Philip Laskowsky (
Yiddish: פֿיליפּ לאַסקאָװסקי; c.1884–1960) was a
Polish-born
American composer, arranger, bandleader, comedian and actor of the
Yiddish theatre.[1][2][3] He collaborated with a number of well-known figures of the American Yiddish theatre such as
Boris Thomashefsky,
Louis Gilrod,
Isidore Lillian,
Jacob Jacobs, and
Rubin Doctor.[2] He is sometimes credited with having written the music for the well-known Yiddish song Oyfn veg shteyt a boym, although this is disputed.[4]
Biography
Early life
He was born Pinchas Laskowsky in
Warsaw, Poland in the 1880s.[1][5][6] His exact year of birth is uncertain; the
Leksikon fun yidishn teater gives it as July 17, 1889, but in immigration documents Laskowsky usually indicated July 17, 1884 or sometimes 1886.[7][8] His father was a lumber merchant and follower of the
Radzymin Hasids.[1] As a youth he was taught by
Melameds and his father, and learned music from a
Hazzan as well as from his brother, who was a music professor.[2][1] His brother wanted to prepare him for the career of being a military bandleader.[1][3]
Theatre career
However, rather than the military he was apprenticed in the opera company "Bustnai" in Warsaw.[3] He soon became the second choir conductor with them.[1][3] He also befriended Yiddish Theatre actor named Strasfogel and started to act in small productions with him.[3] He then acted in traveling Yiddish theatre troupes in Poland and the Russian Empire until the outbreak of
World War I.[1] When Germany occupied Warsaw a central theatre was organized and he played as a character actor in operettas there.[1][3] He also began to compose music for operettas at around this time.[1][3] He married his wife Sarah around the end of the war, and they had their daughter Chaia in July 1919.[8][5]
He left Poland in 1921 and emigrated to the United States, sailing first to
Halifax,
Canada, then to
Montreal and arrived in
New York City in March.[7][9][10][1][6][8] There he continued to act and compose short works for the Yiddish theatre, often for productions by
Boris Tomashevsky.[3] He held a number of jobs in smaller Yiddish theatres during the 1920s, often following Tomashevsky to other cities, including in
Los Angeles in 1925 and in Philadelphia in 1927.[11][3][12]
It was in 1929 that he got his first high-profile job writing full compositions, becoming the director, conductor and composer at the Prospect Theatre with Nathan Goldberg and
Jacob Jacobs.[3][1] That same year, on March 4 1929, Goldberg, Laskowsky and actor Lucy Finkel were involved in an automobile accident, leaving Finkel with a fractured skull and Laskowsky with a broken spine.[13][14][15] According to
Pesach Burstein, Laskowsky spent several months recovering in bed from the injuries.[16]
Philip Laskowsky
In the 1930s Laskowsky continued to be very productive in the Yiddish theatre, not only composing but also arranging the compositions of other composers for performance.[9] In 1930 and 1931 he worked for the Hopkinson Theatre and also worked for a time in
Winnipeg,
Canada.[1][6] In 1931 he returned to the United States to work at the
Arch Street Theatre in
Philadelphia.[1]
He then returned to New York in 1932 and worked at the Liberty Theatre in Brooklyn.[1]
During and after
World War II, as the Yiddish theatre waned in popularity, he collaborated regularly with Israel Rosenberg and
Vera Rozanka.[17][18] His only contribution to film music seems to have been a partial credit for Catskill Honeymoon, a low-budget 1950 film directed by
Josef Berne.[19][20]
He died in New York on June 13, 1960.[9] He was buried at
Mount Hebron Cemetery in the Yiddish Theatrical Alliance section.[21]
Selected list of plays and operettas he wrote music for
Der griner melamed
Di griner kuzine (1922, written by Boris Thomashefsky)[22]
^Hanson, Patricia King (1999). American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States _ Feature Films 1941-1950 Indexes_. University of California Press. p. 394.
^Within our gates : ethnicity in American feature films, 1911-1960. Berkeley, Ca.: University of California Press. 1997. p. 175.
ISBN9780520209640.