FESTIVAL SCREENINGS
Washington DC Jewish Film Festival (2011)
Toronto Jewish Film Festival (2011)
Jewish Festival in Krakow (2011)
Cape Ann Jewish Film Festival (2011)
Kulture Festival, Florida State University (2011)
Jewishfilm.2011 NCJF's 14th Annual Film Festival (2011)
US PREMIERE New York Jewish Film Festival (2011)
WORLD PREMIERE Jerusalem International Film Festival (July, 2010)
"This strange, threadbare drama is high Holocaust kitsch... but the film gets its power and its virtue from the psychic liberation of scarred survivors living, unhealed, in plain sight and silence." -The New Yorker
Moishe Oysher plays Leo, a German concentration camp survivor suffering from traumatic amnesia. In America, Leo works as a hotel clerk next door to Luli’s Gypsy Paradise, a nightclub where he is befriended by comedian Joey Napoleon (borsht belter Joey Adams). One night the two get tipsy and Leo bursts into song. “Leo the Fabulous” becomes Luli’s headliner—although he can only sing when intoxicated. Meanwhile Leo’s visits to a psychiatrist brings forth fragmented memories of his cantor father (shown in flashback with Oysher playing his father singing Hebrew cantorial music). When gangsters looking for Napoleon knock Leo unconscious, his memory finally returns and Oysher is shown singing in the bombed-out ruins of Berlin’s Levetzow Synagogue, poignant scenes shot on location in 1955.
BACKGROUND
This important and little known film is one of the first American features to dramatize the Holocaust and only the second to depict a holocaust survivor (called “refugee” as the film predates the use of the term “survivor”) as the main protagonist. The film represents an early attempt to integrate the Holocaust into mainstream popular culture using American movie conventions of the period. Singing in the Dark is a quirky mix of 1950s American film genres—the musical, gangster and mystery movie—and the period’s fascination with psychiatry. While Jews are not discussed directly, Jewish content is explicit, especially in the popular Yiddish songs (sung in English) and liturgical Hebrew songs.
This musical drama stars Moishe Oysher as a concentration camp survivor suffering from traumatic amnesia who becomes a singing sensation. A quirky combination of 1950s movie conventions-the musical, gangster and mystery movie-this virtually unknown independent film is one of the first American features to dramatize the Holocaust.
Directed by Max Nossek, Singing in the Dark stars the popular entertainer Moishe Oysher in his only English language film. Borscht belt comedian Joey Adams co-stars and produced. Academy Award-winning cinematographer Boris Kaufman (On The Waterfront) shot the film on location in New York City and in Berlin.
While most of the action takes place in New York, the film includes extremely rare and poignant film material. Kaufman shot amid the remains of the Levetzow Synagogue in Berlin which was badly damaged during WWII and razed shortly after Singing in the Dark was shot. Built in 1914, the Levetzow Synagogue sat 2,000 people. On Yom Kippur 1941, the Gestapo converted the synagogue into a collection point for deportations. From there, more than 37,500 Jews living in Berlin were deported to extermination camps.
CREDITS
Director: Max Nosseck
Director of Photography: Boris Kaufman
Executive Producer: Joey Adams
Musical Direction: Abraham Ellstein
Words and Music: Moishe Oysher
Screenplay: Aben Kandel, Ann Hood & Stephen Kandel
Starring: Moishe Oysher (Leo), Joey Adams (Joey Napoleon), Phyllis Hill (Ruth), Lawrence Tierney (Biff), Kay Medford (Luli), Mickey Knox (Harry), Dave Starr (Larry), Cindy Heller (Fran), Al Kelly (La Fontaine), Henry Sharpe (Dr. Neumann), Stan Hoffman (Stan), Paul Andor (Refugee), Abe Simon (Thug)
RESTORATION
Restoration with funding from
Linda Lipsett and Jules Bernstein
KodakWith additional support from
Wellfleet Foundation
Brandeis University
Massachusetts Cultural Council
The National Center for Jewish Film’s Reel FundersSpecial thanks
Saul Jeffee, Movielab, Inc.
Hila Feil and Gerald Feil, ASC
PRESS
The New Yorker Review (January, 2011)
Tablet Magazine on "Singing Sensation: Moishe Oysher" (July, 2010)
EXTRAS
Press Release: US Premiere at New York Jewish Film Festival (PDF)
HOME USE ONLY
$36.00 plus shipping
Home Use Only DVD (Not for Classroom/Institutional Use)Does not include Public Performance Rights
Home Use Policy (pdf)INSTITUTIONAL USE
$90.00 plus shipping
Classroom/Institutional Use Only DVDDoes not include Public Performance Rights
Institutional Use Policy (pdf)
ALSO WITH MOISHE OYSHER
Overture to Glory (directed by Max Nosseck)
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Singing in the Dark
USA, 1956, 86 min, B&W
Directed by Max NosseckNEW RELEASE
RESTORED
with New English Subtitles by
The National Center for Jewish Film
$90 Institutional Use DVD
Buy Now
$36 Home Use DVD
Buy Now
Call to arrange screenings. Public Exhibition 35mm, Beta rental available.
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