Adrienne
Cooper, one of the most influential
performers of Yiddish vocal music today, appears on concert, theater,
and club stages around the world. Her singing has been featured
on film, radio, television and some twenty recordings including
Partisans of Vilna, the only Yiddish recording ever nominated
for a Grammy. She has mentored and inspired a generation of singers
and bands in the burgeoning klezmer revival scene.
Ms. Cooper
has performed and recorded with, among others, The Klezmatics,
Hasidic New Wave, The Flying Bulgar Klezmer Band, Kapelye, and
Frank London's Shekhine Big Band.
Her
singing can be heard in the educational installation at the U.S.
Holocaust Memorial Museum and on the museum's CD productions Remember
the Children and Hidden Histories: Songs from the Kovno Ghetto.
New productions include an international tour of Ghetto
Tango, her groundbreaking collaboration with Zalmen
Mlotek on unknown music theater of World War II. A CD of Ghetto
Tango was released on April 18, 2000, on the Traditional
Crossroads label.
On
Valentine's Day, 1998, she debuted with Mikveh,
her new all-star women's klezmer band in Obie-Award winning playwright
Eve Ensler's star-studded V-Day Benefit, sharing the stage with
Whoopi Goldberg, Glen Close, Winona Ryder, Susan Sarandon, Marisa
Tomei, Phoebe Snow and others.At the invitation of Jewish World
Service and the Jewish Community Development Fund, Ms. Cooper
travels each summer to Russia to train a new generation of Jewish
musicians from throughout the former Soviet territories.
For
two decades, Ms. Cooper has initiated groundbreaking musical,
theatrical and educational projects. As Assistant Director of
the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, she co-founded the Yiddish
Folk Arts Program, popularly known as KlezKamp, the internationally
recognized model for multi-generational folk art education now
in its 14th year. She designed and hosted the Merkin Concert Hall's
children's concert series on ethnic diversity within Jewish music.
Ms. Cooper co-wrote and starred in The Memoirs of Gluckl of Hameln,
presented to acclaim in New York at the legendary La Mama Annex.
New York City's Jewish Museum has commissioned her to curate concert
programs to accompany several of its exhibitions, most recently
Chagall's Kaleidoscope, a multi-media program in French, Russian
and Yiddish.
Ms.
Cooper was a founding member of the Joseph Papp Yiddish Theater
and veteran of its long-running Off-Broadway production, Songs
of Paradise. She teaches on the faculty of the Academy of Jewish
Religion and presents master classes in Yiddish Song throughout
the world. Ms. Cooper was among a handful of Jewish artists selected
for national artists' residencies by the National Foundation for
Jewish Culture. She received her musical training at the Rubin
Academy in Jerusalem, and holds B.A and M.A. degrees in history
from Hebrew University and the University of Chicago. Ms Cooper
is currently Director of Program Development for the Workmen's
Circle / Arbeter Ring.
More
info on www.yiddishmusicians.com