FIDDLER ON THE ROOF 2001

Music by Jerry Bock

 

  Fiddler_Flyer[1]

SYNOPSIS AND CAST

 

1905, in the village of Anatevka, and a Jewish community in Tsarist Russia is trying to eke out a living in its shtetl.   Tevye is a milkman who has a personal relationship with God in whom he confides all. He strives, very hard, to keep up the traditions of his faith, race and culture. He has five daughters, itself a problem but what is more pressing is trying to find husbands for the eldest three children.

 

Yente, the matchmaker, does her best, but with no money, no dowry to offer she finds that her work is very difficult. Tzeitel rejects the butcher Lazar Wolf, to whom Tevye has promised her. She has her heart set on the young, impecunious tailor, Motel. The “new way” is that children shall decide partners for themselves but will Golde, Tevye’s wife, accept this change in traditional values? Tevye conjures up a dream the relating of which he attempts to persuade Golde that Lazar Wolf is not a good match and that Grandmother would much prefer her granddaughter to marry the tailor.  Golde is persuaded and that is the first chink in the breakdown of traditional values. At the wedding ceremony between Motel and Tzeitel, there is a pogrom, an anti-Jewish demonstration, orchestrated by the Chief of Police that casts into doubt the stability of Jewish life in Tsarist Russia.

 

Tevye’s second daughter, Hodel, has fallen in love with Perchik, a political student, an activist against the repressive regime. Tevye refuses to give his permission for Hodel and Perchik to marry but they inform Tevye that they do not wish to seek his permission to marry but merely his blessing. Traditions are obviously changing. Later, Perchik is arrested and is to be sent to Siberia. Hodel intends to join him. She promises her father they will be married, under a canopy, in the traditional Jewish way, Her father accompanies her to the railway station to bid her farewell.

 

Chava, Tevye’s third eldest daughter has fallen for Fyedka, a Russian soldier. Not only is he Russian, he is not a Jew and the bending of tradition this far is something that Tevye cannot reconcile himself to. From this point on, Chava ceases to be his daughter and is shunned.

 

Meanwhile, Anatevka itself is under threat. The Jews are being forced to leave their homes and many of them decide to go to live in America where many of them have friends and relations. That is to where Tevye and Golde and the two youngest children are to go. Motel and Tzeitel, who now have a child of their own, will join them. Chava and Fyedka, wanted by neither Jew nor Russian, go to live in Poland.

 

Director:  Stephen Roe

Musical Director:  Holly Stout

Choreographer:  Vanessa Aves

 

CAST (in order of appearance)

Tevye Des Muller
Golde Vivenne Gingell
Tzietel Kathryn Thompson
Hodel Montserrat Kidwell
Chava Kate Anastasi
Shprintze Laila Menia
Bielke Kate Moss
Yente Janet Huckle
Motel Jeremy Legat
Perchik Sam Moulton
Lazar Wolf Stuart Saunders
Mordcha Spencer Mitchell
Rabbi Denzil Edwards
Mendel Richard Seagroutt
Avrahm Neil Catton
Nachum Paul Sadler
Granma Tzeitel Cindy Elson
Fruma-Sarah Ingrid Palm
Constable John Huckle
Fyedka George Borisov
Shaindel Margaret Sweeney
The Fiddler Helena Ruinard
Russian Bottle Dancers  
Andy Giefer Spencer Mitchell
Dave Dadswell Richard Seagroatt
Villagers  
Vanessa Aves Gill Burchall
Sylvia Carter Gillian Cobb
Lucy Ferrier Jane Greenshields
Alice Hudson Helen Kitchen
Hayley Meynen Penny Stone
Claire Thompson Heather Wright
Melvyn Banks Peter Bagwell
Dave Dadswell Andy Giefer
Hamish Norbrook