Ester Rachel Kamińska (Yiddish: אסתּר־רחל קאַמינסקאַ; née Ester-Rokhl Halpern Porozów, 10 March 1870 – Warsaw, 25 December 1925) was a Polish actress of Jewish descent, known as the mother of Yiddish theatre.
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Ester Rachel Kamińska (Yiddish: אסתּר־רחל קאַמינסקאַ; née Ester-Rokhl Halpern Porozów, 10 March 1870 – Warsaw, 25 December 1925) was a Polish actress of Jewish descent, known as the mother of Yiddish theatre.
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Early life Ester-Rokhl Halpern was born on 10 March 1870 into a poor Jewish family in the shtetl of Porozów, near Grodno, which had a large Jewish community. She had little schooling and moved to Warsaw to worked as a seamstress in early adulthood. This led to her becoming involved in theater. In 1893 she married Avrom-Yitskhok Kaminski, who worked as a gaitermaker but was an aspiring actor. She became known as Ester Rachel Kamińska.
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Career Kaminska won fame as the star of a series of Yiddish theater companies managed by her husband, Avrom Yitshok Kamiński (Abraham Isaac Kamiński), touring in the cities and small towns of the Russian Empire from approximately 1893 to 1905. In Warsaw, in 1907 they together founded the Literary Troupe (Literarishe trupe), the first Yiddish theater company to dedicate itself to a 'literary' or 'artistic' repertoire.
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Family and legacy She was the mother of three children. Regina Kaminska (1894–1913) became an actor but died young. Jozef Kaminski (1903–1972) became a violinist and composer. Ida Kamińska (1899–1980), the well known stage and film actress and director, who cofounded the Warsaw Yiddish Art Theater in the 1920s, and, in 1946, following the Second World War, performed in reestablished Yiddish theaters in Poland. Today, the Jewish Theatre, Warsaw is named after the two actresses.