On the television dramedy “Glee,” the Fox TV show that focuses on the members of an Ohio high school choir, lead character Rachel Berry officially came out — as a Jew. There were hints beforehand: her name, her allusions to her big nose, her love for Streisand. But it wasn’t until the episode that aired on September 23 that she officially came out and said it.
She was fighting for the role of Maria in “West Side Story,” and said, “Natalie Wood was a Jew, you know. I have had a deep, personal connection to this role since the age of 1.” (While rumored to be a Jew, Wood was Russian Orthodox.)
Not only was Rachel’s coming out satisfying for all those who have been suspecting as much, but it also helped fill a big void in Hollywood — the Jewess. Jewish female characters don’t make it onto the screen often, a fact that is easy to overlook because of the heavy representation of Jewish men in Hollywood: from the Apatow clan, to Stiller and Sandler, to Larry David. These slightly nebbishy but nonetheless adorable guys give us our fill of Yiddishkeit, but they almost always come with a shiksa counterpart.
With the character of Rachel Berry, played by “Spring Awakening” alumna Lea Michele, Jewish women finally have someone to call their own. This girl’s got chutzpah and spunk; she is arrogant but never affected; she has a solid heart. Indeed, she has a bit of a young Streisand thing going — something the actress, who is half-Jewish in real life, has noted herself.
“I got my dream song!” Barry told “Access Hollywood.” “I got to sing a Barbra Streisand song [in an upcoming episode.] I can’t say which it is, but it’s one of her most popular songs. Ever since I was a little girl, a Jewish girl, it’s like always been playing through my head. So I had the opportunity to sing that on the show.”
Isn't it a little depressing that the only explicitly Jewish female character nowadays (if that's what she is) is a by-the-book stereotype in both physical appearance and behavior? (not that the male Jewish characters are any better).
I much preferred Kristen Stewart's character in Adventureland, a refreshingly non-stereotypical Jewish character (probably because the writer/director wasn't Jewish).
And btw, unlike Lea Michele, her co-star on the show Dianna Agron (plays the blonde cheerleader) was actually raised Jewish.
1) "These ... adorable guys give us our fill of Yiddishkeit, but they almost always come with a shiksa counterpart".
"Almost always" doesn't even come close. Since "The Goldbergs", there has been a total of ONE Jew/Jew couple on American TV. Think about it. (Remember "Brigit Loves Bernie", the unlamented Jackie Mason "comedic" sitcom?)
BTW. Who - exactly - gives us our fill of Yiddishkeit? Name three. Name one who lights Shabbat candles. In all of TV History since "The Goldbergs" (1949-54).
2) "the actress, who is half-Jewish in real life".
Um ... in the real life I am familiar with there is no such a thing as "half-Jewish". Either she is or she isn't. (Gotta love her either way, of course!)
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