Yuri Sherling
- Additional Crew
Founder and first Director of Jewish Drama and Music Theatre -
officially based in a mock Jewish Autonomy Province capital city of
Birobijan - but really in Moscow. The theatre became extremely popular
and successfully toured Soviet Union between 1976 and 1981 with Jewish
Folkore-based shows such as "All Together Now" and "Black Bridle For A
White Mare" - all republics except Ukraine, whose then First Communist
Party Secretary (the equivalent of PM) Mikhail Shcherbitsky had ordered
the scheduled shows cancelled on anti-semitic grounds. Yuri Sherling, a
talented Director, Composer and Choreographer, continued to lead the
theatre until Yuri Andropov's short reign as Soviet Union's General
Secretary (Head Party Chief) in 1983, when the theatre was closed, and
Sherling himself sent to prison on KGB-fabricated bribe charge. When
Mikhail Gorbachev became the first President of the Soviet Union on the
wave of his democratic "perestroika" reforms in 1990, the Jewish Drama
and Music Theatre was allowed to re-open, and Sherling was freed, but
he chose not to return to his Director's chair, and Alexander Levenbuk
of "Radio-Nanny" - a popular 1970s-1980s radio show fame - became a new
Director.