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Singing in the Dark

Singing in the Dark
SingingInTheDark.jpg
Screenshot from movie, showing Leo pursuing a nightclub career.
Directed by Max Nosseck
Produced by Joey Adams
Written by Ann Hood (writer)
Aben Kandel (adaptation)
Stephen Kandel (writer)
Max Nosseck and Moyshe Oysher (story)
Starring Moyshe Oysher, Phyllis Hill, Joey Adams
Music by Moyshe Oysher
Cinematography Boris Kaufman
Release date
March 7, 1956
Country USA/America
Language English

Singing in the Dark is a 1956 black-and-white motion picture about a Holocaust survivor suffering from total amnesia who comes to the United States. It stars Yiddish language film actor Moishe Oysher in his only English-language film performance, and comedian Joey Adams (born Joseph Abramowitz), and was directed by the silent film director Max Nosseck.

Leo, the main character, is a Holocaust survivor who suffers from total amnesia. When he immigrates to the U.S. he manages to find a job as a hotel desk clerk. When he accepts a drink in the hotel bar, he suddenly starts singing, amazing those around him—and himself—with his magnificent voice. Taking advantage of his gift, he begins singing in nightclubs. Eventually, with the help of a psychiatrist and partly as a result of a blow to the head during a mugging, his memories begin to return, and he realizes that he is the son of a great Jewish Hazzan (Cantor) in Europe. As memories of his parents, who perished in the Holocaust, return to him, he abandons his nightclub career to follow his father's footsteps as a synagogue cantor. The final scene shows Leo (who now remembers that his real name is "David") singing during a synagogue service.

In one crucial scene in the movie, Leo imagines himself ascending the bema of a ruined synagogue in Europe, singing the ancient Jewish prayer "El male rachamim" in memory of all the Jews who died in the Holocaust. By actually returning to the synagogue as a cantor, the film shows how he is restoring "the sacred music of a vanquished culture to a living Jewish community."

The National Center for Jewish Film notes that this "important and virtually unknown independent film" is one of the first American movies to focus on the Holocaust. It is one of the films featured in the 2004 documentary "Imaginary Witness: Hollywood and the Holocaust."

Academy-award winning cinematographer Boris Kaufman filmed this movie in post-war Berlin, including the remains of the city's Neue Synagogue. The film also includes footage of New York's Rivington Street Synagogue.


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