Dr Jonathan Munby (Lancaster University and Du Bois Institute, Harvard University)
In 1974, ‘The Godfather Part II’ provided an iconic moment in Hollywood history. Italian American actor, Al Pacino, persuaded his mentor, Lee Strasberg (Jewish American guru of Method acting), to play Hyman Roth, a character based on the Jewish American gangster, Meyer Lansky. This talk examines how ‘The Godfather Part II’ negotiated the representation of Jewish American gangsters, looking back to the era of the “classic” gangster, when Jewish actors became famous playing Italian gangsters, when “tough Jews”, imagined and real, portrayed a feistily defiant self-image as violent Shtarkers who fought back against victimization.
Dr Jonathan Munby is Senior Lecturer in Film Studies at Lancaster University and Fellow of the Du Bois Institute, Harvard University. He is the author of ‘Public Enemies, Public Heroes: Screening the Gangster from Little Caesar to Touch of Evil’ and ‘Under a Bad Sign: Criminal Self-Representation in African American Popular Culture’.
THURSDAY, 6 JUNE, 6:30 PM AT THE WIENER LIBRARY
This lecture series is organised by the LBI London in cooperation with the Wiener Library.