Esther Gamlielit

Esther Gamlielit (Hebrew: אסתר גמליאלית; March 13, 1919 – September 17, 2012) was an Israeli singer and actress who was popular in the thirties and forties.

Esther Gamlielit
אסתר גמליאלית
Background information
Born(1919-03-13)March 13, 1919
Egypt
DiedSeptember 17, 2012(2012-09-17) (aged 93)
Ramat Yishai, Israel
Years active1930s, 1940s

Biography

Gamlielit was born on March 13, 1919 in Egypt to Yemenite-Jewish parents who were en route to Palestine.[1] After arriving, they settled in the Neve Tzedek quarter of Tel Aviv and later moved to the Yemenite Quarter.[2]

At 16, she joined the Biblical Ballet, a dance studio mostly consisting of Yemenite Jewish women which blended Yemenite dance steps with biblical themes.[1] She gained notoriety as a singer through Biblical Ballet, eventually appearing on the British Mandate established radio station Kol Yerushalayim.[3] Gamlielit later joined Ha-Matate, a satirical theater. While with Matate, she was part of a trio with Shmuel Rodensky and Jacob Timen.

After a performance in Nes Ziyyonah she met Avigdor Yosippon, who was on guard duty. They fell in love and got married one week later.[1] Her marriage led to her retiring at 22, although she would make occasional one-time appearances. In 1960, she was invited by Dahn Ben-Amotz to perform in a nostalgia show on artists of the Yishuv. In 1994, she was widowed from Avigdor.

In 2000, she produced a non-commercial album, with seventeen original recordings of her songs. She died on September 17, 2012 and was buried in Kiryat Tiv'on.[4]

gollark: You can write code without modifying variables (eeeevil mutability) easily.
gollark: It's actually surprisingly simple to do in simple languages which you can use as simple calculators and stuff.
gollark: `math.floor`, actually.
gollark: `int` probably just drops the decimal point, so *that* must be wrong.
gollark: Possibly floor is wrong.

References

  1. Shahar, Nathan. "Esther Gamlielit". Jewish Women's Archive.
  2. "Esther Gamlielit (1919-2012)". National Library of Israel.
  3. "אסתר גמליאלית". Zemereshet.
  4. Barnea, Or. "הזמרת אסתר גמליאלית הלכה לעולמה". Ynet.
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