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Film

Just how Jewish was Stanley Kubrick?

Author Nathan Abrams examines the legendary director's Jewish identity

July 5, 2018 16:31
PA-22069171
4 min read

Many people are surprised to discover that legendary director Stanley Kubrick whose masterpiece 2001: A Space Odyssey is 50 years old this year— was Jewish. “But how Jewish was he?” they ask. This is a thorny question but having just published the results of a decade of teaching and research into him, I believe I’m able to answer it.

Kubrick was known to have said that he was “not really a Jew, but just happened to have two Jewish parents.” He was Jewish by birth through both his mother Gertrude Perveler and his father Jack or Jacques Kubrick. His parents gave him what can be regarded as a very typical first name for Jews born in that era. And he steadfastly stuck to using that name in an industry where fellow Jews at least the actors with whom he worked were encouraged to change them.

Born in 1928, Kubrick grew up in the heavily Jewish West Bronx, surrounded by Jewish neighbours and immigrants. The Bronx was, at that time, home to 250,000 Jews from which Kubrick drew his early circle of childhood friends. His maternal grandmother spoke Yiddish and he adored Woody Allen’s Radio Days (1987), identifying with the little boy Joe. The taste, smell and language of that film was that of his childhood in the 1930s and 1940s.

But, as an assimilated American-Jewish family, the Kubricks were not religious. They practiced little, if any, Judaism. Jacob had changed his own Hebrew name to the more cosmopolitan Jack/Jacques.