Daniel Efrat
Daniel Efrat | |
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דניאל אפרת | |
Born | |
Education | Beit Zvi School for the Performing Arts (MA) |
Occupation |
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Daniel Efrat (Hebrew: דניאל אפרת; born 4 August 1982) is an Israeli actor, theatre director, and translator. He trained at Beit Zvi, where he first began translating (English into Hebrew), before joining the Beit Lessin Theater youth company. He has also acted in film and television. He has won various awards in Israel for his translation and direction, as well as acting awards.
Early life and education[]
Daniel Efrat was born in Tel Aviv, Israel, on 4 August 1982, to musician Ovad Efrat and scholar Daphna Efrat née Tamir.[1][2][3] As a child, his father's musician friends would stay at their house, but Efrat said that he was not very excited to see them and that he preferred getting to explore recording studios.[4] He grew up with a relatively liberal family, though he first read Spring Awakening at home when he was fourteen and identified with its themes of stifled adolescence.[5]
Efrat left home when he was seventeen because he was scared of coming out to his parents, saying he left because he "was angry at them for the reaction [he] expected"; he told them he was gay shortly after he left and they were understanding: "in the first conversation with my mother ... this issue came up, I told her, and she told dad, and the next morning I got a call from him [during which] he told me how much he loved me."[4]
Around the same time he was sent a conscription order for the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), but was not signed up, saying: "I did not ask to be released. I was released. I got there, they saw what was sitting in front of them and decided".[4] He suggested in an interview with Makor Rishon that it was related to his sexuality. His parents reacted badly to him not enlisting in the IDF; his father had been in the elite Shayetet 13.[4]
He attended the Tel Aviv School of Arts,[6] Thelma Yellin School of Arts and Beit Zvi School for the Performing Arts, where he earned an MA[7][1] and received awards for outstanding first-year student and outstanding graduating student. He also received the outstanding graduate award from Thelma Yellin.[6] Efrat graduated from Beit Zvi in 2003.[8] He began translating while at Beit Zvi, saying that he really wanted to perform The Rocky Horror Show but no Hebrew translation existed for it, so he did it himself. When instructors heard he had translated a musical, they encouraged him to do some more.[4][5] His father's band, HaClique, had debuted following a 1980 screening of The Rocky Horror Picture Show at the in Tel Aviv.[9][5]
Career[]
Efrat first acted as a child, in the 1991 American television movie Iran: Days of Crisis directed by Kevin Connor, credited as Daniel Ephrat.[10][6] On television he appeared in Hamachon.[7] His first major film role was in Nadav Levitan's 1998 Aviv (Real Father).[11] He went on to act in several other Levitan films.[6] He then played lead role Menni in the film Yeladim Tovim (Good Boys), a film about rent boys.[7][12] He won the Best Actor award at the 2006 Tampa International Gay and Lesbian Film Festival for the film.[13][14]
He stayed in the theatre and began translating, adapting, and directing.[4][1] In 2008, the youth theatre group at the Beit Lessin Theater was formed, and Efrat joined.[5] This year he performed in and wrote Broadway Corner Freshman, a comedy review musical featuring songs and condensed plots of popular Israeli musicals. It was praised as a "loving and nostalgic tribute".[15] At Beit Lessin, he performed in a variety of musicals, including Hair as Woof, Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat as Joseph and Benjamin, Blood Brothers as Eddie and Sammy, and Cabaret as the Emcee.[7][6]
In 2010, as part of Beit Lessin's youth theatre group, he won the Rabinowitz Charitable Foundation's Ada Ben Nachum Award for his translation of Spring Awakening, starring Ninet Tayeb, which he also performed in and produced. The citation, which also mentioned his 2009 translation of A Midsummer Night's Dream, said that he "successfully faced the special challenges posed by the original text: a dialogue that is a mixture of period language, stylistic poetic language and contemporary dialect".[4][1] Though the play version of Spring Awakening had been performed before in Israel, Efrat's was the first production of the musical.[5] In 2013, Efrat translated The Rocky Horror Show for its commercial Israeli debut, featuring Lake Rodberg and third-year students of the Yoram Levinstein acting studio, in Tel Aviv.[16]
He directed the 2012–2013 revival of Mami; critical of occupation of Gaza and the West Bank, and of the IDF, the theatre invited soldiers to watch the show for free.[17] Hava Yarom for Martha Yodaat theatre review magazine wrote that Efrat "is an extraordinary artist, who certainly knows how to swing his baton on plays and especially on musicals ... and has certainly left his mark on the field of translation" but felt that his attempts to make the musical his own added too much decoration, with "multicoloured vocal richness"; new characters; and more elaborate costumes, choreography, and set designs, distracting from the material. Yarom particularly felt that the staging of the rape scene took away from the Mami performance, though considered that the adaptation as a whole was the negative, saying Efrat's boldness should be praised. Ovad Efrat, his father, was the musical director and arranger.[18]
'sIn 2015, his direction of Haifa Theatre won the four major awards of the Israeli Theater Academy Awards. It was then staged in North America.[19] Efrat had first directed the original musical in 2013; musician approached director Efrat and artistic director with his Jerusalem Academy of Music and Dance dissertation music, hoping to create a musical. They took the result to the Bat Yam Musical Festival, where it won the grand prize, including a development grant, before working on it more for the commercial debut at Haifa.[20][21]
at theIn 2017, he translated Hairspray into Hebrew for its Israeli debut. A review in BroadwayWorld said that "the songs were still extremely fun and flowing and Efrat can clearly write beautiful songs, but one of the major things that made Hairspray such a great musical is Scott Wittman and Marc Shaiman's lyrics and without them it's like a production of Hairspray without tall hair wigs."[22]
Other translations include songs in films and movie musicals, including Tangled, Rio and the Ice Age films.[23] Efrat has said that though he acts, he prefers being known for his work behind the scenes, even though translating is "not a sexy craft",[4] and that he is addicted to both performing and creative work.[5] With Eli Bijawi and Roy Chen, he makes up the young generation of Israeli translation playwriting.[24]
He has also written pop songs, including "Dai La" with Marta Gómez for Roni Dalumi's 2010 debut album.[25]
References[]
- ^ a b c d בר-און, ערן (17 July 2011). "פרס תרגום ע"ש עדה בן נחום לדניאל אפרת". Ynet (in Hebrew). Retrieved 5 January 2022.
- ^ "פרופ' דפנה אפרת". Open University of Israel (in Hebrew). Retrieved 5 January 2022.
- ^ "Varda Agronsky 5343". ANU - Museum of the Jewish People. Archived from the original on 31 December 2021. Retrieved 13 December 2021.
- ^ a b c d e f g h "כשדניאל מתעורר: ריאיון עם דניאל אפרת". Makor Rishon (in Hebrew). 2010. Retrieved 7 January 2022.
- ^ a b c d e f "תיאטרון - חתרנות מתורגמת". Habama (in Hebrew). Retrieved 13 February 2022.
- ^ a b c d e "אמנים - דניאל אפרת". Habama (in Hebrew). Retrieved 13 February 2022.
- ^ a b c d "Good Boys Film (Archived for educational purposes)". Good Boys Film. Retrieved 6 January 2022.
- ^ "Program of Studies". Beit Zvi (in Hebrew). Retrieved 13 February 2022.
- ^ אביב, מאת אורי זר (4 March 2015). "קיצור תולדות הקליק". טיים אאוט (in Hebrew). Retrieved 17 January 2022.
- ^ Haring, Bruce (2 October 1991). "TNT Movie: Iran: Days of Crisis". Variety Daily. ISBN 9780824037963.
- ^ "Daniel Efrat". MUBI. Retrieved 6 January 2022.
- ^ "Yeladim Tovim (2005)". BFI. Retrieved 6 January 2022.
- ^ Slepian, Arthur (12 February 2011). "Good Boys". A Wider Bridge. Retrieved 6 January 2022.
- ^ "indieWIRE INTERVIEW | Going Full Frontal: Yair Hochner's "Antarctica"". IndieWire. 12 November 2008. Retrieved 6 January 2022.
- ^ "ברודווי פינת פרישמן | וואלה! יורם לימודים". לימודים | יורם ערוץ הלימודים של ישראל (in Hebrew). Retrieved 13 February 2022.
- ^ "בחזרה לקולנוע פריז... - יובל אראל". הבלוג של יובל אראל (in Hebrew). 17 September 2013. Retrieved 13 February 2022.
- ^ יודילוביץ', מרב (18 June 2012). "25 "מאמי": הפקה חדשה, פצעים ישנים". Ynet (in Hebrew). Retrieved 13 February 2022.
- ^ "העיבוד שהלך לאיבוד". מרתה יודעת (in Hebrew). 6 March 2013. Retrieved 13 February 2022.
- ^ Musbach, Julie. "BILLY SCHWARTZ Invited to Perform at the Harold Green Jewish Theatre in Toronto". BroadwayWorld. Retrieved 6 January 2022.
- ^ "בילי שוורץ נוסעת לתל אביב - יובל אראל". הבלוג של יובל אראל (in Hebrew). 30 December 2015. Retrieved 13 February 2022.
- ^ יודילוביץ', מרב (5 December 2013). "חג המחזמר: אוהד חיטמן זכה עם 'בילי שוורץ'". Ynet (in Hebrew). Retrieved 13 February 2022.
- ^ Suzan, Ronit. "BWW Review: HAIRSPRAY Being Big, Groundbreaking and Beautiful in Israel". BroadwayWorld. Retrieved 6 January 2022.
- ^ "דניאל אפרת". Ishim (in Hebrew). Retrieved 7 January 2022.
- ^ שחל, מאיה נחום (30 January 2014). "צעירי הבמה". כלכליסט (in Hebrew). Retrieved 13 February 2022.
- ^ "רוני דלומי - שירים חדשים מאלבום הבכורה". mako (in Hebrew). 21 December 2010. Retrieved 13 February 2022.
External links[]
- Daniel Efrat at IMDb
- 1982 births
- Living people
- English–Hebrew translators
- Film people from Tel Aviv
- Gay actors
- Gay writers
- Israeli theatre directors
- Israeli translators
- Jewish translators
- LGBT actors from Israel
- LGBT Jews
- LGBT musicians from Israel
- LGBT theatre directors
- LGBT writers from Israel
- Male actors from Tel Aviv
- Thelma Yellin High School of Arts alumni
- Translators of William Shakespeare
- Writers from Tel Aviv