Louis Reingold
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Louis David Reingold (1874 or 1875-1944) was a Yiddish playwright and journalist.


Early life

Louis David Reingold was born Eliezer Dovid Ozharov in
Ciechanów Ciechanów is a city in north-central Poland. From 1975 to 1998, it was the capital of the Ciechanów Voivodeship. Since 1999, it has been situated in the Masovian Voivodeship. As of December 2021, it has a population of 43,495. History The se ...
, Poland, in 1874 or 1875. He was descended from local pedigree. On his mother's side, he was a grandchild of the "rosh ha-kool" (head of the Jewish community) and on his father's side, a grandchild of a Jewish advisor of Alexander the Second, who was shot during the Polish uprising in 1863. Reingold's father was a rabbi in
Sierpc Sierpc (Polish: ) is a town in north-central Poland, in the north-west part of the Masovian Voivodeship, about 125 km northwest of Warsaw. It is the capital of Sierpc County. Its population is 18,791 (2006). It is located near the national r ...
, about 80 km from Ciechanow. Reingold studied in kheyder, where his father let him learn more Bible than Talmud, and studied Russian and Polish privately. Later, he attended public school, which caused an uproar, because the rabbi's son was studying without a hat.


Coming to America

Reingold's father was invited to work as a rabbi in New York, but only became a rabbi for a small group of (Jews from the same Eastern European town). In 1899, his father brought him and a younger sister to New York, where he became a tailor and attended a night school. According to Reingold's grandson, the family changed their last name from Ozharov because it was too difficult to pronounce and spell in America. Reingold became active in the Jewish labor movement, serving as a secretary and executive member of the Tailor's Union, and organized a branch of women workers in 1893. In 1896 or 1897, he joined the Socialist Worker's Party, became district secretary, and he was for a time employed by them. In 1897, he married Esther Friedman, whom he met through labor organizing. They had four children: Gussie, Bessie, Flora, and
Joseph Joseph is a common male given name, derived from the Hebrew Yosef (יוֹסֵף). "Joseph" is used, along with "Josef", mostly in English, French and partially German languages. This spelling is also found as a variant in the languages of the mo ...
, who later changed the spelling of his last name to Rheingold. Louis Reingold worked in the garment industry in Rochester, NY, for a short time, then came back again to New York. After living briefly in St. Louis, he settled in Chicago, where he worked as a playwright, journalist, theater critic, and editor, and was also active as a speaker and organizer for various charity groups.


Journalism

Beginning in 1899, Reingold wrote sketches about working people's lives for the ''Nyu Yorker Yudishe folkstsaytung''. He worked briefly as a labor reporter for the Forverts (Jewish Daily Forward) for a month, then as a business agent in the children's suit union, and wrote in 1902 for the Brownsville weekly newspaper ''Hoyz fraynd''. Unable to earn a living, he became a prompter in a Yiddish vaudeville theatre in Metropolitan Music Hall. In 1908, he worked as a writer and editor for the St. Louis daily newspaper, ''Forshteyer'', then went to Chicago, where he worked as a writer of skits and short stories, theater critic, and editor at local newspapers including ''Di teglikhe velt'', ''Der yidisher rekord/The Jewish Record'' and ''Idishe arbayter velt''.


Reingold's Yiddish plays

Reingold's Yiddish plays were produced in various cities in the United States and Canada, especially New York, Chicago, and Detroit. Unpublished manuscripts for many of his works are found in the Dorot Jewish Division of the New York Public Library, and in the Library of Congress. According to Rejzen, Reingold joined a Yiddish dramatic club in 1895 and wrote two one-act plays for them. On December 5, 1902, his play Hirsh Lekert was performed by a dramatic theater club for a benefit of the Bund in Brownsville, Brooklyn, where he was an executive member. He also wrote for the Yiddish Theatre Company. He read a play called ''The Freedom Fighter'' for Yiddish actress
Bertha Kalich Bertha Kalich (also spelled Kalish, born Beylke Kalakh; 17 May 1874 – 18 April 1939) was a Ukrainian-Jewish-American actress. Though she was well-established as an entertainer in Eastern Europe, she is best remembered as one of the several ...
and her husband, theater manager Leopold Spachner, and they asked him to write another play. This work, titled ''Zindike neshomes'', was apparently lost by Kalich and Spachner, but later performed by Kalich with Morris Moshkovitsh on March 5, 1917 at Gertner's Pavilion Theatre in Chicago. In 1925, Reingold sent a similar play, ''Neshome'', to the Library of Congress for copyright registration. Reingold also gave his play ''Di naye velt'' (also known as ''Di farkerte velt'') to Jacob P. Adler, who took it without paying Reingold and produced it at the Grand Theatre in 1919 - according to Reingold, Adler did this under the name ''Two generations'' and credited another playwright, Z. Libin. Reingold's play, ''Dos milkhome kind'', was produced at the Empire Theatre in Chicago in 1918 by Misha and Lucy German, and also performed by eon?/nowiki> Blank in Cleveland and by Jacob Kalich and Dina Feinman in Boston. According to Kalmen Marmor, Reingold's plays ''Idisher velt khurbn'' (Jewish world destruction) and ''Tekhter fun Ukraine'' (daughters of Ukraine) were produced in 1919. Reingold's play ''Sha, sha, der rebe geyt'' was produced at Elving's Metropolitan Theatre in Newark, NJ in 1924; and also in New York City, Chicago and Detroit. (also known as ''Forgotten children'') was produced at the Lyric Theatre in Brooklyn, NY in 1924, and as a benefit at the Littman's People's Theatre in Detroit in the 1924-25 season. At least three other plays by Reingold were performed at Littman's: ''The Only Sister/'' (four-performances in the 1926-27 season); ''Libes flamen'' (three performances in the 1931-32 season), and ''The Rabbi's Daughter'', which lists Samuel H. Cohen as a co-author (two performances in the 1935-36 season). Many of Reingold's plays and skits were performed in Chicago, where he worked as a publicist for the Logan Square Theatre. These works include ''Di tekhter fun ukraine'' (1918-1919, Empire Theatre), (March 1926, ), (April 1926, venue unknown), ''Soydes fun Shikago/Secrets of Chicago'' (Lawndale Theatre, date unknown), and ''Der Idisher tsigayner''. Programs, and newspaper articles for many of these works are found in a scrapbook in the Louis Reingold Collection, Dorot Jewish Division, New York Public Library. Reingold also authored a number of works for which performance information is unknown.


Controversy

On December 5, 1924, the Rosa Zilbert Theatre (later the Hopkinson Theatre) in Brownsville, Brooklyn, produced Reingold's play ''A grus fun der heym'', with music by H. Zalik. Later on,
Boris Thomashefsky Boris Thomashefsky (russian: Борис Пинхасович Томашевский, sometimes written Thomashevsky, Thomaschevsky, etc.; yi, באָריס טאָמאשעבסקי) (1868–1939), born Boruch-Aharon Thomashefsky, was a Ukrainian-b ...
performed the same play in Toronto under the name ''Fargesene froyen''. Reingold claimed that Thomashefsky's 1927 operetta ''Bar Mitsve'' was a plagiarized version of Reingold's ''A grus fun der heym/Fargesene froyen'', and initiated legal proceedings against Thomashefsky. Reingold's scrapbook in the Louis Reingold Collection includes newspaper coverage on this subject.


Later life

In his last years, Reingold was employed as a publicity and organizational manager in the office of the
American Jewish Congress The American Jewish Congress (AJCongress or AJC) is an association of American Jews organized to defend Jewish interests at home and abroad through public policy advocacy, using diplomacy, legislation, and the courts. History The AJCongress was ...
in Chicago, where he died on August 27, 1944. He is buried with his wife Esther in the Pruzhnitzer section of
Waldheim Cemetery Forest Home Cemetery is at 863 S. DesPlaines Ave, Forest Park, Illinois, adjacent to the Eisenhower Expressway, straddling the Des Plaines River in Cook County, just west of Chicago. The cemetery traces its history to two adjacent cemeteries, G ...
in Chicago. Reingold's archive, known as the Louis Reingold Collection, was donated to the Dorot Jewish Division of the
New York Public Library The New York Public Library (NYPL) is a public library system in New York City. With nearly 53 million items and 92 locations, the New York Public Library is the second largest public library in the United States (behind the Library of Congress ...
by his descendants. The collection includes unpublished manuscripts and typescripts for many of his works as well a scrapbook of newspaper clippings, photographs, and Reingold's unpublished autobiography in Yiddish original and English translation.


References


External links

* Zylbercweig, Zalmen. ''
Leksikon fun Yidishn teater ''Leksikon fun yidishn teater'' ( yi, לעקסיקאן פון יידישן טעאטער ''Lexicon of Yiddish Theatre'' or ''Encyclopedia of the Yiddish Theatre'') is a Yiddish language reference encyclopedia compiled by Zalmen Zylbercweig, assist ...
.'' New York: Farlag Elisheva. pp. 4, pp. 3173–3175. * Baker, Zackary M.; Sohn, Bonnie
The Lawrence Marwick Collection of Copyrighted Yiddish Plays at The Library of Congress:An Annotated Bibliography
Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. – 2004
Louis Reingold CollectionDorot Jewish DivisionNew York Public Library
* Niger, Samuel; Shatzky, Jacob
Leḳsiḳon fun der nayer Yidisher liṭeraṭur
Nyu-Yorḳ : Alṿelṭlekhn Yidishn ḳulṭur-ḳongres, 1956-1981. Volume 8, pp. 489–490 * Rejzen, Zalmen. '' Leksikon fun der Yidisher literatur, prese un filologye.'' Vilnius: B. Kletzkin. v. 4, pp. 386–387. {{DEFAULTSORT:Reingold, Louis Yiddish-language journalists Yiddish-language dramatists and playwrights 1944 deaths 19th-century Polish Jews Polish emigrants to the United States People from Ciechanów Year of birth uncertain