Lieberman...
Growing up in the Orthodox Jewish world - The Chosen (1981)
Переглядів 8 тис.4 місяці тому
Follow the journey of Danny Malter, the Hasidic Rebbe's son who finds his own way in Judaism as he balances tradition and modernity in his pursuit of becoming a psychologist. The movie is based on the book by Chaim Potok (1967). ua-cam.com/video/CZk_YoIuRJw/v-deo.htmlsi=BO11juvlwWNz31wH CHAPTERS 0:00 - Brooklyn 1:42 - Hasidim 4:57 - Mr Malter 6:54 - Reuven and Danny's Friendship 10:37 - Zionism...
Jewish Stereotypes - Mad Adventure of Rabbi Jacob (1973)
Переглядів 7 тис.5 місяців тому
Follow the story of Victor Pivert (Louis De Funes) who gets taken hostage and dresses as a Jewish Rabbi to escape the police and assassins. By dressing up as a Jew, Pivert must learn the difference between mere STEREOTYPES and meaningful Jewish IDENTITY. ua-cam.com/video/ddsvm vl4Q/v-deo.htmlsi=wQ0xyhMgPYDsYu7X CHAPTERS 0:00 What does a Jew look like? 1:15 Victor Pivert 2:17 Side one 5:08 Solom...
Why I'm starting a JEWISH FILM CLUB
Переглядів 2,1 тис.5 місяців тому
Why I'm starting a JEWISH FILM CLUB
Being Jewish in America - Hester Street (1975)
Переглядів 23 тис.5 місяців тому
From the Lower East Side to today, Jews in America seek to find a balance between tradition and modernity. The film Hester Street (1975) offers three perspectives on this question. ua-cam.com/video/I3HYmjcOr5Q/v-deo.htmlsi=OqyAjkC5hiz4tA70 CHAPTERS 0:00 - Hester Street 0:27 - Lower East Side 3:26 - Greenhorn 6:21 - Being a Yankee 8:52 - No Sheitels, No Tichels 12:33 - A Pox on Columbus 15:06 - ...
Jewish late night dancing in the street | Lag Baomer
Переглядів 2 тис.5 місяців тому
Jewish late night dancing in the street | Lag Baomer
Enhance Your Passover Seder with Songs, Art, and Frogs
Переглядів 3547 місяців тому
Here are 5 tips and strategies to make your Passover Seder more fun and engaging for guests of all ages. We will discuss choosing the right Haggadah, and memorable activities you can do like singing songs to demonstrating parts of the Exodus story. ua-cam.com/play/PL_CuLGwLHSZR3l5VNUzkhvEUdWB70Mev_.html&si=r-EXeDwVjE3jeyV7 CHAPTERS 0:00 - Going To A Seder 0:56 - Choose Your Books 2:15 - INTRIGU...
Solar Eclipse In Jewish Tradition
Переглядів 6457 місяців тому
Solar Eclipse In Jewish Tradition
Ex-Priest Who Forged Jewish Books
Переглядів 1,5 тис.8 місяців тому
Ex-Priest Who Forged Jewish Books
STRANGEST Haggadah Ever Made | Passover
Переглядів 3568 місяців тому
STRANGEST Haggadah Ever Made | Passover
What was the CITIFIELD ASIFA | Clip
Переглядів 8368 місяців тому
What was the CITIFIELD ASIFA | Clip
What Jewish History teaches us about the INTERNET | Clip
Переглядів 3089 місяців тому
What Jewish History teaches us about the INTERNET | Clip
The irony of Hanukkah Songs
Переглядів 71311 місяців тому
The irony of Hanukkah Songs
The Internet Asifa Documentary
Переглядів 71211 місяців тому
The Internet Asifa Documentary
How I'm Embracing Jewish Traditions
Переглядів 1,9 тис.Рік тому
How I'm Embracing Jewish Traditions
How Yom Kippur Changed Movies Forever | The Jazz Singer (1927)
Переглядів 1,2 тис.Рік тому
How Yom Kippur Changed Movies Forever | The Jazz Singer (1927)
The History of Rosh Hashanah
Переглядів 380Рік тому
The History of Rosh Hashanah
Uman Rosh Hashanah Explained
Переглядів 3,2 тис.Рік тому
Uman Rosh Hashanah Explained
How Mir Yeshiva Survived WW2
Переглядів 360Рік тому
How Mir Yeshiva Survived WW2
Exploring The Esrog Market - From Legends to The Lab
Переглядів 259Рік тому
Exploring The Esrog Market - From Legends to The Lab

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @cohenlabe1
    @cohenlabe1 4 години тому

    I could not get through the whole video it is very interesting and well made. But the subject appears to present itself as if it is a about a young man fighting within himself if he should be an orthodox jew or not but the writers have no idea what that is. Even his name yossla is a nick name the Hebrew Yoseph or in English Joseph it's like calling Joey not Jesse that is the English version of the Hebrew Yessi. An orthodox man and wife would have 2 separate beds to sleep and his wife would cover her hair. It's like the writers didnt know and did care what it to be orthodox and if a Jewish man married a non jew it would be a violation of the law of God and those children would not be Jews. Jesse is violating the Torah that is his father acted like he was de@d but the writers didnt know that

  • @pamelascott7207
    @pamelascott7207 7 годин тому

    I just watched Fiddler on the Roof last night for the 100th time. I cry every time. I never thought of it as a happy musical. It is heartbreaking. I loved the closeness of the family and the little town.

  • @reeseasmr2511
    @reeseasmr2511 18 годин тому

    im 53 and watched this movie this weekend because my 13 year old daughter is into theater. Who on earth thinks this is a happy story? I couldn't help thinking what was waiting for this village in the future, WW2 and Soviet Communism, and wished they all would of made it to America.

  • @olterigo
    @olterigo 22 години тому

    It also had a wonderful score by Vladimir Cosma.

  • @wordforger
    @wordforger День тому

    I only ever saw part I as a kid and somehow missed the pogrom at the end of it. I suspect motherly interference. Seeing the whole thing as an adult, I finally understood how it represented a way of life passing away. Definitely a different view than the nice little love story I thought it was.

  • @Destron1001il
    @Destron1001il День тому

    Very good video, well done

  • @rgr1regi88
    @rgr1regi88 День тому

    I’ve loved this movie since I was a child. It speaks to many migrant experiences. ❤

  • @RaixsOreh
    @RaixsOreh День тому

    I'm not jewish, I'm a catholic christian, and I've dived deep into the history of the Bible, both New Testament and the Old Testament (also known as the Tanakh). and like how the story of Ruth was a story focusing on the topic of marrying a gentile, and the story of Esther was the story of how the deliverance of the Jewish people could also come from imperfect people like Esther and Mordecai, I believe the story of the Fiddler of the Fiddler on the Roof has a place of importance in the history of the Jewish people.

  • @soupforthefamily8378
    @soupforthefamily8378 2 дні тому

    I actually have an ancestor who snuck onto the ship to get to the US by hiding in a pickle barrel

  • @RD-nq7fl
    @RD-nq7fl 2 дні тому

    I never thought the fiddler on the roof was a joyful musical. I am a AA and the first time I saw this musical in my choir class Zi understood this was a traumatic historical events in Jewish Family’s life. Anyone who thought this was a joyfully musical is delusional.

  • @doriennelewis3698
    @doriennelewis3698 2 дні тому

    I'm on Team Tevye -- always! :-)

  • @Shut.Eye.Cinema
    @Shut.Eye.Cinema 3 дні тому

    18:20 - Bad editing there. 19:35 - Same. Also, today I heard that kids are just toys to parents; The real kids are the grandchildren.

  • @Shut.Eye.Cinema
    @Shut.Eye.Cinema 3 дні тому

    11:30 - Tearing your clothes doesn't actually symbolize agony. In the bible, it meant a great excitement over an eureka moment.

  • @wojciechradosz4936
    @wojciechradosz4936 3 дні тому

    This is a story of a Jewish racist's community and one racist Jewish man who facing the backlash of their racist actions realize he need to stop being racist. SO it starts really grim but end up on happy note. :)

  • @KMSchriver
    @KMSchriver 3 дні тому

    Watched this movie again this past weekend and I've been thinking about this over the last year and how tradition should be maintained vs modernity. Thanks for making this presentation. Been watching this movie since I was a child and only now in my forties figuring it out.

  • @russrussel3947
    @russrussel3947 4 дні тому

    Thhhhaaannnnnkkkkkk You ! Imagine growing up with the "Jazz Singer" songbook, singing Kol Nidre from "Jazz Singer", home alone with "jesus" as a CLUELESS PATRILINEAL CAUGHT BETWEEN TWO DIAMETRICALLY OPPOSED WORLDS and your Bittersweet Jewish Grandpa from Russian Jewry hates HaShem, Judaism, Rabbis. Sorry, not sorry, but, may his memory be for a blessing, my Jewish Grandpa was a ball of furious non-stop YELLING. He had high blood pressure and I gave him his pills and was the cause of his high blood pressure. Bitterness IS Mental Illness. I WAS THIS MOVIE, like literally. The Father is NOT a STEREOTYPE. IT was real, INTERMARRIAGE is the "soft" Final *olution. Do "Yentl" ppllleeeeaaasssseeeee "A Piece Of Sky'

  • @shanegooding4839
    @shanegooding4839 4 дні тому

    Great! 😃👍

  • @malarucoon
    @malarucoon 4 дні тому

    I love it. the one person most important behind making the movie is the only one not a jew and his name starts with Jew... thats poetic irony.

  • @georgesouthwick7000
    @georgesouthwick7000 4 дні тому

    Another example of how Hollywood never let the facts get in the way of a financially successful movie.

  • @JayTemple
    @JayTemple 5 днів тому

    25:40 Tevye is asking what I asked on November 6. Why does the One Upstairs let people like this go unpunished?

  • @ThatStrawberryGal
    @ThatStrawberryGal 5 днів тому

    OMG David this vid is sooo SLAY!!!!! Love💅🏻💅🏻💅🏻✨✨✨🎀🎀🎀😁😁😁

  • @antoniosilvestrojr.
    @antoniosilvestrojr. 5 днів тому

    I'm a first generation American. My parents would take my sister and I back to the farm in the old country every summer break. They never forgot their roots. I'm a born again Christian, I love the Jewish people, and this film, and everything about it, hits me right between the eyes.

  • @larryolsen4422
    @larryolsen4422 5 днів тому

    Thanks been waiting...❤

  • @ezrafriesner8370
    @ezrafriesner8370 5 днів тому

    Amazing video as always! It’s about time we got a modern update for this film 😁

  • @miriamzajfman4305
    @miriamzajfman4305 5 днів тому

    I remember seeing the movie when it just come out , it was for me a unforgettable experience ! The scene when we hear Kol Nidre it was so touching ( It most be my European roots with conservative beliefs ) Thank you David for bringing it back to me 💌

  • @lq8242
    @lq8242 5 днів тому

    It is obviously a tragedy! It was antisemitism and loss

  • @deerman420
    @deerman420 5 днів тому

    Keeping The Faith (2000)

  • @juliam248
    @juliam248 5 днів тому

    Great video, as always! For something on the lighter side, I'd love to hear your take on Jewish themes in Mel Brooks' comedies.

    • @george_miller_1089
      @george_miller_1089 5 днів тому

      Yeah, maybe a general Mel Brooks video? The only two I'm really a fan of are The Producers and Spaceballs, I watched Men in Tights when I was older too, but I still prefer those other two! Anyway, I love the idea of handling traumatic experiences through comedies. What about the Arrested Development series too? Arguably the best comedy ever.

  • @alg11297
    @alg11297 5 днів тому

    School Ties. This is one you will like. As the only Jew in an exclusive prep school he davens by himself in the school's church.

  • @shadowpsykie
    @shadowpsykie 6 днів тому

    WHO thought this was anything but a tragedy

  • @cocasal001
    @cocasal001 6 днів тому

    I disagree with your characterization of Tevye’s relationship with God. Tevya has a loving relationship with God. Maybe a tough love relationship, but still a loving relationship with God. Just compare his relationship with God to that of his wife. He loves his wife, and she loves him, but their expression of love is different from today’s expression of love. Their love is rooted in their faithfulness to each other, to their children, and to their community. In many ways, this expression of love is very much the love that God and Tevye have for each other.

  • @cocasal001
    @cocasal001 6 днів тому

    I disagree with your characterization of Tevye’s relationship with God. Tevya has a loving relationship with God. Maybe a tough love relationship, but still a loving relationship with God. Just compare his relationship with God to that of his wife. He loves his wife, and she loves him, but their expression of love is different from today’s expression of love. Their love is rooted in their faithfulness to each other, to their children, and to their community. In many ways, this expression of love is very much the love that God and Tevye have for each other.

  • @cocasal001
    @cocasal001 6 днів тому

    There’s also a great irony that those who are expelled from their village, from their country, actually stood a better chance of survival than if they had remain in place in WWII.

  • @mcfalcia
    @mcfalcia 6 днів тому

    It's definitely an American "As-A-Jew" movie.

  • @oekmama
    @oekmama 8 днів тому

    I was reading a fairly new novel called Birobidschan by Tomer Dotan-Dreyfus, a jewish author living in Berlin, and the experience of watching Fiddler on the Roof came back to me. I think Fiddler as a story gives more, the deeper you look into it. Each daughter represents the different path open to the Jews of the community and the ways it can end. But in the original story, Tevje has more than just these three daughters. He has 7 in total. So while the three threads of these daughters‘ stories end in tragedy, there is hope that the others will be happier.

  • @christopherp.hitchens3902
    @christopherp.hitchens3902 8 днів тому

    It’s not that it is “misunderstood” but rather that NO ONE cares! It’s a MUSICAL, it’s entertainment, not a historic document!

  • @Luca_Brasi_881
    @Luca_Brasi_881 8 днів тому

    This reminds me of the line from the movie Fail Safe "How long would the Nazis have kept it up if every Jew they came after had met them with a gun in their hand" My relatives came from Russia ( Kiev today ) and Anatevka could have been their home. How would history be different if the Jewish people had simply said "enough"

  • @Asiaguydude
    @Asiaguydude 8 днів тому

    This movie is just as relevant in 2024 as it was in the 1960s

  • @Asiaguydude
    @Asiaguydude 8 днів тому

    Two pieces of wisdom: What does it profit a man if he gains the world but loses his soul? One cannot stop the birds from flying overhead but it doesn’t mean you have to let them build a nest in your hair.

  • @elaclark2677
    @elaclark2677 9 днів тому

    Yentl, I think, also…

  • @mateoenero4954
    @mateoenero4954 11 днів тому

    You should do analysis on Gustav Mahler and his compositions. He has a lot of motifs to Jewish traditional music.

  • @russrussel3947
    @russrussel3947 11 днів тому

    Do "Jazz Singer" and "Yentl" Pllleeeeaaaasssseeee💕

  • @ASUEdGirl
    @ASUEdGirl 11 днів тому

    I loved this movie. I have a few songs on my Spotify list.

  • @3d3n-w5l
    @3d3n-w5l 12 днів тому

    So the issue for me is historical context being ofJewish heritage it goes a lot to explain my parents behavior and why they and their friends acted as they did I'm very thankful for your efforts

  • @tamaritiel9909
    @tamaritiel9909 12 днів тому

    Last year, around the beginning of the war, I saw a photo of an Israeli soldier playing a violin on a roof of a tank and I remember thinking how weird it is that we as a people thought we left the days of persecution behind and yet the fiddler is still on the roof, carefully avoiding reality.

  • @map3384
    @map3384 12 днів тому

    The story of Fiddler on the Roof is the story of my family or my mother’s side of the family. They were Orthodox Jews from Russia who came to America during the turn of century, the victims of a pogrom. They moved to New York City when my grandfather was five. He meets my grandmother who was an Orthodox Jew from Austria. My grandmother kept a kosher house and raised the my mother and aunt . When my mother was eight she lost her mother to cancer. My aunt was much older and already married. Grandpa stopped going to Temple and there was no one to keep a kosher house. My grandfather was the weak link in the tradition. He worked long house at the Brooklyn Navy yard as a plumber and my mother came home to an empty house. At age 21 she meets my father who isn’t Jewish. Just like Chavah in the movie. My mother would have her way. Had my grandmother lived she would have yes to the marriage but we my mother’s children would have been brought up in the faith. Instead we were raised as Protestant but also understanding the Jewish faith. My grandfather was never kind or loving because of my mother decision. My father didn’t care one way or the other. My grandfather’s relationship with us was out of obligation but not love. My cousins were raised in the faith and he loved them fully and without question.

  • @street-zombie
    @street-zombie 12 днів тому

    A beautiful essay. I would argue that the Fiddler himself is not tradition. Tradition, as Tevye states in his opening monologue, is what keeps the Fiddler stable. Every Jewish person is like a fiddler on the roof and what prevents them from falling is tradition. It's a subtle but important difference. He says "we stay (up there) because Anatevka is our home." But by the end he himself is forced to leave that home and he still retains his Jewish identity when the Fiddler follows him at the end. Judaism survives regardless of location or changing traditions. And it's true that Tevye values money, but only because he himself has none. Both he and Golde want their children to have more than what they had. You can see their poverty compared to Lazar Wolf; would Lazar Wolf share the same value? And even Tevye relents. He says of Tzeitel, "she and Motel are so happy they don't know how miserable they are"

  • @charleycvercko516
    @charleycvercko516 13 днів тому

    I had the same understanding of what that final scene meant. Their world was ending, but also beginning. The ending is best represented by the Samuel Beckett quote: "I can't go on. I'll go on."

  • @LeonL-ug5mq
    @LeonL-ug5mq 13 днів тому

    One thing the movie got wrong was the role of the parents in matchmaking. Under Jewish law (with actual historical evidence), the parents use a matchmaker to make a shiduch (a catch basically). The parents of the boy and the girl make them meet, but it is their final decision if they are to be married, not the parents. If a parent were to insist in the arrangement, Jewish law penalices it with monetary compensation. You can find these in ram bam's books or even christian historians such as Johnson or De Vaux.

  • @MG-dd9kj
    @MG-dd9kj 14 днів тому

    Thank you ever so much for your brillant analysis that I hit upon by accident. Has been an outstanding pleasure!