Browse Items (11 total)

  • Tags: songs

http://jewish-lodz.iu.edu/en/files/original/c6ff04ecba57c2497beca657d42f0964.jpg
Ad from the Yiddish newspaper Najer Folksblat publicizing a 1933 screening of the film Anybody Can Love (Każdemu wolno kochać) at the garden movie theater Rakieta in Łódź. Anybody Can Love, the first full feature Polish talkie, is about a poor song…

Tags: ,

http://jewish-lodz.iu.edu/en/files/original/93fe450da9617237890dba64f5cd690f.mp3
The text of this song, satirizing the dismal living conditions in low-income rentals, would be readily understood by the inhabitants of impoverished working-class districts in any of Poland’s small or big cities. But the conditions it lampooned were…

Tags: ,

http://jewish-lodz.iu.edu/en/files/original/b913d4f99857ba2382de7c60ac245a72.mp3
This favorite song was written for the 1938 movie Zapomniana melodia (The Forgotten Melody), in which it was originally sung by Helena Grossówna and Jadwiga Andrzejewska. In this lighthearted romantic musical comedy we hear this song when the…

Tags: ,

http://jewish-lodz.iu.edu/en/files/original/66ed9776df28213f5681381c51d6cc91.mp3
Aaron Hekelman, better known by his stage name Albert Harris, wrote and recorded “The Forgotten Little Street” in 1944, while the Nazis were completing the final chapter in the annihilation of Polish Jewry. Forced as a Jew to seek refuge in Soviet…

http://jewish-lodz.iu.edu/en/files/original/697902451883be3f3c67ff2310776258.mp3
In the 1937 Polish film, Piętro wyżej (One Floor Up) the foxtrot “Sex Appeal” was performed by the unforgettable Eugeniusz Bodo impersonating (in drag) none other than Mae West. As an actress renowned for her overt sexuality and risqué wit, West…