The Historical Dictionary of the American Theater

KESSLER, DAVID

(1860-1920)
TheYiddishactor-manager began his stage career in Russia, where he was born. He came to America around 1883 with several other Yiddish actors, who soon became rivals toBoris Thomashefsky. Although Kessler had little education and was physically well suited to the big hearty peasant roles, he aspired to good material. As an actor and as a manager, he showed a preference for plays byJacob Gordin, which offered a degree of realism, and he found his greatest success in the leading role of Gordin'sGod, Man, and Devil. Most of his work, however, was standard Yiddish fare with strong effects; for example, the title role in Leon Kobrin'sYankl Boyle(The Village Youth). In 1907, he ventured away from Yiddish theatre to Broadway inThe SpellbySamuel Shipman. TheNew York Timesreviewer (22 September 1907) referred to him as "a natural actor . . . of the old German school," using "emotional gymnastics and physical contortions." The Second Avenue Theatre was built especially for Kessler in 1909.