Shulamith (play)
Shulamith, or Daughter of Jerusalem is an operetta in four acts by Abraham Goldfaden.
Musicologist Susan M. Filler asserts that Shulamith is the best known Goldfaden's work and the most familiar number from the play is "Raisins and Almonds".
Shulamith falls into a well, Absalom rescues her and they wow to marry each other. However, Absalom breaks his wow by marrying Abigail. Their two children tragically die. Absalom thinks this was because the broken wow, leaves his wife, sets to find Abigail, an all comes to a kind of a happy end.
History
It was written in 1880, first staged in 1882 in a Yiddish theater in New York and published in Odessa, 1883; Warsaw, 1886; New York, 1893. It was translated to Hebrew by as שולמית: חזיון מימי קדם. In 1957, two versions of Shulamith were staged, at the Ohel Theatre and at Do-Re-Mi in Tel Aviv. Both theaters decided to make the play closer to the modern Israel and added several new numbers. At Do-Re-Mi, the songs were added by Moshe Wilensky, the part of Shulamith was played by the star of the time, Shoshana Damari, the play was very successful and was dubbed "the first Hebrew musical".