
Fiddler on the Roof in Dublin: ‘That it is always relevant and feels extra potent right now is beyond tragic'
production
of Fiddler on the Roof in
London
, she broke into song, a word-perfect rendition of If I Were a Rich Man, one of the musical's most famous numbers.
Fein was not surprised by his grandmother's excitement, nor by her ability to recall the lyrics and melody with such fluency: Fiddler on the Roof was
the
cultural touchstone of his childhood. His grandmother was born in Philadelphia, where Fein also grew up, but his great-grandparents emigrated to the
United States
from
Kyiv
in the early 1900s. The 1964 musical, by Joseph Stein, reflected their history and the story of their ancestors.
Set in the fictional Ukrainian village of Anatevka at the turn of the 20th century, Fiddler on the Roof charts the fate of villagers as
tsarist
forces arrive and evict the Jewish population from their homes. Its central character is the doting father Tevye, who is struggling to accommodate the changing times, or at least with how his five daughters express them. Contrary to the guiding principles of tradition – a faith more powerful than religion in the musical – they are determined to make their own way in the world: to educate themselves, to choose their own husbands and to follow their own political conscience, even if that means standing against their family's history.
When the musical first appeared on Broadway, it was seen as ground-breaking in many ways. It was adapted from the Yiddish short stories of Sholem Aleichem by Stein, Jerry Bock and Sheldon Harnick, who saw the material as an attractive proposition, as Fein explains, because it 'allowed them to talk about their parents' and grandparents' experience in a way which, at that time, was really very subversive, because people who had migrated from that part of the world were not talking about their history, what happened. My mother: her grandparents did not speak about the pogroms or the Holocaust. They did not talk about why families emigrated, so it was quite bold to be putting it on stage.'
READ MORE
The musical's success – it won nine Tony awards, followed by three Oscars when it was filmed by Norman Jewison in 1971 – meant it became 'one of those cultural phenomena that marked the assimilation of Jewish culture into American culture'. As a result, 'it was really important, almost biblical, to many Jewish-American families'. It certainly was in Fein's. 'I can't remember a time not knowing the music,' he says. 'It is a story I have always known.'
Fein is speaking from London, where the American director has been mostly based since 2019. Before relocating, he cut his teeth off-Broadway with an impressive portfolio of work that included subversive stagings of American classics from Thornton Wilder and Paula Vogel, experimental collaborations with performance artists such as Erin Markey and Ryan Haddad, and a smattering of big-budget opera work. The startling production images on his website position his work far from the commercially minded mainstream of musical theatre, yet Fein explains that the move from more experimental stages to a larger platform was not as unusual as it might seem.
'The fact that I would [be commissioned] to stage work like this is maybe not as surprising as the fact that I would get the opportunity to do a big revival at all,' he says. 'In New York, there just aren't that many new stagings of classic musical work.'
Musicals were actually his gateway into theatre. 'I was a real musical-theatre nerd as a kid, but in a lot of theatre schooling' – Fein attended the prestigious Tisch School of the Arts in New York – 'musicals can be beaten out of you. The things to care about are Chekhov, Williams, Shakespeare – and, of course, I learned to love all that.'
Fiddler on the Roof: Matthew Woodyatt as Tevye. Photoraph: Johan Persson
But Fein found himself more attracted to experimental modes of theatre-making. 'I was surrounded by brilliant performance artists, writers, musicians, and it blew my mind when I began collaborating with my peers to realise how much closer that world was to musicals than it was to straight drama. [Experimental theatre] is about integrating different art forms, challenging form in general. It is so much about instinct and feeling, that ethereal thing that musicals also tap into.
[
Stop lying about musicals. We can see your foot tapping
Opens in new window
]
'So those realms of the commercial musical and performance art were both always in my purview, and it is really exciting now to see how the [different modes of work] influence each other, to see how I can integrate those artists that I have worked with across different types of projects to create a web of collaboration, where [the different genres] are in conversation.'
Fein's distinctive directorial vision will certainly strike anyone lucky enough to see Fiddler on the Roof when it tours to Dublin in October, after an award-winning run in the outdoor Regent's Park Theatre in London last year. The sophisticated production won three awards at the 2024 Olivier Awards, including for best new revival and best set design for Tom Scutt, who presents us with a spare but striking feast for the eyes.
Cast of Fiddler on the Roof
A backdrop of golden wheat-fields presents the Ukrainian countryside as 'the bread basket of the world', a floor is stamped with the village's name lest the audience or the villagers forget it, while the roof that the eponymous Fiddler plays on moves dramatically as the show begins and ends, a release and reinstatement of pressure: a sealing of the village's fate.
I saw the latest version of the production, redesigned for indoor venues, at the Barbican in London in early July, before the tour started, and was startled by the clarity of its presentation of the story, the clean aesthetic and the way in which universal themes of generational fracture are communicated.
Of course, the story's resonance with contemporary global politics was also unavoidable, and deeply moving. I was not alone in the audience sobbing to the mournful lament of the final song, Anatevka, as the villagers take a last look at their 'underfed, overworked, intimate, obstinate' home.
[
Chaim Topol, Fiddler on the Roof actor, dies aged 87
Opens in new window
]
If it seems a subversive act to use a story of Jewish persecution as a means of highlighting the contemporary suffering of other communities, the chutzpah pays off. From the current war in Ukraine to the displacement of Palestinians in Gaza, the musical reflects a broader spectrum of human suffering: the physical and emotional cost paid by individuals who are forced to leave their homes by those with more power.
Fiddler on the Roof is 'beautifully earnest, in a time that feels so cynical', says director Jordan Fein
Fein is naturally reluctant to pin specific current events to the work. Art, he argues, has the capacity to engage us in ways that appeal to a more universal sense of our humanity. Indeed, for him, the most powerful theme of Fiddler is apolitical. It is 'love – whether that is Tevye and Golde's love for each other, a parent's love for their child, a people's love for their home.
'And what is most profound is that I can say that with no irony. [Fiddler] is so beautifully earnest, in a time that feels so cynical. Even the character of Perchick, the revolutionary, his journey is so beautiful. At the beginning he is bombastic and arrogant in preaching to the people of Anatevka, but towards the end of the show he realises what he is really fighting for is love: the opportunity and humanity of love. I don't think there is anything controversial about that.
'The fact that Fiddler is always relevant and feels extra potent right now,' he concludes, 'is beyond tragic – I don't know another word for it.' But theatre has a special role in bringing us beyond the headlines. 'We are inundated with images on our phones, our computers, TVs, of all the horrific things that are happening at the moment, and it can be really hard to connect to that, because of the great flattening effect [of screens].
'But a piece of theatre asks people to sit in a room together and watch a live event, and examine that human propensity that forces people to lose their homes: it forces us to reckon with the human cost, the communal cost, and that sense of loss feels vital.'
Fiddler on the Roof is at the
Bord Gáis Energy Theatre
, Dublin, from Tuesday, October 7th, until Saturday, October 18th
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Irish Times
a day ago
- Irish Times
Fiddler on the Roof in Dublin: ‘That it is always relevant and feels extra potent right now is beyond tragic'
When Jordan Fein called his grandmother to tell her he would be directing a new production of Fiddler on the Roof in London , she broke into song, a word-perfect rendition of If I Were a Rich Man, one of the musical's most famous numbers. Fein was not surprised by his grandmother's excitement, nor by her ability to recall the lyrics and melody with such fluency: Fiddler on the Roof was the cultural touchstone of his childhood. His grandmother was born in Philadelphia, where Fein also grew up, but his great-grandparents emigrated to the United States from Kyiv in the early 1900s. The 1964 musical, by Joseph Stein, reflected their history and the story of their ancestors. Set in the fictional Ukrainian village of Anatevka at the turn of the 20th century, Fiddler on the Roof charts the fate of villagers as tsarist forces arrive and evict the Jewish population from their homes. Its central character is the doting father Tevye, who is struggling to accommodate the changing times, or at least with how his five daughters express them. Contrary to the guiding principles of tradition – a faith more powerful than religion in the musical – they are determined to make their own way in the world: to educate themselves, to choose their own husbands and to follow their own political conscience, even if that means standing against their family's history. When the musical first appeared on Broadway, it was seen as ground-breaking in many ways. It was adapted from the Yiddish short stories of Sholem Aleichem by Stein, Jerry Bock and Sheldon Harnick, who saw the material as an attractive proposition, as Fein explains, because it 'allowed them to talk about their parents' and grandparents' experience in a way which, at that time, was really very subversive, because people who had migrated from that part of the world were not talking about their history, what happened. My mother: her grandparents did not speak about the pogroms or the Holocaust. They did not talk about why families emigrated, so it was quite bold to be putting it on stage.' READ MORE The musical's success – it won nine Tony awards, followed by three Oscars when it was filmed by Norman Jewison in 1971 – meant it became 'one of those cultural phenomena that marked the assimilation of Jewish culture into American culture'. As a result, 'it was really important, almost biblical, to many Jewish-American families'. It certainly was in Fein's. 'I can't remember a time not knowing the music,' he says. 'It is a story I have always known.' Fein is speaking from London, where the American director has been mostly based since 2019. Before relocating, he cut his teeth off-Broadway with an impressive portfolio of work that included subversive stagings of American classics from Thornton Wilder and Paula Vogel, experimental collaborations with performance artists such as Erin Markey and Ryan Haddad, and a smattering of big-budget opera work. The startling production images on his website position his work far from the commercially minded mainstream of musical theatre, yet Fein explains that the move from more experimental stages to a larger platform was not as unusual as it might seem. 'The fact that I would [be commissioned] to stage work like this is maybe not as surprising as the fact that I would get the opportunity to do a big revival at all,' he says. 'In New York, there just aren't that many new stagings of classic musical work.' Musicals were actually his gateway into theatre. 'I was a real musical-theatre nerd as a kid, but in a lot of theatre schooling' – Fein attended the prestigious Tisch School of the Arts in New York – 'musicals can be beaten out of you. The things to care about are Chekhov, Williams, Shakespeare – and, of course, I learned to love all that.' Fiddler on the Roof: Matthew Woodyatt as Tevye. Photoraph: Johan Persson But Fein found himself more attracted to experimental modes of theatre-making. 'I was surrounded by brilliant performance artists, writers, musicians, and it blew my mind when I began collaborating with my peers to realise how much closer that world was to musicals than it was to straight drama. [Experimental theatre] is about integrating different art forms, challenging form in general. It is so much about instinct and feeling, that ethereal thing that musicals also tap into. [ Stop lying about musicals. We can see your foot tapping Opens in new window ] 'So those realms of the commercial musical and performance art were both always in my purview, and it is really exciting now to see how the [different modes of work] influence each other, to see how I can integrate those artists that I have worked with across different types of projects to create a web of collaboration, where [the different genres] are in conversation.' Fein's distinctive directorial vision will certainly strike anyone lucky enough to see Fiddler on the Roof when it tours to Dublin in October, after an award-winning run in the outdoor Regent's Park Theatre in London last year. The sophisticated production won three awards at the 2024 Olivier Awards, including for best new revival and best set design for Tom Scutt, who presents us with a spare but striking feast for the eyes. Cast of Fiddler on the Roof A backdrop of golden wheat-fields presents the Ukrainian countryside as 'the bread basket of the world', a floor is stamped with the village's name lest the audience or the villagers forget it, while the roof that the eponymous Fiddler plays on moves dramatically as the show begins and ends, a release and reinstatement of pressure: a sealing of the village's fate. I saw the latest version of the production, redesigned for indoor venues, at the Barbican in London in early July, before the tour started, and was startled by the clarity of its presentation of the story, the clean aesthetic and the way in which universal themes of generational fracture are communicated. Of course, the story's resonance with contemporary global politics was also unavoidable, and deeply moving. I was not alone in the audience sobbing to the mournful lament of the final song, Anatevka, as the villagers take a last look at their 'underfed, overworked, intimate, obstinate' home. [ Chaim Topol, Fiddler on the Roof actor, dies aged 87 Opens in new window ] If it seems a subversive act to use a story of Jewish persecution as a means of highlighting the contemporary suffering of other communities, the chutzpah pays off. From the current war in Ukraine to the displacement of Palestinians in Gaza, the musical reflects a broader spectrum of human suffering: the physical and emotional cost paid by individuals who are forced to leave their homes by those with more power. Fiddler on the Roof is 'beautifully earnest, in a time that feels so cynical', says director Jordan Fein Fein is naturally reluctant to pin specific current events to the work. Art, he argues, has the capacity to engage us in ways that appeal to a more universal sense of our humanity. Indeed, for him, the most powerful theme of Fiddler is apolitical. It is 'love – whether that is Tevye and Golde's love for each other, a parent's love for their child, a people's love for their home. 'And what is most profound is that I can say that with no irony. [Fiddler] is so beautifully earnest, in a time that feels so cynical. Even the character of Perchick, the revolutionary, his journey is so beautiful. At the beginning he is bombastic and arrogant in preaching to the people of Anatevka, but towards the end of the show he realises what he is really fighting for is love: the opportunity and humanity of love. I don't think there is anything controversial about that. 'The fact that Fiddler is always relevant and feels extra potent right now,' he concludes, 'is beyond tragic – I don't know another word for it.' But theatre has a special role in bringing us beyond the headlines. 'We are inundated with images on our phones, our computers, TVs, of all the horrific things that are happening at the moment, and it can be really hard to connect to that, because of the great flattening effect [of screens]. 'But a piece of theatre asks people to sit in a room together and watch a live event, and examine that human propensity that forces people to lose their homes: it forces us to reckon with the human cost, the communal cost, and that sense of loss feels vital.' Fiddler on the Roof is at the Bord Gáis Energy Theatre , Dublin, from Tuesday, October 7th, until Saturday, October 18th


Irish Times
4 days ago
- Irish Times
My name has always stood out on life's roll calls but now I have to share it
'That's a great name,' the receptionist says to me as I sign into a gym class. I get this a lot. Teachers, postmen, secretaries, they always have a comment to make about my name. 'Sounds like someone important!' a nurse said to me recently as she filled in the details of my hospital band. I still don't know how to respond – I can't exactly take credit for it. But it has become a pathetic point of pride, and sitting there in ill health I thought: 'Well, at least I've still got that going for me.' This illusion came crashing down when the receptionist excitedly turned to me as she realised: 'Oh wait! It's like Molly-Mae!' This was the second time in as many weeks that someone had suggested I shared my name with the influencer and Love Island demigod Molly-Mae Hague (she is engaged to boxer Tommy Fury). 'Well the spelling's different,' I could hear myself stuttering in what sounded like a sad, sad attempt to reclaim something that, evidently, was never even mine. Up until this point, I have smugly avoided the struggle of the Mary Murphys and Seán O'Connors of the world. Neither my first nor second name is obscure, and yet my full name has always stood out on life's roll calls. So standing there as just some other Molly Fur(e)y, humbled by this receptionist's critical spelling error, I had to wonder: what is in a name? Can our identity be wrapped up in it or is it just some random jumble of letters used to identify us? Shakespeare's Juliet was sure of the latter when she first said ('a rose by any other name would smell as sweet', etc), but I have always felt my name was as specific to me as my fingerprint. Living in the name-shadow of £6 million-worth of blonde and beauty, however, I've had to question the vanity of such an assumption. READ MORE 'You are such a Molly,' people have said to me. I do not know what this means, but it is always satisfying to hear. Implicit in the flippant remark is the grand suggestion that by some stroke of luck my parents managed to land on the exact mix of sounds and letters that captured my essence when naming me. My dad is, as ever, less existential about the matter. 'Well every Tom, Dick and Harry was called Rachel,' he tuts, laughing at his own joke. 'But you did just look like a Molly,' he shrugs, further enmeshing my sense of self with the name. Is it any wonder that a name-doppelgänger has inspired such a crisis of identity? The year I was born, 1999, Molly was the 63rd most popular baby name for girls in Ireland. Compared to the 615 Chloes born that year, a paltry 73 Mollys arrived. By 2024, it had jumped 41 places to 22nd most popular but, in 2021 it hit its peak, ranking 18th with 219 Mollys named. Standing at a traffic light as a woman coos at her baby named Molly, I am confronted with this veritable rise before my very eyes. 'There are four other Mollys in her creche!' she explains to me when I ask her about it. 'It's trendy at the moment.' I am winded by the accusation that my name is merely fashionable, offended at the implication that it is basic and, therefore, that I am too. As if I didn't have enough on my plate with the Molly-Mae of it all, I now have the impending banality of my first name to worry about. I am not the first to feel threatened by my name-doppelgängers. In 2021, fuelled by what he described in a Reddit post as 'a spell of pandemic boredom', Arizona college student Joshua Swain created the Swainbowl: an event for all Joshua Swains to come together and 'fight for the right to keep this common name'. Armed with pool noodles and a lifetime's worth of anonymous frustration, hundreds of Joshes duelled in a park in Lincoln, Nebraska. [ Love Island review: Even with two Irish hopefuls in the villa I'm ready to pack my bags and head home Opens in new window ] I do not necessarily feel the need to challenge Molly-Mae to a duel (although I have not ruled out the distinct possibility that she may want to challenge me ), but I do quite like the idea of gathering all of my name-doppelgängers in the one place. Maybe my defensiveness would be quelled if I just got a good look at them all – compared notes, heard about what they have done with the name, got to the bottom of what it means to be 'such a Molly'. [ Molly-Mae Hague denies Tommy Fury break-up and documentary are 'publicity stunt' ] I suppose the idea that there is something inherently 'you' about your name is what makes it so uncanny to meet people with the same one. They offer a foil to your little life, or rather a distorted mirror that makes you consider all of the parallel lives you could have led. This Molly Fur(e)y managed to be a doctor! This one is a businesswoman! This one is an influencing millionaire! Placing my urge to out-Molly Fur(e)y all of them aside, perhaps there is a camaraderie to be found in that. Maybe I should hold my name-doppelgängers in the same bracket as Irish heads spotted abroad or people wearing the same jumper as you on the street – familiar strangers. Should I ever come across Molly-Mae, I will offer her the knowing nod reserved for such encounters, and I will be sure to tell her just what a great name I think she has.


Irish Times
5 days ago
- Irish Times
The Rocky Horror Show in Dublin review: Jason Donovan commands the stage with a rip roaring performance
Rocky Horror Show Bord Gáis Theatre, Dublin ★★★★☆ As the stomp of the Time Warp thumps the boards of the Bord Gáis Theatre, worshippers at the church of Rocky Horror anticipate lines, sing along unapologetically and heckle actors with reckless abandon. The Christopher Luscombe directed edition of The Rocky Horror featuring Neighbours star Jason Donovan and Republic of Telly's Jennifer Zamparelli is every bit as camp and wacky as the screen adaptation. It's uproarious and fun – as it should be. Narrated by Zamparelli, the musical follows Brad (played by Conor Carson) and Janet (Lauren Chia)- a young, conventionally minded and engaged couple who find themselves on the doorstep of mad scientist and alien cross-dresser, Dr Frank-N-Furter. The night devolves into an odyssey of debauched sexual experimentation with an infectious soundtrack. READ MORE The crown jewel of the production lies in Donovan's rip roaring performance, with soaring solos and comedic delivery, he commands the stage as the iconic queer character. From stepping out to Sweet Transvestite in towering heels and a sumptuous velvet cape, to the honeyed tones of I'm Coming Home, Donovan captures the charisma and magnetism of Tim Curry's original performance. In contrast, Zamparelli struggled to find her feet in the first half of the show. Post intermission however, the Irish comedian came into her stride as the watchful narrator, lobbing back quips at the restless audience (much to their delight). When in her groove, Zamparelli's easy demeanour and wit makes for a relatable charm for Irish viewers, leaning camp without straying too far into the Christmas panto territory. Banter between the audience and stage, and among actors, remained consistently snappy under Luscombe's stewardship. Lauren Chia (Janet), Connor Carson (Brad), Job Greuter (Riff Raff). Photograph: David Freeman Ensemble, Morgan Jackson (Rocky), Lauren Chia (Janet), Job Greuter (Riff Raff), Jason Donovan (Frank N Furter), Edward Bullingham (Dr Scott), Natasha Hoeberigs (Magenta), Jayme-Lee Zanoncelli (Columbia), Connor Carson (Brad) Morgan Jackson (Rocky), Job Greuter (Riff Raff), Jason Donovan (Frank N Furter), Natasha Hoeberigs (Magenta), Jayme-Lee Zanoncelli (Columbia), Connor Carson (Brad). Lauren Chia (Janet), Connor Carson (Brad), Job Greuter (Riff Raff). Photograph: David Freeman Nathan M Weight's choreography also spoke to this sensibility, incorporating established fan favourites like the Time Warp with tight routines to effortless musical accompaniment steered by Josh Sood. If dictionaries were permitted to have examples rather than definitions, under the entry for 'cult classic' would be The Rocky Horror Picture Show. Since Richard O'Brien's beloved gender bending musical premiered just more than 50 years ago (with the film celebrating its golden anniversary this year ), the show has been performed in 30 countries, 20 languages and seen by 35 million theatregoers. Taking on a show that is as precious to its audience as The Rocky Horror is no mean feat, and the cast do so with skill, grace, plenty of sexual ambiguity and good humour. The Rocky Horror Show is at the Bord Gáis Energy Theatre , Dublin, until Saturday, August 16th Rocky Horror Show will also run in Derry's Millenium Forum from August 18th to 23rd and Cork's Opera House, August from August 25th to 30th, starring Adam Strong as Dr Frank-N-Furter