Hanna Maron Explained

Hanna Maron
Birth Name:Hanna Meierzak
Birth Date:22 November 1923
Birth Place:Berlin, Germany
Death Place:Tel Aviv, Israel
Occupation:Actress and theater personality
Years Active:1927–2014
Spouse:1. Yossi Yadin;
2. Itzhak Yashar;
3. Yaakov Rechter
Children:Dafna Rechter,Amnon Rechter
Awards:

Hanna Maron (Hebrew: חנה מרון|Chana Maron; 22 November 1923 – 30 May 2014) was a German-born Israeli actress, comedian and theater personality.She held the world record for the longest career in theater.[1]

Life and career

Hanna Meierzak was born in Berlin, Germany on 22 November 1923.[2] As a child, she appeared in several plays, films, and radio plays. In 1931 she appeared uncredited in Fritz Lang's M. She attended a Montessori school where she learned French. In 1932, she spent a year in Paris.[3] In 1933, following the Nazi Party's rise to power, she immigrated with her family to Mandate Palestine.[4]

In 1940, she joined Habimah. During World War II, she volunteered for the Auxiliary Territorial Service of the British army, serving two years before joining the Jewish Brigade's entertainment troupe. In 1945 she joined the Cameri Theater in Tel Aviv. As a member of the repertory committee, she helped shape the company's repertoire, including new works by Israeli dramatists. Early on, she appeared in supporting roles, but after her success as Mika in He Walked in the Fields by Moshe Shamir, she became one of Israel's leading actresses.[3]

She married a fellow actor, Yossi Yadin (son of the archaeologist Eleazar Sukenik and brother of the Israeli Chief of Staff Yigael Yadin).[5] They were together for six years.[6] Among her better known roles were in Pygmalion, The Glass Menagerie and Hello, Dolly!, as well as several plays by Nathan Alterman.[2]

On 10 February 1970, the airport bus transport to her London-bound El Al flight at the Munich-Riem Airport was attacked by Palestinian terrorists. Sustaining serious injuries in a grenade attack, her leg had to be amputated, but she resumed her acting career a year later.[7] [8] She remained a peace activist.[8]

She starred in the films Aunt Clara (1977), The Vulture (1981) and Dead End Street (1982). From 1983 to 1986 she starred in the Israeli sitcom Krovim, Krovim ("Near Ones, Dear Ones"). In 2000 she initiated and founded the Herzliya Theater Ensemble.[2] She directed and participated in an evening of Alterman poems, and on an evening of Bertolt Brecht's works.[9] In late 2003, she returned to the Cameri to play in a comedy.[10] In 2004 she starred in a theater event that reenacted an IDF refuseniks' trial.[11]

She was married to architect Yaakov Rechter, with whom she had three children: Amnon, an architect, Ofra, a philosopher, and Dafna, an actress.[12] [13] Hanna Maron died in Tel-Aviv, Israel on 30 May 2014, aged 90.

Legacy in popular culture

A new graphic novel biography is due to appear in German in September 2016: Barbara Yelin, Vor allem eins: Dir selbst sei treu. Die Schauspielerin Channa Maron, lit. First and foremost: be true to yourself. Actress Hanna Maron.[14]

In 2017, an exhibition was created by Barbara Yelin and David Polonsky after Yelin's graphic novel. It was shown at German high schools (the Heinz Berggruen Gymnasium in Berlin and the Humboldt Gymnasium at Vaterstetten), the Berlin International Literature Festival, and the Goethe Institutes in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem.[15]

Awards and honours

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Israeli actress breaks world record. ISRAEL21c. 22 September 2011.
  2. News: Hanna Maron, heroine. Habama. 10 May 2008. 23 November 2003. he.
  3. Web site: Hanna Meron (Marron). jwa.org.
  4. Web site: Timeline. Jewish Agency. 10 May 2008. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20071201065109/http://www.jafi.org.il/education/jafi75/timeline2b.html. 1 December 2007.
  5. News: Yossi Yadin obituary. The New York Times. 10 May 2008. 21 May 2001.
  6. https://archive.today/20120710162526/http://google.com/search?q=cache:JqkMXDX_6uIJ:www.nytimes.com/2001/05/21/world/yossi-yadin-actor-81.html+hanna+maron+born&cd=17&hl=en&ct=clnk Yossi Yadin obituary, New York Times
  7. 1996/103. Almagor. Dan. Musical Plays on the Hebrew Stage. The Israel Review of Arts and Letters. 10 May 2008. 16 July 1998.
  8. News: Krystal. Meirav. Up from the Vale of Tears. Ynet. 10 May 2008. 6 February 2007. he.
  9. News: Yudilevich. Meirav. Hanna Maron is our sunshine. Ynet. 10 May 2008. 6 December 2003. he.
  10. News: Oren. Amos. Hanna Maron returns to the Camera. Ynet. 10 May 2008. 5 November 2003. he.
  11. News: Yudilevich. Meirav. Heuberger and Maron in a play reenacting the Refuseniks' trial. Ynet. 10 May 2008. 6 June 2004. he.
  12. Web site: Battling the demons, on stage and in life. Zipi Shohat. 5 October 2012. Haaretz.com.
  13. Web site: Philosophy Department. tau.ac.il.
  14. Web site: Vor allem eins: Dir selbst sei treu. Die Schauspielerin Channa Maron | Reprodukt . 3 July 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160725133905/http://www.reprodukt.com/produkt/deutscheautoren/vor-allem-eins-dir-selbst-sei-treu-die-schauspielerin-channa-maron/ . 25 July 2016 . dead . Book
  15. Web site: Channa Maron: Dir selbst sei treu - Graphic art - Goethe-Institut Israel.
  16. Web site: Israel Prize Official Site – Recipients in 1973 (in Hebrew).
  17. News: Krystal. Meirav. Honorary doctorate to Hanna Maron and Aharon Applefeld. Ynet. 10 May 2008. 16 May 2007. he.
  18. News: Yudilevich. Meirav. All about Hanna. Ynet. 10 May 2008. 6 December 2003. he.