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Adler Family Papers

 Collection
Identifier: P-890

Scope and Content Note

The collection relates to the theatrical careers of Celia Adler and Lazar Freed, as well as the greater Adler acting family, including Jacob P., Sara, Frances, Stella, and Luther. It consists of manuscripts and printed versions of plays in Yiddish, English and Hebrew, lectures, theater programs, clippings of reviews of various productions, poems and songs, press notices, flyers, correspondence, memorabilia, Russian theater books, drawings, and programs and posters for performances. There are also photographs and drawings of Lazar Freed and of many of the Adler family in performances and in publicity stills. There are manuscript pages of an English translation of Celia Adler’s autobiography, which was never published.

Dates

  • Creation: 1893-1992
  • Creation: Majority of material found within 1920 - 1977

Creator

Access Restrictions

The collection is open to all researchers, except items that may be restricted due to their fragility, or privacy.

Use Restrictions

No permission is required to quote, reproduce or otherwise publish manuscript materials found in this collection, as long as the usage is scholarly, educational, and non-commercial. For inquiries about other usage, please contact the Director of Collections and Engagement at mmeyers@ajhs.org.

For reference questions, please email: inquiries@cjh.org

Biographical and Historical Note

Celia Adler

Celia Feinman Adler was born in New York on December 6, 1889 and was the only child of actors Jacob P. Adler and his second wife Dinah Shtettin. She was known as the “First Lady of the Yiddish Theatre.” Her parents’ marriage was short-lived and after Jacob Adler’s 1891 elopement with Sara Heine, Dinah divorced Jacob and married actor Siegmund Feinman. Their daughter Lillie Feinman married Yiddish actor Ludwig Satz. Dinah continued to appear onstage with Jacob Adler even after their divorce and, at age four, Celia Adler acted in “Der Yidisher Kenig Lear” (The Jewish King Lear) alongside her father and his new wife, Sara.

Celia Adler continued to act in children’s roles until she entered high school, mainly in her father’s company alongside her father and mother. She attended public high school in New York City and planned to become a teacher. Then, after playing the younger sister to Bertha Kalish’s Magda in Hermann Sudermann’s “Heimat,” (Home) and with Kalish’s encouragement, she resumed her acting career as Celia Feinman. In 1909 she performed with her mother at the London Pavilion Theatre, and in 1910 she toured Poland with her mother. She then returned to New York where she appeared with many of the greatest actors of the Yiddish stage including Rudolph Schildkraut, David Kessler and Boris Thomashefsky, who had previously directed her in Israel Zangwill’s “Children of the Ghetto.” She played, under the name Celia Adler, alongside Schildkraut in Shomer’s “Eykele Mazik” (The Reformed Convict) at Thomashefsky’s People’s Theatre. In the following years, Adler acted on various stages, including Thomashefsky’s National Theater, the Arch Street Theatre in Philadelphia with Anshel Shor and at David Kessler’s Second Avenue Theatre, going from one temporary contract to another.

In 1918, Maurice Schwartz hired Celia for his Yiddish Art Theater. Others in the troupe included Jacob Ben-Ami, Ludwig Satz, Berta Gersten, and Celia’s husband Lazar Freed (May 30, 1889-March 11, 1944), with whom she had a son, Selwyn (Zelig) Freed (June 5, 1917-) before divorcing. Schwartz’s repertory was the classic Yiddish melodramas and vaudeville that were so popular at the time and Adler was usually cast as a weeping maiden or a desperate mother. Adler and Ben-Ami persuaded Schwartz to stage a serious drama, Peretz Hirschbein’s “Farvorfen Vinkel” (Forsaken Nook) but although the play was a hit, Schwartz quickly returned to his former material.

Under the leadership of Ben-Ami, a group of actors, including Celia Adler, broke away, founding the Jewish Art Theater (Naye Teater) in 1919. Inspired by the Moscow Art Theater and the new trend towards realism in drama, they developed a small literary repertoire with fully realized characterizations. They adopted a single Yiddish dialect to be used consistently, what ultimately came to be known as “theater Yiddish,” and appointed a literary-artistic committee to choose the repertoire. They hired a professional director, Emanuel Reicher of the Deutsche Freie Buehne (German Free Stage), and engaged professionals to design the sets and lighting. The new theater’s first season, including Hirschbein’s “The Idle Inn” and Leo Tolstoy’s “Power of Darkness,” marked a high point in the development of Yiddish theater but the troupe folded quickly and the members dispersed.

In 1921–1922, Celia Adler, Ben-Ami, and Satz performed at the Irving Place Theater, and in 1923 Adler acted again under the direction of Maurice Schwartz, appearing as leading lady of the troupe. During the 1923–1924 season, she appeared as a guest star with Anshel Shor in Philadelphia and toured Europe and America with her brother-in-law, Ludwig Satz. In 1927–1928, Adler tried directing her own repertory company, varying this work with guest roles at the various Yiddish theaters in New York and Philadelphia as well as tours throughout Europe and South America. While at the Yiddish Art Theater in 1929–1930 at Philadelphia’s Arch Street Theater, she met Jack Cone, an actor and theater manager she had known in childhood and they soon married. Cone died May 27, 1956.

Adler appeared in the films “Abe’s Imported Wife” and the 1937 production “Vu Iz Mayn Kind?” (Where Is My Child?), based on a play by Louis Freiman about a woman who gives up her child for adoption, is committed to an insane asylum and is reunited with her son twenty years later. These roles marked a reprise of the melodramatic tearjerkers of her earlier years. In 1938 she joined the Yiddish Dramatic Players, together with the new star of the Yiddish stage, Joseph Buloff. Adler continued to act on the Yiddish and English stage throughout the 1920s and 1930s, even as Yiddish theater faded away almost completely. After accepting a role in an English translation of Pinski’s play, “Der Oytser” (The Treasure) at the Garrick Theater in New York, she wrote a letter to her fans via the Yiddish World explaining that her departure was temporary and promising to return to the Yiddish stage.

In the aftermath of World War II, Adler presented a program of English and Yiddish songs to troops in American military camps under the auspices of the National Jewish Welfare Board. She later continued these concert appearances off-Broadway. In 1946, at age fifty-seven, Adler was called back to the stage by Ben Hecht, who cast her opposite Paul Muni (an old friend from Yiddish theater days) in his English-language play “A Flag Is Born,” which was one of the first theatrical portrayals of a Holocaust survivor. Members of the cast included Marlon Brando, Quentin Reynolds, and her youngest brother, Luther Adler, who also directed. Scheduled to run four weeks, the play ran for thirty weeks. Celia Adler appeared in several films and television programs from the 1930s through the early 1950s, including a small part in the 1948 film “Naked City,” before retiring. In 1959 Adler married for a third time, to businessman Nathan Forman, who died in late December 1978. Soon after, Celia Adler died on January 31, 1979.

Jacob P. Adler

Jacob Pavlovitch Adler, star of the Yiddish theater in Odessa, London and New York City and patriarch of a great acting clan, was born in Odessa on February 12, 1855. He established himself on the Yiddish stage in Odessa and London before moving to New York City in 1889. In New York Adler started his own Yiddish theater company, ushering in a new, more serious Yiddish theater, most notably by recruiting the Yiddish theater's first realistic playwright, Jacob Gordin. He scored a great triumph in the title role of Gordin's “Der Yiddisher Kenig Lear” (The Yiddish King Lear), set in 19th-century Russia, and in the title role of Karl Gutzkow’s play “Uriel Acosta,” which along with his more realistic portrayal of Shakespeare's Shylock would form the core of the persona he defined as the “Grand Jew.”

Jacob Adler married the actress Sonya Oberlander in 1880 and together they had two children, Rivka, who was born in 1883 and died of croup in 1886, and Abram, born 1886. Sonya died of an infection contracted while giving birth to Abram. At the same time, Jacob had been having an affair with actress Jenny “Jennya” Kaiser, who gave birth to his son Charles, also in 1886, and with a young chorus girl from an Orthodox Jewish family, Dinah Shtettin, as well as several other affairs. Dinah's father insisted on a marriage, which took place in 1887. In 1889, Dinah gave birth to a daughter, Celia, but the marriage did not last. After Jacob ran away with Maurice Heine’s ex-wife Sara (1858 – April 28, 1953), Dinah and Jacob were divorced. Together, Jacob and Sara Adler were two of the most prominent Yiddish theater actors for almost 30 years and Sara continued to act after Jacob Adler’s death in 1926. Jacob and Sara Adler had six children together, Frances, Florence, Jay, Julia, Stella, and Luther, all of whom, like their three older half-siblings, were involved with the theater, particularly Stella and Luther, who were involved with the Group Theater. Many of the Adler nieces, nephews, in-laws, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren were also involved in theater and films.

On March 31, 1926, Jacob Adler collapsed, dying almost instantly. Thousands of mourners marched with his coffin through the streets of the Lower East Side and a New York Times editorial maintained that Adler’s death marked the end of the heroic age of the Yiddish theater.

References

Adler, Celia. Tsili Adler Dertseylt. Nyu-york: Tsili Adler Faundeyshon un Bukh-Komitet, 1959.

Adler, Jacob, translated by Lulla Rosenfeld. Jacob Adler: A Life on the Stage. New York: Applause Theater Books, 1999.

Cook, Joan, “Celia Forman Dies; Stage Actress, 89.” New York Times, February 2, 1979, pg. A13.

Jewish Women in America: An Historical Encyclopedia. Paula E. Hyman and Deborah Dash Moore, eds. Vol. 1, pgs. 13-15, Routledge: New York, London, 1997.

Lifson, David S. The Yiddish Theatre in America. New York: Thomas Yoseloff, 1965.

Rosenfeld, Lulla Adler. The Yiddish Theatre and Jacob P. Adler. New York: Shpolsky Publishers, 1977.

Sandrow, Nahma. Vagabond Stars. New York: Harper and Row, 1977.

Zylbercweig, Zalmen. Leksikon fun Yidishn Teater. Vol. 1, pgs. 35-37, Nyu-york: Farlag “alishbe,” 1931.

http://2ndave.nyu.edu/manakin/

Biographical / Historical

Celia Adler

Celia Feinman Adler was born in New York on December 6, 1889 and was the only child of actors Jacob P. Adler and his second wife Dinah Shtettin. She was known as the “First Lady of the Yiddish Theatre.” Her parents’ marriage was short-lived and after Jacob Adler’s 1891 elopement with Sara Heine, Dinah divorced Jacob and married actor Siegmund Feinman. Their daughter Lillie Feinman married Yiddish actor Ludwig Satz. Dinah continued to appear onstage with Jacob Adler even after their divorce and, at age four, Celia Adler acted in “Der Yidisher Kenig Lear” (The Jewish King Lear) alongside her father and his new wife, Sara.

Celia Adler continued to act in children’s roles until she entered high school, mainly in her father’s company alongside her father and mother. She attended public high school in New York City and planned to become a teacher. Then, after playing the younger sister to Bertha Kalish’s Magda in Hermann Sudermann’s “Heimat,” (Home) and with Kalish’s encouragement, she resumed her acting career as Celia Feinman. In 1909 she performed with her mother at the London Pavilion Theatre, and in 1910 she toured Poland with her mother. She then returned to New York where she appeared with many of the greatest actors of the Yiddish stage including Rudolph Schildkraut, David Kessler and Boris Thomashefsky, who had previously directed her in Israel Zangwill’s “Children of the Ghetto.” She played, under the name Celia Adler, alongside Schildkraut in Shomer’s “Eykele Mazik” (The Reformed Convict) at Thomashefsky’s People’s Theatre. In the following years, Adler acted on various stages, including Thomashefsky’s National Theater, the Arch Street Theatre in Philadelphia with Anshel Shor and at David Kessler’s Second Avenue Theatre, going from one temporary contract to another.

In 1918, Maurice Schwartz hired Celia for his Yiddish Art Theater. Others in the troupe included Jacob Ben-Ami, Ludwig Satz, Berta Gersten, and Celia’s husband Lazar Freed (May 30, 1889-March 11, 1944), with whom she had a son, Selwyn (Zelig) Freed (June 5, 1917-) before divorcing. Schwartz’s repertory was the classic Yiddish melodramas and vaudeville that were so popular at the time and Adler was usually cast as a weeping maiden or a desperate mother. Adler and Ben-Ami persuaded Schwartz to stage a serious drama, Peretz Hirschbein’s “Farvorfen Vinkel” (Forsaken Nook) but although the play was a hit, Schwartz quickly returned to his former material.

Under the leadership of Ben-Ami, a group of actors, including Celia Adler, broke away, founding the Jewish Art Theater (Naye Teater) in 1919. Inspired by the Moscow Art Theater and the new trend towards realism in drama, they developed a small literary repertoire with fully realized characterizations. They adopted a single Yiddish dialect to be used consistently, what ultimately came to be known as “theater Yiddish,” and appointed a literary-artistic committee to choose the repertoire. They hired a professional director, Emanuel Reicher of the Deutsche Freie Buehne (German Free Stage), and engaged professionals to design the sets and lighting. The new theater’s first season, including Hirschbein’s “The Idle Inn” and Leo Tolstoy’s “Power of Darkness,” marked a high point in the development of Yiddish theater but the troupe folded quickly and the members dispersed.

In 1921–1922, Celia Adler, Ben-Ami, and Satz performed at the Irving Place Theater, and in 1923 Adler acted again under the direction of Maurice Schwartz, appearing as leading lady of the troupe. During the 1923–1924 season, she appeared as a guest star with Anshel Shor in Philadelphia and toured Europe and America with her brother-in-law, Ludwig Satz. In 1927–1928, Adler tried directing her own repertory company, varying this work with guest roles at the various Yiddish theaters in New York and Philadelphia as well as tours throughout Europe and South America. While at the Yiddish Art Theater in 1929–1930 at Philadelphia’s Arch Street Theater, she met Jack Cone, an actor and theater manager she had known in childhood and they soon married. Cone died May 27, 1956.

Adler appeared in the films “Abe’s Imported Wife” and the 1937 production “Vu Iz Mayn Kind?” (Where Is My Child?), based on a play by Louis Freiman about a woman who gives up her child for adoption, is committed to an insane asylum and is reunited with her son twenty years later. These roles marked a reprise of the melodramatic tearjerkers of her earlier years. In 1938 she joined the Yiddish Dramatic Players, together with the new star of the Yiddish stage, Joseph Buloff. Adler continued to act on the Yiddish and English stage throughout the 1920s and 1930s, even as Yiddish theater faded away almost completely. After accepting a role in an English translation of Pinski’s play, “Der Oytser” (The Treasure) at the Garrick Theater in New York, she wrote a letter to her fans via the Yiddish World explaining that her departure was temporary and promising to return to the Yiddish stage.

In the aftermath of World War II, Adler presented a program of English and Yiddish songs to troops in American military camps under the auspices of the National Jewish Welfare Board. She later continued these concert appearances off-Broadway. In 1946, at age fifty-seven, Adler was called back to the stage by Ben Hecht, who cast her opposite Paul Muni (an old friend from Yiddish theater days) in his English-language play “A Flag Is Born,” which was one of the first theatrical portrayals of a Holocaust survivor. Members of the cast included Marlon Brando, Quentin Reynolds, and her youngest brother, Luther Adler, who also directed. Scheduled to run four weeks, the play ran for thirty weeks. Celia Adler appeared in several films and television programs from the 1930s through the early 1950s, including a small part in the 1948 film “Naked City,” before retiring. In 1959 Adler married for a third time, to businessman Nathan Forman, who died in late December 1978. Soon after, Celia Adler died on January 31, 1979.

Biographical / Historical

Jacob P. Adler

Jacob Pavlovitch Adler, star of the Yiddish theater in Odessa, London and New York City and patriarch of a great acting clan, was born in Odessa on February 12, 1855. He established himself on the Yiddish stage in Odessa and London before moving to New York City in 1889. In New York Adler started his own Yiddish theater company, ushering in a new, more serious Yiddish theater, most notably by recruiting the Yiddish theater's first realistic playwright, Jacob Gordin. He scored a great triumph in the title role of Gordin's “Der Yiddisher Kenig Lear” (The Yiddish King Lear), set in 19th-century Russia, and in the title role of Karl Gutzkow’s play “Uriel Acosta,” which along with his more realistic portrayal of Shakespeare's Shylock would form the core of the persona he defined as the “Grand Jew.”

Jacob Adler married the actress Sonya Oberlander in 1880 and together they had two children, Rivka, who was born in 1883 and died of croup in 1886, and Abram, born 1886. Sonya died of an infection contracted while giving birth to Abram. At the same time, Jacob had been having an affair with actress Jenny “Jennya” Kaiser, who gave birth to his son Charles, also in 1886, and with a young chorus girl from an Orthodox Jewish family, Dinah Shtettin, as well as several other affairs. Dinah's father insisted on a marriage, which took place in 1887. In 1889, Dinah gave birth to a daughter, Celia, but the marriage did not last. After Jacob ran away with Maurice Heine’s ex-wife Sara (1858 – April 28, 1953), Dinah and Jacob were divorced. Together, Jacob and Sara Adler were two of the most prominent Yiddish theater actors for almost 30 years and Sara continued to act after Jacob Adler’s death in 1926. Jacob and Sara Adler had six children together, Frances, Florence, Jay, Julia, Stella, and Luther, all of whom, like their three older half-siblings, were involved with the theater, particularly Stella and Luther, who were involved with the Group Theater. Many of the Adler nieces, nephews, in-laws, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren were also involved in theater and films.

On March 31, 1926, Jacob Adler collapsed, dying almost instantly. Thousands of mourners marched with his coffin through the streets of the Lower East Side and a New York Times editorial maintained that Adler’s death marked the end of the heroic age of the Yiddish theater.

References

Adler, Celia. Tsili Adler Dertseylt. Nyu-york: Tsili Adler Faundeyshon un Bukh-Komitet, 1959.

Adler, Jacob, translated by Lulla Rosenfeld. Jacob Adler: A Life on the Stage. New York: Applause Theater Books, 1999.

Cook, Joan, “Celia Forman Dies; Stage Actress, 89.” New York Times, February 2, 1979, pg. A13.

Jewish Women in America: An Historical Encyclopedia. Paula E. Hyman and Deborah Dash Moore, eds. Vol. 1, pgs. 13-15, Routledge: New York, London, 1997.

Lifson, David S. The Yiddish Theatre in America. New York: Thomas Yoseloff, 1965.

Rosenfeld, Lulla Adler. The Yiddish Theatre and Jacob P. Adler. New York: Shpolsky Publishers, 1977.

Sandrow, Nahma. Vagabond Stars. New York: Harper and Row, 1977.

Zylbercweig, Zalmen. Leksikon fun Yidishn Teater. Vol. 1, pgs. 35-37, Nyu-york: Farlag “alishbe,” 1931.

http://2ndave.nyu.edu/manakin/

Extent

3.5 Linear Feet (2 manuscript boxes, 1 half manuscript box, 1 OS1 box, 1 OS5 box, 1 OS2 folder)

Language of Materials

Yiddish

English

Hebrew

Russian

German

Dutch; Flemish

Abstract

This collection contains the personal and professional papers of Celia Adler and Lazar Freed, including theatrical materials such as scripts, programs and sheet music, correspondence, newspaper clippings, assorted publications, and photographs of many of the members of the Adler family and their friends from the Yiddish theater. These materials reflect the wide scope of the Adler acting family and their immense influence on Yiddish theater, Broadway and motion pictures.

Physical Location

Located in AJHS New York, NY

Acquisition Information

The papers of Celia Adler and Lazar Freed were donated by their son Selwyn Freed in 2000. The photographs of Jacob, Sara, Stella, Luther, and Frances Adler were donated by Stella’s daughter Ellen Adler in 2000.

Related Material

AJHS and YIVO have the autobiographies of Jacob P. Adler, Jacob Adler: A Life on the Stage and Celia Adler, Tsili Adler Dertseylt, as well as two books about Jacob P. Adler. In addition, the YIVO Archives has archival collections of Celia Adler’s Papers and Jacob P. Adler’s Papers, RG 399 and RG 1177, respectively, and collections about the Yiddish theater and the papers of other Yiddish stage actors in which Celia Adler and Jacob P. Adler are represented. The Theater and Film Poster Collection of Abram Kanof, P-978, contains numerous posters of many members of the Adler family. The YIVO Library has a videocassette copy of the Celia Adler movie “Where is My Child?” and both the AJHS and YIVO Archives have photos of Celia Adler, Lazar Freed, Jacob P. Adler, and other members of the Adler acting family. The AJHS Archives has a copy of the script for “A Flag is Born” as well as a program for the show from 1946. Stella Adler’s papers are at the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin. Luther Adler’s papers are at the Billy Rose Theatre Division of the New York Public Library.

Title
Guide to the Adler Family Papers, 1893-1992
Status
Completed
Author
Originally processed by David Morrill Schlitt in June-August 2007. Additional processing by Rachel S. Harrison in April 2010 as part of the Leon Levy Archival Processing Initiative, made possible by the Leon Levy Foundation. Further processing done by Rachel S. Harrison in April 2013 as part of the Jewish Performing Arts Digital Archive Initiative.
Date
© 2010.
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin
Language of description note
Description is in English.
Edition statement
This version was derived from AdlerFamily.xml

Revision Statements

  • November 2020: RJohnstone: post-ASpace migration cleanup.

Repository Details

Part of the American Jewish Historical Society Repository

Contact:
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New York NY 10011 United States