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tracy ann oberman

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Tracy-Ann Oberman

Opinion

This is your story, and mine

She had never appeared in a musical before, so why was Tracy-Ann Oberman determined to take the part of Golde in Fiddler on the Roof?

July 13, 2017 10:59
Omid Djalili (Tevye) Tracy-Ann Oberman (Golde) and Company in Chichester Festival Theatre's Fiddler on the Roof
2 min read

I was eight years old when I first watched Fiddler on the Roof. It was at my grandma’s house on a May Bank Holiday and as the opening number, Tradition, began, my mum reached for a hanky. She then cried throughout the film, as did my grandma. Even my grandpa had a tear in his eye.

However, my beloved great grandma didn’t cry, and simply sat there in silence. At the end she pronounced in her heavy Yiddish accent “ Yes, it was just like that. ”

My booba, Annie, grew up in a shtetl in Mogilev, in eastern Belarus. After a spate of violent pogroms, where her own father was beaten very badly, her parents cobbled the money together to send her to England for a safer life. Aged just 14 she travelled alone in a third class passage to Liverpool and then to the East End of London, where she worked — and slept — in a clothes factory for a penny a week. She lived to the age of 99 and all her life warned us “Don’t go to Russia, the Cossacks will get you”.

Fiddler on The Roof is one of the most successful musicals of all time, it’s the multi award-winning musical by Jerry Bock and Sheldon Harnick based on the the stories of Sholem Alechim about Tevvye the milkman, his wife Golde and their five daughters. Tevvye and his family live in the fictional village of Anatevka in the Pale of Settlements of Imperial Russia at the turn of the century. Jewish inhabitants had to live, work and scratch out a living in the pale. They were not allowed to leave.