Wonder of Wonders, Musical of Musicals
Fiddler on the Roof brought the shtetl--along with many
memorable characters and unforgettable tunes--to the big screen.
By Joel Samberg
Excerpted with permission from Reel Jewish (Jonathan David Publishers, Inc.).
The
Jewish musical of all Jewish musicals hit the screen in 1971, three years after
Funny Girl [a highly anticipated musical film starring Barbra Streisand]
and with the same kind of anticipation. Actually, anticipation was even
greater, since the stage version of Fiddler on the Roof was a bigger hit
than Funny Girl, and the curiosity about how well the screen's Topol
would measure up against the stage's Zero Mostel developed into an
American-Jewish version of "Who shot J.R.?"
A story of Jewish traditions tenaciously clung to in the
face of adversity; Fiddler on the Roof, written by Joseph Stein
and directed by Norman Jewison, was blessed with a versatile, enthusiastic
ensemble. It also boasted a marvelous Broadway score and an old world reality
found and replicated by the production crew in realistic Yugoslavian locations
and filmed with shades, tones, and colors specifically chosen to resemble a
Marc Chagall painting.
Casting Tevye
In terms of production problems, why should Fiddler on
the Roof be different from anyother movie musical? First, of
course, there was the Tevye tribulation, and then the director dilemma. Many
actors, including Mostel and Danny Thomas, lobbied hard for the part of the
poor milkman with five daughters. But itwas the Israeli actor Topol--who had played Tevye for many years on
the London stage--who won the coveted role. Many thought his more muted
approach to the character (compared with Mostel's) would hurt the film. Topol,
in turn, raised concerns that the studio's choice for director, the non-Jewish
Jewison, might not be able to interpret the emotions or characters of the story
properly.
Topol and Jewison, as it
turned out, were both excellent choices.
The townsfolk of Anatevka, a Russian shtetl, or poor,
tiny village, try to "scratch out a simple little tune without breaking
their necks." Tevye's horse, though, breaks its leg, his daughters begin
to break tradition--and his wife, Golde, would like to break his neck when he
gives in to his daughters' marital whims.
But Tevye is not a broken man--a poor man, yes, but not a
broken one. He has faith in his faith, and everything he does, including the
songs he sings, speaks to that faith. He dreams of being a rich man so that he
would have more time to sit in the synagogue and pray. He talks and even argues
with God, coming to some very special realizations along the way. When his
eldest daughter, Tzeitel, and her beau, Motel the tailor, tell him that they
have given each other a pledge to marry without using a matchmaker, Tevye
suddenly realizes that they are indeed using a matchmaker--the same one used by
Adam and Eve--and he takes comfort in that.
Supporting Cast
Tevye may be the story's central character (Joseph Stein's
libretto and screenplay are based on a collection of Sholom Aleichem short stories
called "Tevye and His Daughters") but Fiddler on the Roof is peopled with a cast of likable characters
played by talented pros, which gives the movie much of its charm. Leonard Frey
plays the tailor with an infectious innocence, goodness, and earnestness that
won him an Academy Award nomination as best supporting actor. Norma Crane is a
tough and effective Golde. Yiddish stage star Molly Picon is an adorable and
quirky Yente the Matchmaker.
But Tevye is the one
who holds itall together more than anyone else. Stoic,
warm, and wise, he is the only one who can get away with jabbing his finger at
God and saying, "I'm not really complaining. After all, with your
help, I'm starving to death."
The score, by
Sheldon Harnick and Jerry Bock, effectively evokes the daily struggles of these
life-loving Jews. Beginning with the opening ensemble number, "Tradition,"
through "Matchmaker, Matchmaker," "Sabbath Prayer,"
"To Life," "Miracle of Miracles," "Do You Love
Me?" "Far from the Home I Love," and others, each one seems
hand-sewn to the characters to tell the story of their lives and their little
village. (Thanks to the success of Fiddler on the Roof on stage and
screen, every wedding band in the world knows "Sunrise, Sunset"
backward and forward.) The dances by Tom Abbott, who was Jerome Robbins's
assistant on the original Broadway production, are based on the stage play's
choreography.
Directing
Jewison--whose body
of work includes The Cincinnati Kid, In the Heat of the Night, and Moonstruck--is
one of the most serious and insightful directors around, and as much as drama,
musical comedy always benefits from insightful direction. So when Motel feels
like a king for standing up to Tevye, the angle Jewison chooses, unlike any
other angle in the film, almost literally shows how he feels 10 feet tall. And
when Golde tells Tevye that their third daughter, Chava (Neva Small), has run
away to marry the gentile Fyedka (Raymond Lovelock), the scene is set in a vast
expanse of cold, barren landscape, as if all the beauty and familial comforts
of their lives have been ripped mercilessly away from them. It's a chilling
scene in more ways than one.
Fiddler on the
Roof was the third most successful
movie musical of the 1970s, the last decade in which movie musicals were
brought to life to any great degree (among them were Cabaret, Funny Lady, A
Star Is Born, Grease, Hair, and The Rose). In addition to Frey's
Academy Award nomination for best supporting actor, Fiddler on the
Roof also received nominations for best picture and best actor, and though itlost both (to The French
Connection and Gene Hackman), it won
over many audiences that might otherwise never have learned how to make a
toast "to life" by shouting l'chaim! [The film did win three
Academy Awards, for music, cinematography, and sound.]
Joel Samberg, a humor and opinion columnist, also is the
author of The Jewish Book of Lists.