
The Unorthodox World of Orthodox Jewish Comedy
Elon Altman saw more than he heard the fedoras and shtreimels shake with shy giggles. Orthodox Jewish crowds tend to be quiet laughers.
Altman, donning a kippah, was at a Hasidic show for a Sheva Brachot — the seven blessings recited during an Orthodox Jewish wedding ceremony — in the heart of Brooklyn. A panel of rabbis, “big bushy rabbis,” Altman described, stared at him blankly. His set was in English; the rabbis, who spoke Yiddish, understood very little.
In keeping with the Orthodox Jewis
Altman, donning a kippah, was at a Hasidic show for a Sheva Brachot — the seven blessings recited during an Orthodox Jewish wedding ceremony — in the heart of Brooklyn. A panel of rabbis, “big bushy rabbis,” Altman described, stared at him blankly. His set was in English; the rabbis, who spoke Yiddish, understood very little.
In keeping with the Orthodox Jewis