Pnina Gary

Pnina Gary (Hebrew: פנינה גרי; born September 24, 1927) is an Israeli actress and theatre director.[1]

Pnina Gary
Gary in 2011
Born
Pnina Dromi

(1927-09-24) September 24, 1927
OccupationActress, theatre director
Spouse(s)
Robert Gary
(
m. 1949; died 1987)
Children2, including Meirav Gary
RelativesMichael Cohen (grandson)

Biography

Pnina Dromi (later Gary) was born and raised in Nahalal, Mandatory Palestine, daughter of Yosef Dromi (previously Kotlar) and Tzipora Ostrowski. Her parents made aliyah from the Ukraine in 1919. Gary attended to Nahalal's Agricultural High School, and later the teachers' seminar to become a kindergarten teacher.

In March 1948, during Israel's war for independence, just a few days before she was supposed to marry Eli, the son of Rachel Yanait and Yitzhak Ben-Zvi (later to be the second president of Israel), her Palmach member husband-to-be was killed in an Arab ambush in the fields of their kibbutz, Beit Keshet.[2]

In September 1948, trying to recover from the outcome of the Beit Keshet battle, she volunteered to participate in an expedition of teachers to the DP camps around Munich. She was sent to help set up kindergartens in the camps and work with Jewish children who survived the Holocaust. Six months later, she was sent to reside in Ulm, in order to do the same work in the DP camps around Stuttgart.

In Munich she met her husband, Robert (Bob) Gary, a Jewish American journalist, who reported from the camps. They married in Germany in late 1949 and two weeks later moved to Israel. Pnina and Bob had two daughters, Dorit and Meirav. Through Merirav, she is the grandmother of rapper Michael Cohen.

While living in Israel, Pnina Gary wrote a weekly column for Davar newspaper for a period of two years.

Artistic career

Pnina Gary in New York, 1953

From 1953 through 1957 Gary studied acting in New York, in the private schools of Herbert Berghof and Lee Strasberg, and took lessons in the Actors Studio.

After their return to Israel, in 1959 Gary co founded the Zavit Theater, which was active for nine years and among others produced Jean-Paul Sartre's "No Exit", featuring Gary herself.[3] During those years, she also acted in various theater shows produced by other theaters in Tel Aviv.

In 1968 Gary joined HaBima as an actress, until 1980. From 1981 through 1990 she was the artistic director of the Orna Porat Theater.

Gary adapted a number of novels to theater, by the most renowned Israeli novelists: Amos Oz, Sami Michael, Shulamit Lapid, Tzruya Shalev and Shmuel Yosef Agnon.

Pnina Gary's movie appearances as an actress include: The Dock (1960),[4] Dreams (1969),[5] Death Has No Friends (1970),[6] Ariana (1971)[7] and the BBC's "A Dinner of Herbs" (1988).[8][9]

In 2006 she received an award for her life's work from both the Israeli Ministry of Culture and Education and ASSITEJ.

In 2008, Gary wrote and directed the one-woman show “An Israeli Love Story”, based on her own true life story between 1942, when she first met Eli Ben-Zvi, and 1948, with the tragic ending of their relationship. The play is still performed by Adi Bielski, who won the Israeli Best Actress Award in Fringe Theater in 2009.[10]

On March 28, 2011, a special evening marked the celebrating of 250 shows. Attending that evening, were the Israeli Minister of Culture, Mrs Limor Livnat, and the recent winner of the Israeli Sapir Prize for Literature 2011, the writer Yoram Kaniuk.

The play was translated to English and performed at The Leeds Jewish International Performing Arts Festival in 2009, at London's New End Theatre from May 18 to June 6, 2010,[11] and at the National Arts Centre in Ottawa[12][13][14] as well as Montreal,[15] Toronto[16] and Washington, DC,[17][18][19] in September 2011. The show was also performed in the Harold Green Jewish Theatre in Toronto in 2014.[20]

In 2011 Gary directed "Tmol Shilshom" (Only Yesterday), the novel by Shmuel Yosef Agnon which she adapted to theatre, and in 2012 Gary staged "My Name is Yuda", a poetry theater show based on the poems of Yehuda Amichai, which also featured Adi Bielski.[21]

In 2013 Gary directed in Paris the French production of "An Israeli Love Story" (in French) under the name "Une histoire d'amour israélienne", played by the French actress Estelle Grynszpan.[22]

In 2015 Gary published an autobiographical novel in Hebrew under the same title as the Hebrew title of the monodrama "An Israeli Love Story". The book was published under Schocken Books.

In 2016 the film (in Hebrew) "Sipur Ahava Eretz-Israeli" ("An Israeli Love Story") was released, directed by Dan Wolman and starring Adi Bielski,[23] based on Gary's life's story and monodrama by the same name.

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References

Pnina Gary as Estelle Rigault in "No Exit", Tel-Aviv 1958
  1. Pnina Gary’s filmography (in Hebrew)
  2. Love in troubled times, Yocheved Miriam Russo, The Jerusalem Post, April 2, 2010
  3. McGraw-Hill Encyclopedia of World Drama, 1984. Page 322.
  4. "The Dock" Archived August 7, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, @ www.cine-holocaust.de
  5. Dreams on IMDb
  6. Death Has No Friends on IMDb
  7. Ariana on IMDb
  8. A Dinner of Herbs on IMDb
  9. A Dinner of Herbs at BFI, Film & TV Database
  10. An Israeli Love Story at HaniTheater.com
  11. An Israeli Love Story What's On at the New End Theatre
  12. An Israeli Love Story in Ottawa by Jennifer Mcintosh, Aug 24, 2011, Your Ottawa Region
  13. An Israeli Love Story Coming to Ottawa Sept. 7-8 Archived April 2, 2012, at the Wayback Machine by Sabine Gibbins, Sep 1, 2011, Ottawa South EMC
  14. A bounty of plays this month Archived October 1, 2013, at the Wayback Machine by Patrick Langston, Sep 4, 2011, The Ottawa Citizen
  15. Israeli play comes to Montreal Archived September 27, 2013, at the Wayback Machine Sep 6, 2011, The Jewish Tribune
  16. Israeli Love Story – September 15 Archived April 2, 2012, at the Wayback Machine Aug 29, 2011, Shalom Canada
  17. ‘An Israeli Love Story’ – about love and Israel Archived March 29, 2012, at the Wayback Machine by Lisa Traiger, Sep 7, 2011, Washington Jewish Week
  18. About Love and Israel – An Israeli Love Story by Laura Cutler, Sep 9, 2011, American University website
  19. One woman production depicts epic ‘love story’ Archived November 7, 2012, at the Wayback Machine by Katie Castellano, Sep 20, 2011, The Eagle
  20. An Israeli Love Story Archived February 26, 2014, at the Wayback Machine at Toronto Centre for the Arts website
  21. "My Name is Yuda": The Poetry of Yehuda Amichai at Tzavta by Ayelet Dekel, May 15, 2012, at www.midnighteast.com.
  22. "Une histoire d'amour israélienne", at "Théâtre Darius Milhaud" website
  23. Sipur Ahava Eretz-Israeli on IMDb
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