Judaism Through Hollywood's Lens
Films and television shows are comfortable with Jewish themes and
characters--and, often, with distorting Judaism.
By Elliot B. Gertel
Reprinted with
permission from Over
the Top Judaism: Precedents and Trends in the Depiction of Jewish Beliefs and
Observances in Film and Television (University Press of America).
For more than a
quarter of a century, a lot of movies and TV programs have been obsessed with
Judaism. One can argue that many American Jews were infatuated first with film
and then, simultaneously, with television. The movies, and then television,
have imposed standards, aesthetics, values, and even vocabulary that American
culture, including American Jewish culture, had to engage, whether in
imitation, protest, or adaptation. Yet such engagement, for all of its
occasional valor, has not been without distortion of Judaism, of Jewish
teachings and observances.
The Goldbergs Become Molly
At first these seductive media mesmerized Jews.
But Judaism was left alone. It was kept offstage, to the side, as a precious
relic or heirloom. One thinks of the 1950 film, Molly, originally
entitled The Goldbergs, and based on the famous television series of
that name.
Gertrude Berg
assumed her classic TV role as Molly Goldberg, beloved Jewish matriarch. Most
of the film came across as a rather general nostalgia for European parents, not
much different from the I Remember Mama genre. Toward the end one sees
covered challah rolls and Shabbat candles, though the actual rituals are
only suggested and not performed.
It was a bold
statement in the 1950s just to show challahand Shabbat candles at a
time when the name of the film had to be changed from The Goldbergs to Molly.
For most of the Jewish audience, the immigrant experience and the
close-knit family were still realities, and there was no need to translate or
to fill in between the lines. Likewise, the presence of ritual objects in the homes of parents was still widely taken for granted. (By
the 1970s, ritual objects in film and TV began to be more the domain of immigrant
grandparents.) Just the image of a Sabbath table spoke volumes more than any
dialogue.
In the 1960s and 1970s, however, depiction of Jews and of
Jewish practices became more aggressive, more pointed. There was a determined
and concerted effort to stand up for Jewish identity and to throw Jewish
practices back into the face of a film culture that had ignored them or shunted
them aside. The irony was that the “film culture” consisted of many Jews who
had been embarrassed about delving into their heritage, but now sanctioned,
with a vengeance, an explosion of Jewish references, associations, and even
ambivalences.
The Way We Were
All
of this came to a head in the 1973 film, The Way We Were, starring
Barbra Streisand and directed by Sidney Pollack. The well-known singer-actress
was taking her stand that ethnic women with a not-so-typically-Hollywood screen
look, in this case Jewish women, can successfully chase after matinee-idol
Gentile men.
Whatever one thinks of Streisand’s “cause,” it should be
noted that The Way We Were was one of the first portents that Judaism
would not go untouched or unscathed in the process of the new Jewish
self-determination, even self-infatuation, in flimmaking. In one scene in The
Way We Were, Streisand’s character presents her Gentile lover (played by
Robert Redford) with a typewriter and calls it a “Rosh Hashanah present.” One
can imagine Gentile viewers wondering at the time whether Rosh Hashanah, the
Jewish New Year, was a time when they should be sending gifts to Jewish
friends.
One can safely assume that at the time, Jewish viewers were
savvy enough to realize that Streisand and Company were inventing this gift as
an inside joke to make the point that the public ought to realize that Jews
have holidays other than Hanukkah. This was their way of "opening up”
Judaism. Little did they know that they were starting a trend that would become
widespread and shameless--namely, the concoction, or, more often, the corruption,
of Jewish customs and observances under the rubric of “creative media
writing.”…
Paradoxically, such
retreading of Judaism, even when misleading, represented the height of comfort
with Judaism in the general culture, on the part of both Jewish and non-Jewish
writers and producers. It also revealed an antipathy on their part toward
religious Jews that rivaled and even exceeded early Hollywood denigration of
Jews as ridiculous or embarrassing.
The acceptance, in
the 1980s, of Judaism as a prominent theme in television and in the movies did
not come without baggage or cost. The new emphasis on “interpreting” Jewish
ritual practices provoked both caricature or censure of Judaism.
Elliot B. Gertel is the rabbi of Congregation Rodfei
Zedek in Chicago and media critic for The Jewish Post and Opinion of
Indianapolis.
Reprinted with
permission from Over
the Top Judaism: Precedents and Trends in the Depiction of Jewish Beliefs and
Observances in Film and Television (University Press of America). Copyright
2003, Elliott B. Gertel.