Friday, November 13, 2009
Harvey Fierstein to replace Chaim Topol in North American tour of Fiddler on the Roof
The national tour comes to Bass Performance Hall in March.
FORT WORTH Performing Arts Fort Worth, Inc. and Casa Manana will help usher in a new tradition as Harvey Fierstein replaces Chaim Topol in the North American tour of the Tony Award-winning musical Fiddler on the Roof, which comes to Bass Performance Hall March 9-14. Chaim Topol informed the show’s producers he would have to leave the production due to a shoulder injury requiring emergency long term treatment.
Harvey Fierstein in Fiddler on the Roof
- Tue
- Mar
- 9th
- 7:30PM
- Bass Performance Hall
- 525 Commerce Street, Fort Worth
- $30 - $75
- Age limit: N/A
Fierstein starred as the iconic milkman Tevye in the recent critically acclaimed Broadway production. Audiences now have the rare opportunity to see the Tony Award-winner embrace one of his favorite roles in this Jerome Robbins-inspired production. Fierstein has won four Tony awards including Best Book of a Play and Best Actor in a Play for Torch Song Trilogy. His most recent win was the 2003 Tony for Best Actor in a Musical for the Broadway production of Hairspray. In addition to his Tony Award-winning role in the Torch Song Trilogy, Fierstein recreated the role in the film adaptation, thus winning him an Independent Spirit Award nomination as Best Male Lead. Other film work includes Mrs. Doubtfire, Woody Allen’s Bullets Over Broadway and Independence Day.
Fiddler on the Roof has captured the hearts of people all over the world with its universal appeal and timeless message. The North American tour continues the tradition of the 1964 Jerome Robbins TONY Award-winning production. Robbins won twin Tony Awards for his direction and choreography of Broadway’s Fiddler on the Roof. In this national tour, both are faithfully recreated by Director Sammy Dallas Bayes, choreographer of the Broadway revival.
When Fiddler on the Roof opened in the United States in 1964, it was a time of change and crumbling traditions in our own country. Perhaps the explanation for its world-wide success in the ‘60s and ‘70s was that the play illustrated the universality of such problems as the “generation gap,” youthful dissent, revolutionary doctrine, and the oppression of minorities. Students of the time identified with the rebellious student, Perchik, and strongly related to the breaking of hallowed traditions. Tevye and others of his time struggled with these problems in 1905, and emerged triumphant, offering the hope and promise of reconciliation to a turbulent society. Today, Fiddler on the Roof is as relevant as ever.
Now, in the midst of a new millennia, in a world fraught with anxiety and fear, the one constant humanity can rely on is the strength of family and of its traditions that will ultimately sustain it through its own trials and tribulations. Forty-five years and a generation later, new audiences can identify and take heart as they experience the tradition in great musical theater that is Fiddler on the Roof.
Source: Performing Arts Fort Worth
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