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  1. 10 de oct. de 2015 · Provided to YouTube by The state51 ConspiracyA Medley Of Songs Performed Live With Joey Adams · Molly PiconTheater And Movie Hits℗ 2005 Tamuz Records LtdRele...

  2. www.encyclopedia.com › encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps › picon-mollyPicon, Molly | Encyclopedia.com

    Picon, Molly (b. 28 February 1898 in New York City; d. 5 April 1992 in Lancaster, Pennsylvania), greatest attraction of the Yiddish musical theater for more than sixty years, during the most cataclysmic period of Jewish history.Picon, born Margaret Pyekoon on New York’s Lower East Side, was the first of two daughters of Clara Ostrow (later Ostrovsky), who had fled pogroms near Kiev, Ukraine ...

  3. 26 de nov. de 2022 · English. 1. אַבי געזונט (Abi gezunt (Abi gezint)) 2. ייִדל מיטן פֿידל (Yidl mitn fidl) 3. מזל (Mazl) Molly Picon - אַבי געזונט (Abi gezunt (Abi gezint)) (English translation) : A little bit of sun, / a little bit of rain, / A quiet place / to lay one's h.

  4. Molly Picon. Actress: Fiddler on the Roof. Barely 5' tall, the little "yente" with the big, expressive talent and mischievous twinkle in her eye, Yiddish icon Molly Picon, entertained theater, radio, TV and film audiences for over seven decades. Born Malka Opiekun to Polish-Jewish parents in New York on February 28, 1898, she would gradually assist in popularizing the Yiddish culture into the ...

  5. 20 de oct. de 2021 · Transliteration. 1. אַבי געזונט (Abi gezunt (Abi gezint)) 2. ייִדל מיטן פֿידל (Yidl mitn fidl) 3. מזל (Mazl) Molly Picon - מזל (Mazl) (Transliteration) : mazl, es shaynt a mol far yedn— / far yedn, nor nisht far mir. / mazl, du brengst a yedn freydn; / farvos fa.

  6. The inimitable Molly Picon — actress, singer, dancer and comedienne — has been celebrated for her work not only in the Yiddish theater, but also on Broadway ...

  7. 5 de abr. de 1992 · Picon spent much of the 1950s on tour with the USO and in various international fundraising efforts. The 1960s saw her career boosted by her spirited featured role in Jerry Herman's first Broadway musical, "Milk and Honey," which she soon followed with her English-language film debut as the mother of two playboy sons in Neil Simon's "Come Blow Your Horn" (1964).