A study of
Hester Street (1975), Joan Micklin Silver's landmark drama of Jewish immigrant life in turn of the century New York, in the BFI Film Classics series.
Joan Micklin Silver's groundbreaking debut feature film, Hester Street (1975), vividly portrays the immigrant experience through the eyes of Gitl (Carol Kane), a young, Orthodox Jewish woman who arrives in New York City from Eastern Europe at the end of the nineteenth century. Reunited with her already-assimilated husband, Gitl finds they now have little in common and she is forced to adjust to a new way of life. Hester Street achieved international critical and commercial success, and Kane received a Best Actress nomination at the 1976 Academy Awards.
Marking the film's 50th anniversary, Julia Wagner's landmark book is the first to focus exclusively on Micklin Silver's film. Wagner examines how, despite the sexism and prejudice that Micklin Silver faced, a low-budget, black-and-white, female-led, independent production with Yiddish dialogue became an unexpected box-office hit. Through close analysis, Wagner highlights the importance of Hester Street as a milestone in cinema and affirms Micklin Silver's status as a unique voice in the history of American film-making.
Papildus informācija
A study of Hester Street (1975), Joan Micklin Silver's landmark drama of Jewish immigrant life in turn of the century New York, in the BFI Film Classics series.
Acknowledgements
1. One more problem we DO need: getting Hester Street off the ground
2. Evoking the past in visual and spoken language
3. Geographic and cinematic movement: Immigration and point of view
4. Uncovering: the symbolism of costume and ritual
5. Money, freedom and knowledge
6. Situating Hester Street
Notes
Credits
Julia Wagner is a writer and lecturer based in London, UK, specialising in Jewish film and culture, documentary and Italian cinema. She holds a PhD in Film Studies and has written widely for publications including Sight and Sound and the Jewish Chronicle. She curated the BFI/JW3 archival project Jewish Britain on Film.