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X-WR-CALNAME:mamuta art &amp; research center
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://old.mamuta.org
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for mamuta art &amp; research center
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DTSTART:20160101T000000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20171122T203000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20171122T220000
DTSTAMP:20260410T052934
CREATED:20171022T174730Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20171024T114931Z
UID:5847-1511382600-1511388000@old.mamuta.org
SUMMARY:The Dybbuk 1937-2017  | Film and Live Performance
DESCRIPTION:Tickets: https://www.eventer.co.il/dybbuk \n\nJerusalem International YMCA\, P.A.T. Labs and Mamuta present for only one time the great success of the year performed at the Jerusalem Film Festival 2017:\nThe Dybbuk 1937-2017\n\n\n\nFilm and live performance by Sala-manca (Lea Mauas and Diego Rotman)\, Adi Kaplan\, Shachar Carmel\, Ayu Rotman Mauas & The Jerusalem Street Orchestra\, conducted by Ido Shpitalnik \nMichael Waszynski (Poland) with a new edition by Adi Kaplan\, Shachar Carmel & Sala-manca \n״The dead were returned to life\, and a culture long vanished\, wiped out by the Holocaust\, was resurrected on the screen” (Ira Konigsberg) \nA new\, re-edited version of the Yiddish film will be screened with live music and dubbing performance in the courtyard of the former Jerusalem Leprosarium (Hansen House)\, a venue no less gothic than the film’s aesthetics. \nThe new\, film-performance version is based on the film directed by Michael Waszynsky (1937)\, based upon S. Ansky’s play Der Dybbuk. Ansky wrote the play after completing the ethnographic expedition he organized between 1912-1914. The play (and film) tells the story of the ill-fated love between Hanan and Lea\, the possession of Lea’s body by Hanan’s soul\, the exorcism ceremony\, and death as resolution – a re-encounter of the lovers in the next world. \nAdi Kaplan\, Shahar Carmel\, and Sala-manca not only re-edited the film\, they also replaced the original music composed by Henekh Kohn and the cantorial songs performed by Gershon Sirotta\, with a new score. Performed live by the Jerusalem Street Orchestra\, conducted by Ido Shpitalnik\, the score is an adapted version of the Vltva (The Moldau)\, the second symphonic poem of Má vlast (My Homeland)\, by Czech composer Bedřich Smetana.  The use of Smetana’s Moldau as a clear reference to Israel’s national anthem – resonating it\, but different – creates a liminal sonic soundscape incapable of defining an accurate sense of place or ideology. \nLea Mauas and Diego Rotman of the Sala-manca group are professional and real life partners\, possessing the voices of the “dead but eternal” characters\, originally performed by another real-life couple\, Lili Liliana (Leah) and Leon Liebgold (Hannan) \nIn the spirit of The Dybbuk\, the artists visit the archive instead of the cemetery\, and invite the dead to dance with the living once again. \nWith the support of The National Authority for Yiddish Culture\, Ostrovsky Family Fund\, Hansen House\, Jerusalem Municipality\, Bet Shalom Aleichem\, and the Polish Institute.
URL:https://old.mamuta.org/event/the-dybbuk-1937-2017-film-and-live-performance/
LOCATION:YMCA THEATER\, King David 26\, Jerusalem\, Israel
CATEGORIES:Performance/Concert
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/gif:https://old.mamuta.org/wpress/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/Dybbuk_YMCA_eng_final.gif
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