Nathaniel Buchwald
Nathaniel Buchwald was a 20th-century, left-leaning Jewish-American theater critic, writer, and scholar of Yiddish theater who wrote in Yiddish and English and translated from Yiddish and Russian into English.
Background
Nathaniel Buchwald was born Naftoli Bukhvald on April 14, 1890, in Lublin, Volhynia, Ukraine. He studied at a religious primary school and then a public school. In 1910, Buchwald emigrated to America. He studied at the University of Georgia, Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute, and in 1918 obtained a BS in Chemistry from New York University.Career
During World War I, Buchwald worked for Forverts by translating its editorials from Yiddish into English as required by wartime security regulations regarding foreign-language publications in the US.In the 1920s, Buchwald began publishing articles appeared in Di naye velt, after which he wrote for this and other Yiddish labor publications. Following the founding of Frayhayt in New York City in 1922, Buchwald joined its editorial board and contributed as theater critic. Later, he wrote for Morgn Frayhayt and Jewish Life, also in New York.
In 1925, Buchwald helped found the Artef Players Collective, a Yiddish theater group in New York City. Members included: Moyshe Olgin, David Pinski, David Abrams, Melech Marmur, Kalman Marmur, Shachno Epstein, Moyshe Nadir. Regarding Artef's aims, Buchwald wrote: " Life pulled in one direction, to world upheavals, to Revolution, to Soviet Russia, to collective consciousness and collective action, the theatre still busied itself with bygone idylls, Hassidic legends, all kinds of tall tales, or with the routine of bourgeois life, family drama and romantic complication." They staged their first performance in 1927 but slowed during the Great Depression and even took a hiatus from 1937 to 1939. In 1940, the group resumed performances with Clinton Street by Louis Miller. The group disbanded in the 1940s.
Up to September 1933, Buchwald served as Moscow correspondent for the publications like the Communist Party USA's official newspaper, the Daily Worker; Vern Smith replaced him.
Communist allegations
During the 1930s, Buchwald came to the attention of the Dies Committee of the US House of Representatives for his contributions to Agitprop theater and again in the 1950s for his theater criticism that appeared in The Daily Worker.Personal life and death
Buchwald married Stella Buchwald, also a writer.Buchwald wrote under several pen names including: B. Tulin, B. Brand, N. Poloner, and Bert Toulens.
Buchwald's friends and letter correspondents include Abraham Cahan.
Buchwald died on June 7, 1956, in New York.
Works
Books:Folks-bildung in Sovet-Rusland From peasant to collective farmer Farvos men hot gemishpet di 21 in moskve Alts--far unzer land Amerike Di dek̜laratsye fun zelbsht̜endigk̜eyt̜ Teater Pogromshtshikes farfleytsn amerike, faktn vegn der aynvanderung fun natsis, fashistn un gorgl-shnayder Omanut ha-teatronTranslations to Yiddish:
- Alfonz Goldshmidt, Dos lebn un shtrebn in sovet-rusland
- Anatoly Lunacharsky, Kunst un sotzyalizm
- Lenin, Teorye un praktik fun revolutsye
- Rosa Luxemburg, Reform oder revolutsye
- Hallie Flanagan and Margaret Ellen Clifford, Trikenish Der Regnboygn
- "Yiddish", Cambridge History of American Literature
- "A Visit with 'Tarbut Laam'," ''Jewish Life''
External sources
- Translation of Teatr
- "In dem vaytn land Sibir"