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Keren David

ByKeren David, Keren David

Opinion

This Fiddler speaks to modern Jewish parents

Do go and see Trevor Nunn's production of Fiddler on the Roof, says Keren David, especially if your children are young adults

April 3, 2019 16:11
Andy Nyman - Tevye - Fiddler-© Johan Persson
3 min read

Fiddler on the Roof is a Jewish cultural staple - like Yentl, like kugel, like obscene Yiddish curses — that I managed to miss completely while growing up, one of those gaps that makes my husband say “Are you sure you’re actually Jewish?” when he finds out.

And I must admit that I felt nervous when the lights dimmed and Andy Nyman as Tevye strode onto the stage at the Playhouse Theatre last week, as Trevor Nunn’s acclaimed production of Fiddler transferred from the tiny Menier Chocolate Factory to the West End. Would I like it? Or would it be a sentimental dollop of schmaltz, harking back to a past that I feel lucky to have escaped?

As Tevye started his hymn to tradition, I felt little more than irritation. Ugh, the Mamas and the Papas and their smothering sexism. But that changed very quickly. The production pulls you into its heart, and asks questions that resonate long after the well-earned ovations fade away. I’ve rarely felt quite so moved by a musical.

It’s easy to put this feeling down to today’s troubled political times. As we see the villagers of Anatevka suffer the escalating threats of antisemitic violence, and watch their love for their home threatened by people who don’t think they belong there, then of course we join the dots to form today’s headlines about antisemitism. As the community breaks up, its residents leaving for various destinations, we think about generations of Jewish refugees, and also of refugees of all nationalities. It’s a universal story of forced migration, which we’re beginning to fear might be our future.