The Flying Matchmaker

1966 Israeli film
  • 1966 (1966)
Running time
120 minutesCountryIsraelLanguagesYiddish
Hebrew
The title page of Goldfaden's play

The Flying Matchmaker[citation needed] (also: Two Kuni Lemel, Shnei Kuni Leml or שני קוני למל) is a 1966 Israeli film musical directed by Israel Becker. The film was the first major success on screen for lead actor Mike Burstyn who has a double role as Kuni Leml and his cousin Max, and also casts his father Pesach Burstein in a small role. The film was selected as the Israeli entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 39th Academy Awards, but was not accepted as a nominee.[1]

Plot history

The plot is based on the 1880 Yiddish play, a comedy of errors, Di tsvey Kuni-Lemels (Yiddish: די בײדע קוני-לעמעל) by Abraham Goldfaden. It was based on the German-language comedy Nathan Schlemiel oder Orthodoxe und reformirte Juden by J. Rosenzweig[a] (Ein Tendenz-Lustspiel in 3 Acten. Pressburg, 1873[2]). Rosenzweig's was also the base for the 1879 play Di tsvey shmuel shmelkes (Two Shmuel Shmelkes) by Joseph Lateiner, and some sources say that Goldfaden's was based on Lateiner's,[4] because the play of the latter one was earlier, but Lateiner's text is no longer available.[5]

Plot

The local matchmaker (shadchan), Reb Kalman, arranges a match for Carolina, the daughter of a wealthy client, Reb Pinchas. The daughter is already romantically linked with Max, who teaches her French. He arranges to show up in Kuni Lemel's place, disguised as Kuni Lemel, so he can marry Carolina. Confusion ensues as both Max and Kuni Lemel show up to court Carolina.

Cast

  • Mike Burstyn as Max / Kuni Leml
  • Raphael Klatchkin [he] as Matchmaker
  • Germaine Unikovsky [he] as Matchmaker's Daughter (as Jermain Unikovsky)
  • Shmuel Rodensky as Rebbe Pinchas
  • Elisheva Michaeli [he] as Rebbe Pinchas' Wife
  • Rina Ganor [he] as Carolina, Rebbe Pinchas's Daughter
  • Aharon Meskin as Kuni Leml's Father
  • Ari Kutai [he] as Max's Father

Sequels

  • Kuni Lemel in Tel Aviv [he] (Kuni Lemel in Tel Aviv at IMDb Edit this at Wikidata), 1976
  • Kuni Lemel in Cairo [he] (Kuni Lemel in Cairo at IMDb Edit this at Wikidata), 1983

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Rosenzweig's text says that the action is "somewhere in Hungary"[2] and a 1906 Hungarian reference book gives author's name as Ignácz Rosenzweig, born in Pozsony (Both Pressburg and Poszony are the names of Bratislava,)[3]

References

  1. ^ Margaret Herrick Library, Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
  2. ^ a b Nathan Schlemiel oder Orthodoxe und reformirte Juden. Ein Tendenz-Lustspiel in 3 Akten, public domain, readable in Google Books
  3. ^ József Szinnyei [hu], Life and works of Hungarian writers, p. 1183 (public domain, readable in Google Books)
  4. ^ Lateiner, Yoysef (Joseph) (December 25, 1853–February 23, 1935), translated from Leksikon Fun Der Nayer Yidisher Literatur by Joshua A Fogel
  5. ^ 'Landmark Yiddish Plays. A Critical Anthology, 2010, p. 39

External links

  • Shnei Kuni Leml at IMDb Edit this at Wikidata
  • Joel Berkowitz, Di tsvey Kuni-Leml [The Two Kuni-Lemls] (synopsys of the original play)