Topol died two years ago, having played Tevye the Dairyman over 3,500 times in 42 years of Fiddling on the Roof. That lame horse of his never did get better, but at least he became a rich, if not idle-didle, man.
Superficially, Fiddler on the Roof is about the clash of tradition and change. But its real theme is Khava: the story of a girl who married out. In Orthodox Jewish tradition, a child who marries a gentile is dead to the parents. They never see, talk or hear about that child again. That is one of the greatest Jewish tragedies of all, and it’s entirely self-inflicted. It lies not only at the heart of Fiddler on the Roof, but at the heart of the Orthodox Jewish community. Why do Jewish writers, again and again, speak out against this self-destructive practice? Is it possible, just possible, that in this case, the rabbis might have got it wrong? No! There is no other hand.
Jordan Fein’s production was the runaway hit of 2024, selling out the Open Air Theatre in Regent’s Park, and recreating itself (according to reviews) with even greater intensity in the Barbican. Now it’s out on a national tour with a mostly new cast. And even in its slimmed-down, carry-on format it’s still a joy. Matthew Woodyatt as Tevye brings heart, humour and even a bit of extra Ashkenazi ichle to If I Were a Rich Man. Jodie Jacobs is every inch the matriarch as Golde. Between them they make the usually forgettable Do You Love Me? one of the most heartwarming moments of the evening. And the three older daughters, Tzeitel (Natasha Jules Bernard), Hodel (Georgia Bruce), and Chava (Hannah Bristow) are punchier than in any production I’ve ever seen. Rather than demure worms who dare to turn, these women are ready to fight for their own futures from the start. Tzeitel actually participates in the magnificent Fake Dream sequence, playing both her own grandmother and the terrifying Frumme Sarah, with distended arms straight out of a Tim Burton movie and a voice that shivers the rafters.
It’s in moments of innovation like this that the production really shines. The set, a delicate wheat canopy bounded by corded sheaves at the wings, emphasises the fragility of the villagers’ existence, always on the verge of being cut down, while also doubling as a chuppah, evoking both marriage and transience. The fiddler himself (Roman Lytwyniw), always intended as a parallel to Tevye’s narrator-cum-patrician, becomes here something more akin to a Philip-Pullmanesque daemon. He is effectively Tevye’s conscience, and his haunting strings speak of the family’s fears, hopes and daily grind. Perhaps most evocative of all, during Chava’s farewell song, Hannah Bristow produces a clarinet and duets hauntingly with the Fiddler, as if she is taking her destiny into her own hands, determined to play her own tune. Together, their sound beckons towards a mournful klezmer, celebrating the weddings that will never come. It’s fitting that her music is the final sound of the show.
Given how minimalist this staging is, it’s packed with action. Julia Cheng’s choreography captures both Jewish and Russian traditions, with leaping, spinning, hora-ing, and a jaw-dropping performance of the famous rabbinic bottle dance. There is something about the sight of five Jewish men advancing towards you on their knees with bottles balanced on their streimels that is both thrilling and supremely absurd. Once again, as with the Fiddler himself, the visual emphasis is on trying to keep one’s balance and the threat of imminent destruction.
The production is also brazenly laissez-faire about accents – and I think I approve. Woodyatt’s Tevye comes from the Welsh valleys, Golde from North London, Lazar Wolf the Butcher from the
When I first saw the film, as an eight-year-old, the