There's a poignant moment at the end of Fiddler on the Roof — the latest, brilliant, incarnation now showing at the Menier Chocolate Factory — when the Jewish residents of Anatevka, having been evicted in 1905 by Tsarist troops, discuss their plans for the future. Yente the matchmaker is heading for Jerusalem. Tevye and his remaining family are going to America. Tzeitel, Tevye's oldest daughter, is on her way to Poland, though she eventually hopes to join her parents in the US. Chava, with her Russian soldier... Читать дальше...