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You are at:Home » “Fiddler on the Roof” in Yiddish Opens Soon – front mezz junkies, Theater News
“Fiddler on the Roof” in Yiddish Opens Soon – front mezz junkies, Theater News
Reviews

“Fiddler on the Roof” in Yiddish Opens Soon – front mezz junkies, Theater News

25 May 20264 Mins Read
Steven Skybell in Fiddler on the Roof in Yiddish. Photo by Victor Nechay.

Frontmezzjunkies reports: Anatevka returns to the Elgin Theatre for a limited Toronto engagement beginning May 25

Quietly settling somewhere deep in my emotional memory, the experience of seeing Fiddler on the Roof in Yiddish in 2019 still feels vivid years later. That production, directed by Joel Grey, opens soon at the Elgin Theatre, and it’s one that shouldn’t be missed. Frustratingly, I will not be able to return to experience it once again, something I genuinely regret, because this reworking remains one of the most moving and unexpectedly revelatory theatrical experiences I have encountered in recent years. For Toronto audiences, the opportunity is finally here, and it feels like a rare gift worth experiencing.

Presented by the Harold Green Jewish Theatre Company, the internationally celebrated production arrives for a limited engagement running May 25 through June 7, 2026. This acclaimed staging became one of the most talked-about theatrical events of the last decade following its New York run, offering audiences Jerry Bock, Sheldon Harnick, and Joseph Stein’s beloved musical performed entirely in Yiddish with English subtitles. For anyone wondering whether that concept creates distance or disconnection, I can honestly say the opposite proved true for me.

When I first went to see the production in New York in 2019, I approached it with hesitation. “Sounds crazy, no?” I wrote at the time. “But as it turns out, the resounding answer is ‘No, not at all. It’s actually a blessing‘” (here’s my review). Hearing these songs performed in Yiddish unlocked an emotional texture and musicality that felt astonishingly organic. Rather than functioning as a barrier, the subtitles simply opened the door wider, allowing the audience to fully absorb the warmth, humour, heartbreak, and humanity woven throughout the piece. The result was intimate, immediate, and deeply affecting.

Steven Skybell in Fiddler on the Roof in Yiddish. Photo by Victor Nechay.

Steven Skybell (Broadway’s Cabaret), reprising his acclaimed performance as Tevye, remains one of the production’s greatest strengths. In my original review, I described him as “the heart of this less grand production,” noting that it “beats strong, embracing us in his care, his wit, his humor, and his pain.” His performance avoids theatrical excess and instead grounds the production in emotional honesty and care, allowing Tevye’s fears, joys, frustrations, and devotion to his family land with remarkable clarity. Around him, a strong Canadian supporting company helps fully realize the world of Anatevka with tenderness and specificity, while the creative team, including music supervisor Zalmen Mlotek, scenic designer Beowulf Boritt, costume designer Ann Hould-Ward, and lighting designers Peter Kaczorowski, preserves the production’s graceful balance between intimacy and tradition.

What continues to make this production feel so special is not simply the language, but the sense of cultural memory flowing through it. Fiddler on the Roof in Yiddish does not attempt to reinvent the musical or force modern relevance onto it. Instead, it allows the story’s themes of displacement, faith, family, and generational change to emerge naturally through the rhythms of a language deeply connected to the world the characters inhabit. Years after first seeing it, I still find myself thinking about how unexpectedly personal the experience became.

Like so many people, I already carried my own emotional relationship with Fiddler into the theatre, especially through the 1971 film and the performances of Topol and Norma Crane, whose warmth and humanity shaped my earliest understanding of the story. What surprised me most was how this production expanded that connection rather than competing with it. It opened another emotional doorway into a musical I thought I already fully understood. That quiet generosity is part of what makes this staging feel so meaningful. It trusts the enduring power of the story while allowing it to breathe through a different cultural and emotional lens. Sometimes, familiar stories simply discover new ways to reach us.

Steven Skybell in Fiddler on the Roof in Yiddish. Photo by Jeremy Daniel.

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