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And action!
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It's huge.
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It's mind blowing.
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I have to keep reminding myself
that they're not real.
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It's like a historical movie, actually,
what we are doing here.
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This is 90 percent of my filming
experience, here?
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Is like this.
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Come over here to do a show
set in Williamsburg,
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to do it in Berlin, it kind of,
you know, plays with my head.
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A series in Yiddish, for me also,
personally, I think it's a great thing.
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Going to be dealing with a language
that no one understands.
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I mean, we're dealing with costumes
and rituals no one understands.
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But the essence of what's happening,
that's universally understood.
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This very beautiful and unique story
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that shows kind of like, both worlds.
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I don't think it's a story about
the existence of God, or something.
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It's more about...the right to
have your voice.
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And people like me never really
had that opportunity.
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We never saw ourselves reflected back
in the stories being told
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in popular culture.
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So we didn't really know
how to create our own stories.
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I think this is the first show, ever,
to accurately portray
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the Hasidic community.
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These are real people, and their
experiences are very universal,
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and very relatable.
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When the community watches it,
and there is somebody like me,
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watches it, and sees, this girl
lived exactly like she lives.
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And, she was able to muster
the courage to follow her dreams.
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Maybe this girl can, too.
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When I met Ann and Alexa,
and I became friends with them,
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I realized, if anybody is ever going to
really be able to grasp
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what the story is about,
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and to really execute it in a way
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that is going to have a
positive cultural impact,
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it's these women.
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After I met Deborah,
i read her book,
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and I thought it was amazing.
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I mean, I read it in one sitting.
I couldn't put it down.
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And then, she said:
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"Well, why don't you make my book
into a TV show?"
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Anna and I wanted to make a show
for a while,
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in which we could work through
a lot of the topics
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we discuss a lot, especially
about being Jewish in Germany.
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To me, the story is about
a young woman, who
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is searching for herself,
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and she is searching for
her community in the world.
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Esther is a 19 year old girl.
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She was born and raised in
Williamsburg, Brooklyn,
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in the community called Satmar.
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- Don't forget, Esty.
He speaks first.
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She grows up in a very
religious neighborhood.
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And, frees herself from an
unhappy arranged marriage,
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and flees to Berlin.
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Her story is unique, and romantic.
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We just felt it was so different,
that somebody would leave
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this very insular community
in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, New York,
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and find their way here,
out of choice.
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From a very young age,
she always felt very different.
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She's always been told
that she is very different,
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because of the fact that
she always has questions within her,
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and she has that 'chutzpah,'
you can say.
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The Satmar Jews are a
Hasidic community,
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originally from the town of
Sate Mar, in Hungary.
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They are mostly descendants
of Holocaust survivors, and
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started by Holocaust survivors,
in New York, after the war.
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This kind of makes them
a little bit different
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than a lot of other
Hasidic communities,
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because they really developed
what they were about, after the war.
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It is founded by people who are
struggling with the most immense trauma.
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For the first generation,
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I would say even for the first
two generations,
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this trauma was a very driving force
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behind the ideological structures
of this community.
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The Satmar community is also special,
in that Yiddish is their native language.
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I think they can be credited,
to some degree,
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with keeping Yiddish alive.
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- But why Berlin?
- Think about it.
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- What?
- Her crazy mama lives in Berlin!
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It was very important to us,
to make changes in the present-day story,
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from Deborah Feldman's real life.
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Because she is a young woman,
she is a public figure,
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she is a public intellectual,
and we wanted Esther's
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Berlin life to be very different
from real Deborah's Berlin life.
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So, in a sense, the flasbacks
are based on the book,
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but the present-day story
is entirely made up.
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You have to go beyond cliche,
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beyond our projection
into what the life might be.