Chaim Topol Art for Sale at Auction
b. 1935 -
Chaim Topol (Hebrew: ???? ??????, born September 9, 1935)[1], also spelled Haym Topol,[2] mononymously known as Topol,[3] is an Israeli theatrical, film, and television actor, singer, comedian, voice artist, film producer, author, and illustrator. He is best known for his portrayal of Tevye the dairyman in the musical Fiddler on the Roof on stage and screen, a role he performed more than 3,500 times in shows and revivals from the late 1960s through 2009.[3]
Topol began his acting career during his Israeli army service in the Nahal entertainment troupe, and later toured Israel with kibbutz theatre and satirical theatre companies. He was a co-founder of the Haifa Theatre. His breakthrough film role came in 1964 as the title character in Sallah Shabati, by Israeli writer Ephraim Kishon, for which he won a Golden Globe for Most Promising Newcomer—Male. He went on to appear in more than 30 films in Israel and the United States. In the 1960s through 1980s, he was Israel's "only internationally-recognized entertainer".[3] He won a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor and was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actor for his 1971 film portrayal of Tevye, and was nominated for a Tony Award for Best Actor for a 1991 Broadway revival of Fiddler on the Roof. He is a founder of Variety Israel, an organization serving children with special needs, and Jordan River Village, a year-round camp for Arab and Jewish children with life-threatening illnesses, for which he serves as chairman of the board. In 2015 he was awarded the Israel Prize for lifetime achievement.
Chaim Topol was born in Tel Aviv in 1935, in what was then Mandatory Palestine. His father, Jacob Topol, had immigrated to Mandatory Palestine from Russia in the early 1930s and worked as a plasterer;[4][5] he also served in the Haganah paramilitary organization.[6] His mother, Rel (née Goldman) Topol, was a seamstress.[4][7] Though the young Chaim wanted to become a commercial artist, his elementary school teachers saw a theatrical side to him, and encouraged him to act in school plays and read stories to the class.[3]
At age 14 he began working as a printer at the Davar newspaper while pursuing his high school studies at night.[3] He graduated high school at age 17 and moved to Kibbutz Geva. A year later, he enlisted in the Israeli army and became a member of the Nahal entertainment troupe, singing and acting in traveling shows.[3][8] He rose in rank to troupe commander.[3]
Twenty-three days after being discharged from military service on October 2, 1956, and two days after marrying Galia Finkelstein, a fellow Nahal troupe member, Topol was called up to serve in the Sinai Campaign. He performed for soldiers stationed in the desert. After the war, he and his wife settled in Kibbutz Mishmar David, where Topol worked as a garage mechanic.[3] Topol assembled a kibbutz theatre company made up of friends from his Nahal troupe; the group toured four days a week, worked on their respective kibbutzim for two days a week, and had one day off. The theatre company was in existence from early 1957 to the mid-1960s. Topol both sang and acted with the group, doing both "loudly".[3]
Between 1960 and 1964, Topol performed with the Batzal Yarok ("Green Onion") satirical theatre company, which also toured Israel.[3][9] Other members of the group included Uri Zohar, Nechama Hendel, Zaharira Harifai, Arik Einstein, and Oded Kotler.[10] In 1960, Topol co-founded the Haifa Municipal Theatre with Yosef Milo, serving as assistant to the director and acting in plays by Shakespeare, Ionesco, and Brecht.[3][11] In 1965 he performed in the Cameri Theatre in Tel Aviv.[11]
Topol's sketch of himself as Sallah Shabati
Haim Topol, then a young man and of Ashkenazi heritage, plays the old Sephardic manipulator with such consummate skill that even aged immigrants from Morocco and Tunisia were convinced that he was one of them.
Topol's first film appearance was in the 1961 film I Like Mike, followed by the 1962 Israeli film El Dorado.[3][10] His breakthrough role came as the lead character in the 1964 film Sallah Shabati.[3] Adapted for the screen by Ephraim Kishon from his original play, the social satire depicts the hardships of a Mizrahi Jewish immigrant family in Israel in the 1950s, satirizing "just about every pillar of Israeli society: the Ashkenazi establishment, the pedantic bureaucracy, corrupt political parties, rigid kibbutz ideologues and ... the Jewish National Fund's tree-planting program".[12][13] Topol, who was 29 during the filming,[14] was familiar playing the role of the family patriarch, having performed skits from the play with his Nahal troupe during his army years.[3][10] He contributed his own ideas for the part, playing the character as a more universal Sephardi Jew instead of specifically a Yemenite, Iraqi, or Moroccan Jew, and asking Kishon to change the character's first name from Saadia (a recognizably Yemenite name) to Sallah (a more general Mizrahi name).[3]
The film won the Golden Globe Award for Best Foreign Language Film, and Topol won the 1964 Golden Gate Award for Best Actor at the San Francisco International Film Festival and the 1965 Golden Globe for Most Promising Newcomer—Male.[3][9][10][15] Sallah Shabati was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film, losing to the Italian-language Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow.[3]
In 1966, Topol made his English-language film debut as Abou Ibn Kaqden in the Mickey Marcus biopic Cast a Giant Shadow.[16]
Tevye the dairyman
Topol came to greatest prominence in his portrayal of Tevye the dairyman on stage and screen. He first played the role in 1966[10] in the Israeli production of Fiddler on the Roof, replacing Shmuel Rodensky for 10 weeks when the actor fell ill.[3] Harold Prince, producer of the original Fiddler on the Roof that opened on Broadway in 1964, had seen Topol in Sallah Shabati and called him to audition for the role of the fifty-something Tevye in a new production scheduled to open at Her Majesty's Theatre in London on February 16, 1967.[17] Not yet fluent in English, Topol memorized the score from the Broadway cast album and was tutored in the lyrics by an Englishwoman.[17] When Topol arrived at the audition, Prince was flabbergasted that this 30-year-old man had played Shabati, a character in his sixties. Topol explained, "A good actor can play an old man, a sad face, a happy man. Makeup is not an obstacle".[3] Topol also surprised the producers with his familiarity with the staging, since he had acted in the Israeli production, and was hired.[3][18] He spent six months in London learning his part phonetically with vocal coach Cicely Berry.[18] Jerome Robbins, director and choreographer of the 1964 Broadway show who came over to direct the London production, "re-directed" the character of Tevye for Topol and helped the actor deliver a less caricatured performance.[19][20]
Topol's performance received positive reviews.[20] A few months after the opening, he returned to Israel to serve in the army during the Six-Day War in June. He was assigned to an army entertainment troupe on the Golan Heights.[20] All told, he appeared in 430 performances of the London production, which ran for a total of 2,030 performances.[21]
It was during the London run that he began being called by his last name only, as the British producers were unable to pronounce the voiceless uvular fricative consonant ?et at the beginning of his first name, Chaim, instead calling him "Shame".[3]
Chaim Topol breathed life into Tevye.
In casting the 1971 film version of Fiddler on the Roof, director Norman Jewison and his production team sought an actor other than Zero Mostel for the lead role. This decision was a controversial one, as Mostel had made the role famous in the long-running Broadway musical and wanted to star in the film.[23] But Jewison and his team felt Mostel would eclipse the character with his larger-than-life personality.[24][25][26] Jewison flew to London in February 1968 to see Topol perform as Tevye during his last week with the London production, and chose him over Danny Kaye, Herschel Bernardi, Rod Steiger, Danny Thomas, Walter Matthau, Richard Burton, and Frank Sinatra, who had also expressed interest in the part.[3][25][27]
Then 36 years old, Topol was made to look 20 years older and 30 pounds (14 kg) heavier with makeup and costuming.[5] As in his role as Shabati, Topol used the technique of "locking his muscles" to convincingly play an older character.[3][28] He later explained:
As a young man, I had to make sure that I didn't break the illusion for the audience. You have to tame yourself. I'm now someone who is supposed to be 50, 60 years old. I cannot jump. I cannot suddenly be young. You produce a certain sound [in your voice] that is not young.[3]
For his performance, Topol won the Golden Globe Award for Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy[29] and the 1972 David di Donatello for Best Foreign Actor, sharing the latter with Elizabeth Taylor.[10] He was nominated for the 1971 Academy Award for Best Actor, losing to Gene Hackman in The French Connection.[16]
In 1983 Topol reprised the role of Tevye in a revival of Fiddler on the Roof in West End theatre.[21] In 1989, he played the role in a 30-city U.S. touring production.[30] As he was by then the approximate age of the character, he commented, "I didn't have to spend the energy playing the age".[30] In 1990–1991, he again starred as Tevye in a Broadway revival of Fiddler at the Gershwin Theatre.[30][31] In 1991, he was nominated for a Tony Award for Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical,[32] losing to Jonathan Pryce in Miss Saigon. Topol again played Tevye in a 1994 London revival,[21] which became a touring production. In that production, his youngest daughter, Adi Topol Margalith, played one of his daughters.[3][33]
Topol reprised the role of Tevye for a 1997–1998 touring production in Israel, as well as a 1998 show at the Regent Theatre in Melbourne.[34] In September 2005 he returned to Australia for a Fiddler on the Roof revival at the Capitol Theatre in Sydney,[35] followed by an April 2006 production at the Lyric Theatre in Brisbane[36] and a June 2006 production at Her Majesty's Theatre in Melbourne.[34] In May 2007, he starred in a production in the Auckland Civic Theatre.[37]
On January 20, 2009, Topol began a farewell tour of Fiddler on the Roof as Tevye, opening in Wilmington, Delaware. He was forced to withdraw from the tour in Boston owing to a shoulder injury, and was replaced by Theodore Bikel and Harvey Fierstein, both of whom had portrayed Tevye on Broadway.[3] Topol estimated that he performed the role more than 3,500 times.[3][16]
Other stage and film roles
In 1976, Topol originated the leading role of the baker, Amiable, in the new musical The Baker's Wife, but was fired after eight months by producer David Merrick. In her autobiography, Patti LuPone, his co-star in the production, claimed that Topol had behaved unprofessionally on stage.[38] The show's composer, Stephen Schwartz, claimed that Topol's behavior greatly disturbed the cast and directors and resulted in the production not reaching Broadway as planned.[39] In 1988, Topol starred in the title role in Ziegfield at the London Palladium.[11] He returned to the London stage in 2008 in the role of Honoré, from Maurice Chevalier's 1958 film Gigi.[3]
Topol appeared in more than 30 films in Israel and abroad.[16] Among his notable English-language appearances are the title role in Galileo (1975), directed by Joseph Losey; Dr. Hans Zarkov in Flash Gordon (1980);[40] and Milos Columbo in the James Bond film For Your Eyes Only (1981).[40][41]
In Israel, Topol acted in and produced dozens of films and television series.[10] As a voice artist, he dubbed the Hebrew-language versions of The Jungle Book and two films in the Harry Potter film series.[16] He is also a playwright and screenwriter.[13]
He was featured on two BBC One programs, the 6-part series Topol's Israel (1964) and It's Topol (1968).[9][42] A Hebrew-language documentary of his life, Chaim Topol – Life as a Film, aired on Israel's Channel 1 in 2011, featuring interviews with his longtime actor friends in Israel and abroad.[7]
Musical recordings
A baritone,[7] Topol recorded several singles and albums, including film soundtracks, children's songs, and Israeli war songs.[43]
Author and illustrator
Shimon Peres by Topol
His autobiography, Topol by Topol, was published in London by Weindenfel and Nicholson (1981).[9][34] He also authored To Life! (1994) and Topol's Treasure of Jewish Humor, Wit and Wisdom (1995).[34]
Topol has illustrated approximately 25 books in both Hebrew and English.[10] He has also produced drawings of Israeli national figures. His sketches of Israeli presidents were reproduced in a 2013 stamp series issued by the Israel Philatelic Federation,[10] as was his self-portrait as Tevye for a 2014 commemorative stamp marking the 50th anniversary of the Broadway debut of Fiddler on the Roof.[44]
Charitable work
In 1967, Topol founded Variety Israel, an organization serving children with special needs.[10][45] He is also a co-founder and chairman of the board of Jordan River Village, a year-round camp for Arab and Jewish children with life-threatening illnesses, which opened in 2012.[10][46]
Other awards
Topol (center row, far right) and other winners of the David's Harp award in arts and entertainment
At an October 1963 awards ceremony, Topol was a recipient of Israel's David's Harp award in arts and entertainment.[47] He received a Best Actor award from the San Sebastián International Film Festival for his performance in the 1972 film Follow Me![10] In 2008, he was named an Outstanding Member of the Israel Festival for his contribution to Israeli culture.[10][48] In 2014, the University of Haifa conferred upon Topol an honorary degree in recognition of his 50 years of activity in Israel's cultural and public life.[10] In 2015, he received the Israel Prize for lifetime achievement.[45][16]
Personal life
Topol married Galia Finkelstein in October 1956. They have one son and two daughters.[3] The couple resides in Galia's childhood home in Tel Aviv.[16] Topol's hobbies include sketching and sculptin
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