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Joseph Stein (born May 30, 1912, New York City) is a Jewish-American playwright best known for his books for hit musicals such as Fiddler on the Roof, Zorba, Rags, Take Me Along, and The Baker's Wife.
Stein began as a social worker writing comedy on the side. A chance encounter led him to the Sid Caesar Show where he joined the writing team that included Mel Brooks, Woody Allen, Carl Reiner, Neil Simon, Larry Gelbart, Mel Tolkin and Aaron Ruben. Richard Kollmar, husband of Dorothy Kilgallen ("What's My Line?"), asked Stein to write a musical about Pennsylvania that would promote the state on Broadway as Rogers and Hammerstein's Oklahoma had its namesake. Stein, with his writing partner, Will Glickman, set out and among the rich heritage that included the Liberty Bell, Independence Hall, Ben Franklin, and Valley Forge. They were drawn to the Amish of Lancaster County. They purchased a 50 cent tourist book filled with Pennsylvania Dutch slang and returned to New York to write Plain and Fancy. Its central character, Jacob Yoder, the paternalistic head of the Yoder clan, faced with changes forced upon him, grows from the traditions of the past to acceptance of the future. This early study of a man of the earth struggling with his conscience and love for his family would be brought to fruition fourteen years later in Tevya, the milkman, in Stein's classic Fiddler on the Roof. Stein is married to Elisa Loti, a psychotherapist, and lives in New York City.
Plain and Fancy has been running since 1986 at The Round Barn Theatre at Amish Acres in Nappanee, Indiana. The theatre's stage was dedicated to Joseph Stein in 1996. The show now runs in repertory with five additional musicals each season. The 20th anniversary season of Plain and Fancy featured a Joseph Stein Festival with its third production of Fiddler on the Roof,a costumed staged reading of Rags, and a Second Stage production of Enter Laughing.
Numerous radio and TV shows including:
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