Exhibit: Women of Valor

1919  Marriage

“I always said influenza was our matchmaker.... I was the all-American girl...and absolutely illiterate about Jewish culture. Yonkel on the other hand, was the complete intellectual who knew not only classic Yiddish, but its plays, theaters, and writers.... It was a funny situation. I was trying to make him a real American guy and he was trying to make me a Yiddishe Mama. But it was fun.”


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After six months on tour, The Four Seasons arrived in Boston to a city paralyzed by the influenza epidemic. The only theatre that remained open was the Boston Grand Opera House, which offered Yiddish Theater. Picon, looking for work, answered an advertisement for an ingenue placed by the director and producer Jacob "Yonkel" Kalich. He hired her on the spot and her “commitment to both Yonkel and the Yiddish Theater had begun.” Picon looked up to Kalich, a Polish immigrant who had quit rabbinical school to join a traveling acting troupe. He was seven years her senior, better educated and more experienced. The two fell in love and got married on June 29, 1919.


Notes

Next—Pregnancy & Disappointment


How to Cite This Page
For a bibliography: Jewish Women's Archive. "JWA - Molly Picon - Marriage." <http://jwa.org/exhibits/wov/picon/mp4.html>.

For a footnote: Jewish Women's Archive, "JWA - Molly Picon - Marriage," <http://jwa.org/exhibits/wov/picon/mp4.html>.


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