Article 5CJ3N The director who dared to suggest Jewish men don't need rescuing by blond women

The director who dared to suggest Jewish men don't need rescuing by blond women

by
Hadley Freeman
from World news | The Guardian on (#5CJ3N)

The late film-maker Joan Micklin Silver exploded the cliches of modern romances. If only others would do the same

The director Joan Micklin Silver, who died last week, was - to use the kind of cliche she abhorred - a pioneer. She was a female director at a time when studio executives were more than comfortable with being openly sexist, telling Silver: Women directors are one more problem we don't need."

She made distinctly Jewish movies, as opposed to the kind of Jewish-lite movies that were - and are still - Hollywood's more usual style. Her two greatest films, Hester Street (1975), about a Jewish immigrant couple (Steven Keats and Carol Kane) on the Lower East Side in the 1890s, and the peerless 1988 romcom Crossing Delancey, about a modern young woman (Amy Irving) who is reluctantly fixed up with a pickle seller (Peter Riegert), are to When Harry Met Sally what the Netflix series Shtisel is to Seinfeld: Jewish as opposed to merely Jew-ish.

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