Erik Stein as Tevye in the Pacific Conseryatory Fiddler on the Roof, approaching its 50th anniversary, proves its staying power. Michele Alperin JNS.org W orldwide performances of Fiddler on the Roof attest to its cultural power as it evokes the yearning for tradition in a changing world. What is behind its staying power? According to Alisa Solomon, author of the new book Wonder of Wonders: A Cultural History of Fiddler on the Roof (Metropolitan Books), it is the show's balance between the universal and the particular. During a recent symposium at Princeton University celebrating the upcoming 50th anniversary of the play's Broadway opening on Sept. 22, 1964 (it made its stage debut in tryouts on July 27, 1964, at Detroit's Fisher Theatre), Solomon, a pro- fessor at the Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia University, said the show "quickly belonged to everyone:' She shared an anecdote about a Tokyo rehearsal, where a local producer asked Joseph Stein, who wrote the play, whether Americans really understood Fiddler. A very surprised Stein quickly asked, "Why?" and received the response, "Because it's so Japanese!" While its appeal is universal, for Jews Fiddler calls forth the Old Country. "To this day, it is taught as a document of shtetl life and thus came to stand for Jewishness itself" Solomon said at the Princeton symposium, which probed the play's roots, its creative development and its cultural resonances at home and abroad. Solomon suggested that the key to the show's abiding power, in a way its authors couldn't have guessed, is that it is "focused on tradition rather than Torah or law:' The idea of tradition, she adds, is dear to any culture in the modern world. "It is a way of embracing a legacy without having to adopt its strictures:' she said. By successfully representing the idea of the East European Jewish past and an idyllic idea of the shtetl, said Solomon, the show "served a need of American Jews, who both needed to honor, recognize, claim and embrace a heritage and life that was no more, and at the same time needed to distinguish themselves from that:' In pondering the implications of her own profound response to the music of the "Sabbath Prayer" song in the show, Jenna Weissman Joselit, professor and program director of Judaic studies and professor of history at George Washington University, noted that in the New World, "the Sabbath experience was more in the breach than in observance:' The power of "Sabbath Prayer; she said, is that it "directly assuaged the concern of the American Jewish community — its future. "It raised the possibility that in aban- doning the Sabbath, American Jews had missed something special, but it was not too late to stage its resurrection:' Joselit said. But at the same time, this "prayer" is not from the liturgy but was totally fabricated by the creative team, and language like "keep them from the stranger's way" and "defend them" was included purposefully, said Joselit. "It was designed to encapsulate condi- tions at the time of play:' she said. "The language was designed to integrate the self into the body of the play and concerns about exogamy (intermarriage), change and the need to preserve the Jews:' The play came to be at a moment in the U.S. when the counterculture was growing, feminism was coming to the fore and the U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War was increasing. Solomon noted that its audiences saw the developing generation gap through the eyes of both Tevye and his daughters. "Part of the genius of the show is to have both perspectives," she said. To illustrate this, Solomon alludes to the arrival in Anatevka of Perchik, who will eventually marry Tevye's daughter Hodel, but early on mocks Tevye and his friends. When they ask where he is from, Perchik responds that he is from the uni- versity in Kiev. A townsman then asks, "Is that where they teach you to speak to your elders like this?" Solomon observed that, given the devel- oping gap between parents and children in the early 1960s, the play's audiences "know why that was a joke in '64:' Politics also affected the actors them- selves during the first Broadway perfor- mances of Fiddler. Joanna Merlin, who originated the role of Tzeitel, the eldest of Tevye's daughters, related the tension that remained between Zero Mostel, who played Tevye, and the show's director-choreographer, Jerome Robbins, because of their different expe- riences with the House Un-American Activities Committee. Robbins had been a cooperative wit- ness, eventually "naming names" to the congressional committee that investigated allegations of Communist activity in the U.S. during the early years of the Cold War, whereas Mostel had been blacklisted. Merlin was blunt about the two men's relationship. "Zero hated him but agreed to work with him because he respected him as a director, and he didn't hide his feelings:' she said. "Jerry felt very guilty and humili- ated. There was a lot of tension during rehearsals because of that:' Sheldon Harnick, the lyricist for Fiddler on the Roof, had a different perspective. He recalled that on the first day of rehearsal, which is kind of a meet-and-greet among participants, the cast wondered what would happen when the two men met. Mostel arrived first. When Robbins walked in, said Harnick, "Zero said, 'Hi there, Blabbermouth: Luckily, everyone in the cast and Robbins laughed:' His perspective was that after that incident, Mostel kept his feelings to himself and worked very hard. According to Solomon, a "political" use of Fiddler has been in Eastern Europe, where the play has been used as a way to delve into the history of a locale's Jews. Its performances are accompanied by book- lets that detail what happened to the area's Jews during World War II. In the end, the legacy of Fiddler on the Roof may be its ability to reach both back- ward and forward. Joanna Merlin's favorite moment was the farewell scene. "It was very reminiscent for me of my grandmother leaving; she said, noting that the final scene was a prelude to an unknown future. "I was kind of experiencing what they were looking forward to when they were leaving each other, in addition to having to say goodbye to each other, as they were all going to different parts of the world:' Merlin added. "It was very close and per- sonal for me:' George Washington University's Joselit touched on Merlin's sentiments, but in a different way. "What the play is about, despite moments of wrenching loss, is possibility; she said. To Life! To Life! L'Chaim! Celebrating 25 years together (just like Tevye and Golde!), Bloomfield Players stages Fiddler on the Roof. The Bloomfield Players board: Udi Kapen, president; Larry Miller, vice president; Donna Raphael, treasurer; and Debby Portney, secretary. Suzanne Chessler Contributing Writer T he hit musical Fiddler on the Roof and the Bloomfield Players theater group share something in common. Each marks a milestone anniversary in 2014. It will be 50 years for the show and 25 years for the stage company. A joint celebration will take place as the play with multiple Tony Awards is presented by the community troupe Jan. 16-19 at the Bloomfield Hills High School (formerly Lahser High School). "This is the third time we're doing Fiddler:' says Larry Miller, a dentist who serves as board vice president of the theater company and is reprising the role of Lazar Wolf, a character he por- trayed some 20 years ago. Miller, who has initiated theater pro- grams at Temple Israel, reports that the production has a cast of 45, and about half of the participants are Jewish. "For the past three years, a lot of board members and people in the com- munity asked when we were going to do ❑ L'Chaim! on page 34 January 9 • 2014 33