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Hanna Rovina

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Citizenship
  
Israeli

Occupation
  
Actress


Name
  
Hanna Rovina

Role
  
Actress

Hanna Rovina prabookcomwebshowphotojpgid22628


Died
  
February 3, 1980, Tel Aviv, Israel

Similar People
  
S Ansky, Allan Miller, Carl Reiner

ISRAEL MUSIC HISTORY Passover Ceremony & Actor Hanna Rovina חנה רובינא


Hanna Rovina (Hebrew: חנה רובינא‎‎‎; 15 September 1888 – 3 February 1980), written also Hannah, Hana, or Chana Rovina or Robina, Israeli actress, is recognised as the original "First Lady of Hebrew Theatre".

Contents

Hanna Rovina FileFlickr Government Press Office GPO President Zalman

hanna rovina a day is coming


Biography

Born in Byerazino, Minsk district (guberniya), Belarus, in the Russian Empire, she originally trained as a kindergarten teacher, at a course for Hebrew-speaking kindergarten teachers in Warsaw (prior to the First World War, when the city was part of the Russian Empire). She began her career on stage at the "Hebrew Stage Theatre" of Nahum Tzemach. She joined the Habima theatre in 1917 just as it was being launched, and participated in its first production, a play by Yevgeny Vakhtangov. She became famous for her role as Leah'le, the young bride who is possessed by a demon in The Dybbuk by S. Ansky.

Hanna Rovina Hanna Rovina Alchetron The Free Social Encyclopedia

In 1928, Rovina and the other actors of Habima immigrated to Mandate Palestine, where Habima became the flagship of the new national theatre movement, and Rovina was soon recognized as the movement's leading actress. The image of Rovina in her role as Leah in the Moscow performance of The Dybbuk, in a white dress, with her long black braid, became an icon of the emergent Hebrew theatre, and especially of Habima.

Hanna Rovina hanna rovina Tumblr

She filled every role she played with dramatic expression, taking every part very seriously and trying to live the life of the character, as prescribed by the Stanislavski School of acting. Outside the theatre, she was a non-conformist, even having a child out of wedlock with the Hebrew poet Alexander Penn, though this was very unusual for that time. Her lifestyle won her many admirers, even among people that did not frequent the theatre. Her admirers within the theatre included writer Nissim Aloni, who wrote a play, Aunt Liza, especially for her. Of course, Rovina played the lead.

Rovina had a very stern attitude regarding the theatre, and made high demands of her audience. She frequently stopped a play in the middle when she felt that the audience wasn't behaving appropriately. In one famous instance, she stopped the play Hannah Senesh right in the middle of a moving scene, when she was visiting her daughter in prison before her execution. Turning to a group of school children in the audience, she shouted at them to stop munching sunflower seeds.

Rovina was awarded the Israel Prize for theatre in 1956. She remained active on stage until her death, in 1980. She died in Tel Aviv, aged 91.

Filmography

Actress
1968
Iris as
Mother
1965
Shabbat Hamalka
1937
The Habima Theatre in Scenes From Uriel Acosta (as Hanna Rhovina)
1933
Pioneers of Palestine as
Miriam - Elegant's wife (as Chana Rowina)

References

Hanna Rovina Wikipedia