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May 17, 2015

Workshop mit Andrea Pancur: Klezmer Kapelye, München, Germany, 16-17 May 2015

Andrea Pancur workshop: Klezmer Kapelye

16.05. – 17.05.2015, jeweils 11:00 – 16:00 Uhr
Münchner Volkshochschule – Pasing,
Bäckerstr. 9
81241 München,

Weitere Infos und Anmeldung

Heartland Klezmorim, E. Lansing, MI, 17 May 2015

Heartland KlezmorimHeartland Klezmorim

Sunday, May 17th, 2015, 3 pm.
East Lansing Art Festival
downtown East Lansing

This concert is free.

Millie and the Mentshn, Bellevue, WA, 17 May 2015

photo: Millie and the MentshnMillie and the Mentshn
Present Heavy Mettle: From Shtetl to Tin Pan Alley
(A Multimedia Music Concert)

May 17th, 2015, 4:30 pm
Overlake Park Presbyterian Church
1836 156th Ave NE
Bellevue, WA

Tickets are $10 with all proceeds going to Seattle Against Slavery, available at oppc.brownpapertickets.com

New Yiddish Rep: "Making Stalin Laugh" US Premiere, NYC, 17 May 2015

New Yiddish Rep is presenting the US premiere of “Making Stalin Laugh,” British playwright David Schneider’s dark comedy that details the events leading up to the chilling silencing by Stalin of the revered Yiddish actor Solomon Mikhoels. Directed by Allen Lewis Rickman, the developmental workshop production plays an exclusive two-night engagement:

Sunday and Monday May 17 and 18, both at 7pm
Theatre 80
80 St. Marks Place
East Village, NYC

Tix: $25, visit www.newyiddishrep.org or call 888-596-1027.

The production’s multi-lingual cast includes Israeli television star Gera Sandler (as Mikhoels), and Yelena Shmulenson (“A Serious Man”).

“Making Stalin Laugh” world premiered in London last summer in an English-language production that The Independent called “a fascinating story.” New Yiddish Rep’s revised version will be performed in three languages -- Yiddish and Russian mostly and some English -- in a production that aims for language authenticity in its portrayal of the remarkable theatrical community that thrived (under dubious circumstances of course) as Stalin’s early support of the celebrated Moscow State Yiddish Theatre (GOSET) for propaganda purposes suddenly gave way to something far darker after the defeat of the Nazis and end of World War II.

Dating back to 1921, when the GOSET troupe moved into a theatre a short distance from the Kremlin, Mikhoels and his colorful compatriots shrewdly managed to build a Yiddish theatre that was seen as a jewel of Jewish culture in the Soviet Union. Even though its audiences were mostly gentile, Jews in Russia followed with pride the rising fortunes of GOSET and the growing stature of the internationally acclaimed Mikhoels.

Vent D'Ouest, Alençon, France, 17 May 2015

Vent D'ouest Klezmer Band Mai 17 2015 Concert dans le cadre de la journée Mondiale de lutte contre l'homophobie à confirmer Alençon (61) France