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"It's part of why I like singing," he said last week
from New York, "and if normal singing makes me feel expressive, when
I sing Yiddish it doubles it or triples it." That intensity of emotions
will hit the Kennedy Center Feb. 9-11 when Patinkin begins a concert
tour with three performances of "Mamaloshen" (Yiddish for mother tongue),
a nostalgic rendering of Yiddish and American songs.
Expanded from his 1998 Nonesuch album of the same name,
the song list consists of ballads, dances and folk tunes dating to the
turn of the century, including ditties many a Jewish elder has sung
to many a grandchild--"Raisins and Almonds (Rozhinkes Mit Mandlen)"
and "Oyfn Pripetshik" among them. Other songs recall the sinking of
the Titanic, a man killed in a strike and a drunken rabbi. English explanations
will be projected on a wall.
Weaving the songs together with snatches of Paul Simon's
"American Tune," Patinkin means to call up the universal immigrant experience.
"It is certainly being told through a Jew's eyes . . . but the way it
is designed is to tell the story of being an American immigrant; so
the metaphor is clear that it is for everyone." Between two groupings
of Yiddish numbers, Patinkin will perform pop tunes in English.
Brought up on Chicago's South Side, the 46-year-old
stage ("Evita"), screen ("The Princess Bride") and television ("Chicago
Hope") star had to learn Yiddish for this show but always recognized
the link between the shtetl and Tin Pan Alley, between the emotional,
story-driven Yiddish song tradition and the American musical theater
nurtured by its descendants, from Irving Berlin to Stephen Sondheim.
"I feel that all the music and the nature of the stories
are very similar. When you listen to just the music, they meld beautifully,"
he said. "It's all from the same land and the same heart."
"The Language of Lore"
Washington Post, February 2, 1999
by Jane Horwitz
Mandy Patinkin figures he was born to sing in Yiddish,
a language so vivid it can make a banality like "nice weather we're having"
sound dramatic. It's a match made in Lublin.
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