Childhood and youth
Adler was born in''Sanitar'' and Inspector
The outbreak of theActing career
Lulla Rosenfeld's remark that Adler "...rel edentirely on classics and translations of modern European plays" does not quite tell the whole story. On one hand, he was also responsible for recruiting the Yiddish theater's first naturalistic playwright,Russia
Adler wrote in his memoir that the passion of his future wife Sonya Oberlander (and of her family) for theater, and their vision of what Yiddish theater could become, kept him in the profession despite his uncle's view. When she was cast by Rosenberg opposite Jacob Spivakovsky in the title role ofLondon
Coming to America
With the aid of a small sum of money from his distant relative the Chief Rabbi, Adler got together the money to travel by steerage to New York, with his infant son Abrom, Alexander Oberlander and his family, Keni and Volodya Liptzin, and Herman Fiedler, among others. Adler did not doubt that the rabbi was glad to see Yiddish actors leaving London. In New York, they promptly discovered that neither Mogulesko and Finkel at the Romanian Opera House nor Maurice Heine at the Oriental Theater had any use for them. They headed on to Chicago, where, after a brief initial success, the troupe fell apart due to a combination of labor disputes and cutthroat competition. The Oberlanders managed to start a restaurant; he and Keni Liptzin headed to New York that autumn, where she managed to sign on at the Romanian Opera House; failing to find a similar situation for himself, he returned to London, drawn back to the charms of both Dinah and Jennya. He did not remain long in London. After some major successes inNew York
Family
Adler was married three times, first to Sophia (Sonya) Oberlander (died 1886), then toMemoir
Adler's memoirs were published in the New York socialist Yiddish-language newspaper ''Die Varheit'' in 1916–1919, and briefly resumed in 1925 in an unsuccessful revival of that paper; his granddaughter Lulla Rosenfeld's English translation was published only in 1999. The 1916–1919 portion of the memoir gives a detailed picture of his Russian years. The 1925 portion gives a comparably detailed picture of his time in London, dler 1999''passim.'' although with some evasions around the relative timing of his relationships with his wife Sonya and with Jennya Kaiser and Dinah Shtettin. It contains only a relatively fragmentary description of his New York career. In the English-language book of these memoirs, Rosenfeld attempts to fill the gaps with her own commentary. Adler writes vividly and with humor. He describes the director Hartenstein as "a young man fromSee also
*'' Solomon the Wise'', 1906 play starring AdlerNotes
References
* * ''OxfordExternal links
* * Accessed September 29, 2006. * * * * * * {{DEFAULTSORT:Adler, Jacob 1855 births 1926 deaths Actors from Odesa People from Odessky Uyezd Odesa Jews Jewish Ukrainian actors Emigrants from the Russian Empire to the United Kingdom American people of Ukrainian-Jewish descent Jewish American male actors Yiddish theatre performers