My wife says the subject line should have been, "If he was a dead man".

And so it goes, 

Kevin Brabant (I still love that musical...don't ask me why)
[email protected]

-----Original Message-----
From: danny burstein <[email protected]>
To: wnn <[email protected]>
Sent: Mon, Oct 25, 2010 4:06 pm
Subject: a coffin on the roof


>Xref: panix alt.obituaries:646494 
 
Confirmed now by Playbill. 
 
http://www.playbill.com/news/article/144298-Joseph-Stein-Tony-Award-Winning= 
-Librettist-of-Fiddler-Dies-at-98 
 
Joseph Stein, Tony Award-Winning Librettist of Fiddler, Dies at 98 
By Robert Simonson 
October 25, 2010 
 
Joseph Stein, the veteran musical librettist who penned the books to 
such shows as Fiddler on the Roof and Zorba, died Oct. 24, friends in 
the industry told Playbill.com. He was 98 and had recently been 
hospitalized. 
 
Mr. Stein was best known for the folksy, heartfelt text for Fiddler on 
the Roof, which was replete with one-liners tailored to the talents of 
star Zero Mostel's comic style, many spoken directly to the Almighty. 
(Tevye to God: "I know, I know. We are Your chosen people. But, once 
in a while, can't You choose someone else?") But he also wrote the 
books to the shows Mr. Wonderful, Take Me Along, Juno, Irene and Plain 
and Fancy, and scored a solid comedy hit in 1963 with Enter Laughing, 
which was [AUDIO-LEFT]based on an autobiographical, coming-of-age 
novel by Carl Reiner, and made a star out of Alan Arkin. He won a Tony 
Award for Fiddler, and was nominated for Rags, Zorba and Take Me 
Along. 
 
His steadiest collaborator was Fiddler composer Jerry Bock (they also 
worked together on Mr. Wonderful and Body Beautiful), but he seemed to 
have worked at least once with nearly every composer of note of 
Broadway's Golden Age, including Charles Strouse, Sheldon Harnick, 
Stephen Schwartz, John Kander, Fred Ebb, Bob Merrill, Alan Jay Lerner, 
Burton Lane, Marc Blitzstein, Jule Styne, and Albert Hague. 
 
Kander told Playbill.com that he is "devastated," adding, "He was a 
close friend and collaborator and it's a big loss to me and to the 
theatre." 
 
Mr. Stein was born on May 30, 1912, to Jewish parents in New York 
City, and grew up in the Bronx. Taking a masters degree in social work 
from Columbia University in 1937, he spent the next decade as a 
psychiatric social worker, writing comedy on the side. He contributed 
sketches to the revues Lend an Ear (1948) and Alive and Kicking 
(1950). His comedy Mrs. Gibbons' Boys ran on Broadway briefly in 1949. 
 
His big break came when he accidentally met then-nightclub-comic Zero 
Mostel while having lunch at a friend's house. =93I=92d never heard of 
him,=94 Mr. Stein said. =93He was doing a radio show." Mostel paid Stein 
$15 for some jokes he made up on the spot. That stroke of luck led to 
more work. He began writing for radio, authoring jokes for the likes 
of Phil Silvers and Jackie Gleason. He later joined the famed team of 
writers on TV's "Your Show of Shows," alongside Woody Allen, Mel 
Brooks, Carl Reiner and Larry Gelbart. He became friends with Reiner 
and, after suggesting his book "Enter Laughing" would make a good 
play, was given the go-ahead to write it. (He later turned it into a 
musical called So Long, 174th Street, a flop in 1976 that was recently 
re-dubbed Enter Laughing.) 
 
He was invited by producer Richard Kollmar to write his first musical. 
Kollmar envisioned a Pennsylvania answer to Oklahoma!, using the Amish 
in place of frontier settlers. Mr. Stein and his writing partner Will 
Glickman bought a 50-cent pamphlet of Amish slang and wrote the 
affectionate Plain and Fancy in 1955. Like many of Mr. Stein's future 
works, it dealt in part with the immigrant experience, and featured 
characters who feel secure within their small community, but isolated 
from and slightly fearful of the larger world. It starred Barbara Cook 
and ran for over a year. 
 
Mr. Stein's work could be simultaneously funny and touching. Fiddler's 
book was noted for its mix of comedy and drama. For every Yiddish 
Theatre-like comic exchange between Tevye and his wife Golde there was 
a disturbing encounter with Russian officals, or a painfully 
intolerant conversation between traditional father and rebellious 
daughter. 
 
Mr. Stein continued working up until his final days. He wrote the book 
to Kander and Ebb's musical take on The Skin of Our Teeth, called All 
About Us, which had a production in Westport in 2007. In 2006, Mr. 
Stein's works were showcased in the York Theatre's "Musicals in Mufti" 
series." 
 
In 1997, the Round Barn Theatre in Nappanee, IN, was renamed in honor 
of the librettist. Plain and Fancy reportedly had played more than 
2,000 performances at Round Barn. 
 
A revival of Zorba is aiming for Broadway for the 2010-11 season. 
Also, 174th Street, retitled Enter Laughing, and a recent hit for the 
York Theatre Company, is looking to reach Broadway during the 2010-11 
season. Mr. Stein welcomed the opportunity to revisit his work. In 
1999, Paper Mill Playhouse presented a revised version of the four- 
performance 1986 flop Rags. "In a sense, I tried to do too much, to 
tell too much story," Mr. Stein conceded at the time. "It's perfectly 
fine for a novel, but it was a little too much for a musical 
structure. I think we've sharpened the characters and clarified some 
of the storyline." 
 
"Look," Mr. Stein added, "if I had the opportunity to work on Fiddler 
now, there are a couple of little things I'd like to change. You can 
always improve something. Nothing is ever really perfect." 
 
Mr. Stein is survived by his wife Elisa; and three sons, Daniel, Harry 
and Josh, from his first marriage to Sadie Singer, who died in 1974; 
and one daughter, Jenny Lyn, from his marriage to Elisa Loti. 
 
Send questions and comments to the Webmaster 
Copyright =A9 2010 Playbill, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 
 
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