OLSHANETSKY, ALEXANDER BIOGRAPHY(1892 - 1944)
Alexander Olshanetsky was
one of the most prominent composers and conductors associated with the American
Yiddish theater. He was also highly regarded as a synagogue choir director, and
he wrote a handful of (unpublished) liturgical music that is clearly theatrical
in nature. Olshanetsky was born in Odessa, where he had a traditional Jewish
and a modern Western-oriented Gymnasium education. He immigrated to the
United States in 1922 and almost immediately became involved with the Yiddish theater,
initially with Maurice Schwarz's Yiddish Art Theater, for which he wrote
incidental music and the well-known song Shiru, and then with the
popular "Second Avenue" medium, with which his name became ubiquitous
from 1925 until his death. Two of his most famous Yiddish theater songs are Mayn
shtetele belz and ikh hob dikh tsufil lib.
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