MA
Ozzy Irving Gold-Shapiro is a curious historian, Yiddishist, cultural worker, and raconteur living on Nipmuc, Pocumtuc, and Nonotuck land in so-called western Massachusetts. They have been involved as a researcher, translator, and performer in a number of archival Yiddish-based performance projects that seek to destabilize traditional historical narratives. Recent projects include Jenny Romaine’s “The Revival of the Gravediggers of Uzda,” A. C. Weaver's "Plague Wedding," and “Vu bistu geven?/Where Have You Been?," a film about the history of the land where Klezkanada takes place. They also appeared as Bum in the Folksbiene's staged reading of Kadya Molodowsky's "Ale fentster tsu der zun" (dir. Jenny Romaine). They play ukulele and sing in the klezmer band Burikes, and orchestrate multigenerational, community-led spectacle theater parades based on the Jewish calendar. They are also on the organizing team of KlezCummington, a yearly festival celebrating Yiddishkayt and klezmer music, and highlighting local artists involved in this important cultural work.
Additional Content:
The website for the People's People's Puppet Parade, a spectacle parade I co-organize bi-yearly.
I play in this six-member klezmer band, Burikes (beets in Yiddish)
I am a member of the organizing team of KlezCummington, a yearly festival highlighting artists, cultural organizers, and performers engaged in generating contemporary Yiddish culture and klezmer music.
Vu bistu geven? Where have you been? [trailer]
A trailer for the film "Vu bistu geven? Where have you been?"
Institution/Business Type:
Artist / Creative (Individual)
Legal Status:
Commercial / For profit - Sole proprietorship
Institution/Business Type:
Artist / Creative (Individual)
Legal Status:
Commercial / For profit - Sole proprietorship
Primary Discipline:
Theater - Devised / Artist-LedAdditional Disciplines:
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