Yentl

Directed by Barbra Streisand

Monday 31 March 2008 09:51 EDT
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Yentil (1983) The story: In an Ashkenazic shtetl in Poland, Yentl Mendel is the boyishly klutzy daughter and only child of long widowed Rebbe ("Talmud Teacher") Mendel, who teaches Talmud (a codification of Jewish Law) to local boys - and to Yentl, but secretly because girls were not allowed to learn the law in those days. When her father dies, Yentl is all alone in the world. She takes the momentous decision to leave the village and - disguised as a boy and calling herself by the name of her late brother, Anshel - seeks and gets admitted to a Yeshiva, to study the texts, traditions, subtleties and complexities of Torah, Talmud, etc. She befriends Avigdor who is engaged to Haddas, but her family discovers his brother committed suicide so they call off the wedding (in case Avigdor possesses the same madness). Anshel then finds "him"-self in the awkward position of being called into service as substitute bridegroom, so that the wedding can go ahead and Haddas will have a husband. It is a marriage that never gets consummated - apart from the more obvious reasons, because Haddas still wants Avigdor (though she eventually falls in love with Yentl, too). After numerous complications (including Avidor and Yentl falling in love with each other, briefly, after she reveals her secret to him, along with her bosom), the film ends with everybody getting what they always wanted - Haddas and Avigdor to live happily ever after with each other, while Anshel, now Yentl once again, goes off to America to pursue her dream of serious study in Yeshiva, where she will be able to study without needing to hide her identity as a woman.

Director

Barbra Streisand

Writers

Jack Rosenthal (screenplay)

Isaac Bashevis Singer (story)

Cast

Barbra Streisand... Yentl (aka Anshel)

Mandy Patinkin... Avigdor

Amy Irving... Hadass

Nehemiah Persoff... Reb Mendel 'Papa'

Steven Hill... Reb Alter Vishkower

Allan Corduner... Shimmele

Ruth Goring... Esther Rachel

David de Keyser... Rabbi Zalman

Bernard Spear... Tailor

Doreen Mantle... Mrs. Shaemen

Lynda Baron... Peshe

Jack Lynn... Bookseller

Anna Tzelniker... Mrs. Kovner

Miriam Margolyes... Sarah

Mary Henry... Mrs. Jacobs

Trivia

  • Answering certain reviews that suggested all the songs in the film "sounded the same," songwriters 'Alan Bergman (I)' and Marilyn Bergman responded that there are indeed similarities in the songs because they wanted them to reflect the lessons of the Talmud, in which each lesson often reflects the lesson before it.

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