- Orna Porat
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Orna Porat
Orna Porat (1957)Native name אורנה פורת Born June 6, 1924
Cologne, GermanyCitizenship Israeli Occupation Theater actress Religion Jewish Spouse Joseph Proter Awards - 1979 Israel Prize for lifetime achievement in theater
- 2005 EMET Prize for science, art, and culture
- Brenner Prize
Orna Porat (Hebrew: אורנה פורת; b. June 6, 1924) is an Israeli theater actress.
Biography
Porat was born Irene Klein in Cologne, Germany, in 1924. Her father was a Catholic and her mother a Protestant, but she chose atheism in her youth and was interested in socialist ideas. In 1934 her family moved to Porz, where she attended high school. During these years she was a member of the Hitler Youth, despite her parents’ objections.
After high school, she attended drama school and began her stage career at a repertory theater in Schleswig. There, she became acquainted with the writings of Thomas Mann and Franz Werfel and the poetry and plays of Bertolt Brecht, and discovered the truth about the atrocities of the Nazi regime.[1]
Porat met her husband, Joseph Proter, in Schleswig. He was an officer in the Jewish Brigade of the British Army, made up of Jewish volunteers from the British Mandate of Palestine. In 1946, she moved to Palestine with Proter, and married him (in a civil ceremony). She converted to Judaism later, in 1957, and they held a Jewish ceremony before adopting two children.
After being refused by the HaBima and Ohel theaters, she was accepted by the Cameri Theater, where she took her Hebrew name. She appeared there for many years, until 1984.
After the major financial and artistic crisis in the Cameri in 1958, Porat was appointed to the theater’s administrative board.
In the early 1960s, she spent three years in France and England studying children’s theater. Upon her return to Israel she founded a children’s theater, under the wing of the Cameri. In 1970, the children’s theater became independent. Porat directed several productions. She retired from managing the Children’s Theater after nineteen years. In her honor the theater was renamed the Orna Porat Theater for Children and Youth and she remains its honorary president.
She helped establish ASSITEJ, the international children's theater association.[2]
Awards and honors
- Porat won the Kinor David prize, awarded by Yedioth Ahronoth, on three occasions; in 1970, 1974, and 1980.
- In 1979, she received the Israel prize for her lifetime achievement in theater. [3]
- In 1997, she received the Israel Theater Lifetime Achievement award.
- In 2005, she won the EMET Prize for science, art, and culture, awarded by the prime minister of Israel.[4]
- Other awards received by her include the Brenner Prize.
In 2005, she was voted the 151st-greatest Israeli of all time, in a poll by the Israeli news website Ynet to determine whom the general public considered the 200 Greatest Israelis.[5]
References
- ^ Gilula, Leah. "Orna Porat". Jewish Women: A Comprehensive Historical Encyclopedia. Jewish Women's Archive. http://jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/porat-orna.
- ^ "The grand woman of Israeli theater". The Jerusalem Post. December 1, 2005. http://www.jpost.com/Home/Article.aspx?id=6225.
- ^ "Israel Prize recipients in 1979 (in Hebrew)". Israel Prize Official Site. http://cms.education.gov.il/EducationCMS/Units/PrasIsrael/Tashlag/Tashmab_Tashlag_Rikuz.htm?DictionaryKey=Tashlat.
- ^ "Orna Porat". EMET Prize website. http://www.emetprize.org/english/Product.aspx?Product=46.
- ^ גיא בניוביץ' (June 20, 1995). "הישראלי מספר 1: יצחק רבין – תרבות ובידור". Ynet. http://www.ynet.co.il/articles/0,7340,L-3083171,00.html. Retrieved July 10, 2011.
Categories:- Israel Prize women recipients
- Israel Prize in theatre recipients
- Brenner Prize recipients
- German emigrants to Israel
- Converts to Judaism
- Israeli Jews
- Israeli stage actors
- 1924 births
- Living people
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