Theater for the New City presents two
operas of upheaval by Leonard J. Lehrman,
"Sima" and "E.G.: A Musical Portrait of Emma Goldman"
Two productions, One Journey of Jewish Survival and Defiance
WHERE AND WHEN:
January 8 to 25, 2026
Theater for the New City, 155 First Ave. (at E.10th Street)
Theater for the New City presents two operas composed by Leonard J. Lehrman:
• "Sima," an opera with music and libretto by Leonard J. Lehrman
• "E.G.: A Musical Portrait of Emma Goldman (1869-1940),"
with music by Leonard J. Lehrman and words by Lehrman and Karen Ruoff Kramer
Presented in alternating performances:
"Sima" plays Jan. 8 (Thu), 11 (Sun), 16 (Fri), 17 (Sat), 22 (Thu)
and 25 (Sun). Running time :90 plus intermission.
"E.G."plays Jan. 9 (Fri), 10 (Sat), 15 (Thu), 18 (Sun), 23 (Fri)
and 24 (Sat). Running time :90 plus intermission.
Times of all performances: Thursdays through Saturdays at 8:00 PM, Sundays
at 3:00 PM
Tickets: $25 general admission, $15 seniors & students.
Reviewers are invited to all performances.
Photos: https://photos.app.goo.gl/oNLaHeTk4UVjMLbq8
NEW YORK, December 24-- From January 8 to 25, Theater for the New City (TNC), 155 First Ave., will present two operas by Leonard J. Lehrman, "Sima" and "E.G.: A Musical Portrait of Emma Goldman." "Sima" is a story of the attempted adoption of a poor Jewish girl orphaned by a pogrom in 1905 Ukraine. "E.G." is a music-theater biography of Emma Goldman, dramatizing her life as an anarchist, activist, and revolutionary thinker from her youth through her deportation in 1919 and brief return to the United States in 1934. "Sima" plays Jan. 8, 11, 16, 17, 22 and 25. "E.G."plays Jan. 9, 10, 15, 18, 23 and 24.
The pairing of these works provides a continuum of the Jewish and Immigrant Experience, with "Sima" offering a tale of a child uprooted by antisemitic terror and "E.G." tracing the path from Old World oppression to New World radicalism, showing how in the 20th century, trauma and resistance seeded lifelong political action in people who fought oppressive systems rather than merely surviving them.
About "Sima"
"Sima," an opera in two acts, will be directed by Lissa Moira and
conducted by composer Leonard Lehrman. This will be its NYC premiere. In a
first for TNC, this opera will be performed with a 10 piece orchestra.
The plot of "Sima" is the attempted adoption of a poor Jewish girl who has been orphaned by a pogrom in 1905 Ukraine. A wealthy couple, Yakov and Regina Krasovitsky, visit an orphanage for children left parentless by pogroms. A little girl named Sima seems to recognize Regina as her mother and rushes to embrace her before realizing her mistake. The couple, touched, adopt the girl. She, however, has escaped one trauma only to enter another: a household on edge, barely capable of caring for her. She breaks a statue and becomes increasingly distressed. The household has its own tensions: Yakov fears repercussions of a strike at his factory. Regina appeals to wealthy friends to adopt other children, but her friends dismiss her, fearing the kids will be mistaken for their own illegitimate offspring. The couple's Ukrainian maid, Manya, grieving over the death of her own child from malnutrition, resents the adopted girl. Their anguishes are a canvas in which one small girl mirrors an entire society’s failures--and its fleeting moments of grace.
As Regina and Yakov weigh returning the child to the orphanage, Sima wakes from a nightmare. Manya enters the room in anger and is unexpectedly softened by the child’s fear. She takes Sima in her arms and sings her back to sleep, suggesting that kindness comes not from wealth or good intentions, but from those who have known suffering themselves.
The music of the opera is in collage style with authentic Russian and Ukrainian folk melodies, a revolutionary song, a prison song, and a love song that becomes a fugue--contrasting with very violent pogrom music. Lehrman dedicated the work to his teacher, Nadia Boulanger, and to his grandmother, Sima Glukhovskaya Rosenstein Peterson Yaffe, whose first name is echoed in the opera's title.
CAST OF "SIMA"
Bennett Pologe plays industrialist Yakov Isaevich Krasovitzky. The role of
his wife, Regina, alternates between Christine Browning (Jan. 8 & 11)
and Clare Iverson (Jan. 16, 17, 22 & 25). Perri Sussman plays their
Ukrainian maid, Manya. Samantha Long plays the Orphanage Supervisor and
Hannah Grace Hollingsworth plays the orphan Sima. Choristers are Addie Grant,
Michael Jiang, Desi Sandoval, Boaz Katz, Noelle Louis, Lily Nussbaum, Jacob
Hollingsworth, Miranda Libanan, and brothers Luka and Niko Zylik.
Set design is by Lytza Colon. Lighting design is by Marsh Shugart. Costume design is by Billy Little. Graphic and Video Design is by Roy Chang.
PERFORMANCE SCHEDULE OF "SIMA"
Jan. 8 (Thu), 11 (Sun), 16 (Fri), 17 (Sat), 22 (Thu) and 25 (Sun).
Thursdays thru Saturdays at 8:00 PM, Sundays at 3:00 PM.
Runs 90 min. incl. intermission.
About "E.G.: A Musical Portrait of Emma Goldman
(1869-1940)"
Set in 1933, "E.G." is a music-theater biography of the legendary
Russian Jewish American Anarchist Emma Goldman. She defends her life as an
anarchist, activist, and revolutionary thinker as she attempts to re-enter
the America that had deported her in 1919. The piece combines musical numbers,
spoken monologues, melodrama, historical photos, and audience interaction
to create a kaleidoscopic portrait of Goldman’s life, ideals, and struggles.
Caryn Hartglass plays Emma Goldman. Piano accompaniment is by composer Leonard
Lehrman, who also portrays all the men in Emma's life. These include the artist
Modest Stein, the roustabout Ben Reitman, and especially Alexander Berkman
("Sasha"), a leader of the anarchist movement in the early 20th
century who was famous for his political activism and writing. In the opera,
he is a confidant and chorus who frames the narrative and provides a counterpoint
to Emma’s voice. Visuals include 266 projections and a newsreel, all
operated by Janet Kalish.
"E.G." celebrates the life of a woman who dared to defy authority, insist on justice, and assert that love, art, and anarchism could coexist--leaving audiences to consider what it means to live and fight for one’s convictions. Musical passages serve both narrative and ideological purposes, dramatizing philosophical debates and historical events. Audience interaction and repetition of chants reinforce Goldman's enduring message about anarchism, resistance, reproductive freedom and social responsibility.
Music and direction are by Leonard Lehrman, lyrics are by Leonard Lehrman and Karen Ruoff Kramer. Adviser to the production is Lissa Moira.
This opera includes music inspired by the American Musical, encompassing many different styles.
About Caryn Hartglass (Emma Goldman)
Caryn Hartglass has performed in opera and musical theater in the U.S. and
Europe. Recent roles include Madame Armfeldt in "A Little Night Music"
and Old Lady/Blair Daniels in "Sunday in the Park with George."
She has also appeared as Blonde in "The Abduction from the Seraglio,"
Queen of the Night in "The Magic Flute," Eliza Doolittle in "My
Fair Lady," Aldonza in "Man of La Mancha," Johanna in "Sweeney
Todd" and Cunegonde in "Candide." Between 2002 and 2019, she
appeared in seven performances of "Memories & Music of Leonard Bernstein"
with Leonard Lehrman and Helene Williams.
Hartglass was Grand Prize Winner of the International Eisteddfod Classical Voice Competition (Roodepoort, South Africa) and won the Concours International d’Oratorio et de Lied (Clermont-Ferrand, France). She has recorded a CD of German Lieder, French melodies and American art songs on the French label Ligia Digital.
PERFORMANCE SCHEDULE OF "E.G."
Jan. 9 (Fri), 10 (Sat), 15 (Thu), 18 (Sun), 23 (Fri) and 24 (Sat).
Thursdays thru Saturdays at 8:00 PM, Sundays at 3:00 PM.
Runs 90 min. incl. intermission.
About Leonard J. Lehrman (composer of both operas, librettist
of "Sima," co-librettist of "E.G.", director of "E.G.")
Leonard J. Lehrman made his NYC debut as composer and conductor with the Bel
Canto Opera in 1978, winning the first Off-Broadway Opera Award for "most
important event of the season," while also conducting as Assistant Chorus
Master backstage at the Met. In 2022, his completion of Marc Blitzstein's
"Sacco and Vanzetti"was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize. "Sima"
is the third of his twelve operas, written while he was studying opera conducting
at Indiana University. He earned his BA at Harvard and MFA from Cornell. He
also studied in Fontainebleau and Paris with Nadia Boulanger. In 1983, he
became the first Jew to conduct "Fiddler on the Roof" in Berlin,
where he founded the Juedischer Musiktheaterverein, produced "Sima"
in German, and co-wrote "E.G." with Karen Ruoff, his fourth of seven
musicals. At the invitation of Wolfgang Wagner, he and his wife Helene performed
the first Yiddish song recital in Bayreuth during the Wagner Festival in 1998
with a return engagement in 2000.
Lehrman describes the creative influence of his Jewish heritage and that of family members, mentors, and colleagues who have shaped his life and work in a recent memoir published by Dorrance Press, "Continuator: The Autobiography of a Socially-Conscious, Cosmopolitan Composer." (https://tinyurl.com/ContinuatorPreOrder)
Lehrman writes, "TNC has always valued bold, socially conscious art. Thank you, Crystal, for hosting my opera about the scars of the pogrom in 1905 Ukraine, and for enabling me to bring Emma Goldman, the great Russian-American Jewish anarchist and troublemaker, back to the Lower East Side. I hope the pairing of these two works will produce dialogue about nationalism, antisemitism, activism, and the ethics of resistance--topics that are again at the forefront of global public life."
About Lissa Moira (Director of "Sima"; Advisor
to the Production of "E.G.")
Lissa Moira is a playwright, screenwriter, director, artist and poet. She
is two-time Jerome Foundation grantee and an OOBR Award-winning actress. In
2025, she received an Acker Award, which is presented to NYC residents who
have made unique and under-recognized cultural contributions to their communities.
In her long and varied career, she has directed everything from Sophocles
to Shakespeare to Lanford Wilson. She has written and been produced in a wide
variety of genres as well.
In recent seasons, she has directed a succession of musicals at TNC. These include "Rappaccini’s Daughter" by Michael Cohen, an opera based on Nathaniel Hawthorne's short story; "Who Murdered Love?" a sold-out, critically-praised Dadaist musical comedy that she wrote with Richard West; "Bliss Street," an Indie Rock musical set in New York's decade of punk, glam and glitter rock; "The Boy Who Listened To Paintings,” based on a memoir by visual artist/poet Dean Kostos; "Woman on a Ledge," an autobiographical work by harpist Rita Costanzi, and "Café Resistance" by Roberto Monticello, a harrowing and heroic story of the WWII French Resistance highlighting the power of defiance in the face of oppression.
Ms. Moira writes, "I wish to thank Crystal Field for her unwavering support and her abiding faith in me as a writer and director, and for maintaining TNC as a haven for artistic freedom." More info: https://www.broadwayworld.com/people/Lissa-Moira/.
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CRITICS ARE INVITED to all performances of both shows.
Photos: https://photos.app.goo.gl/oNLaHeTk4UVjMLbq8