JN Life Magazine - Winter 2019

Page 30

The Show

GOES ON With Shtisel season three confirmed, Brigit Grant asks producer Dikla Barkai what viewers can expect Location: Ramat Hahayal, Tel Aviv Interior : Office at Abot Barkai Productions. On the wall is a painting of a Charedi boy holding a goldfish in a plastic bag. At a desk sits Shtisel producer, Dikla Barkai Me: Can we play a game of ‘Hot and Cold’? Dikla: Excuse me? Me: It’s a kids’game. If I correctly guess a plot line in Shtisel season three, you say ‘hot’ Dikla: You can ask me anything. Me: Really? But I don’t want to ruin it for thousands of fans. They’re everywhere? Dikla: Yes, I’m amazed how many have watched it. I’ve heard from people in China. And Brazil. Me: So you really are doing it ? What about the cast labour dispute? Dikla: We solved that and we are good. We will shoot in the spring. Me: So we’ll see Shitsel three at the end of the year? Dikla: (laughing) Yes, we have started writing and it is really fun. More than fun. I feel very lucky. I have a meeting with the writers Ori (Elon) and Natan (Indursky) after this. Cut to:

The Conductor

When the producer of your favourite TV series announces that the next people in the room will be its creators, the urge to hide in a closet and eavesdrop is overwhelming. Torn between wanting to know and not, any reveals about the next chapter in the lives of the Shtisel family would be spoilers. It’s funny that Dikla, who has won a slew of Israeli awards for producing Srugim (religious singletons search for mates) and Shtisel (Charedi artist seeks shidduch) thinks of herself as lucky, because the audience feels that finding her shows. Srugim still ranks on Amazon Prime and the one glibly described as a “black-hat soap opera” is the cultural gift that keeps on giving. Thanks to Dikla. Raised in Petach Tikva, Dikla, 48, convinced an

executive at the Israeli television company Yes that Elon and Indursky’s script about Mea Shearim’s strictly-Orthodox community was brilliant, which was tricky in a country fraught with religious versus secular tension. But they bought it. With an Iraqi mother and Moroccan father, and grandparents who were new émigrés, Dikla was raised secular and knew little of the Charedi world. That world is currently the focus of her working life, so has it changed her? “I’ve always felt spiritual and my faith lives inside me, but am I closer to it?” she ponders. “I’m not sure. I’ve shed all my prejudices and feel a close connection to the society I never understood. I also think Shtisel has made us all a bit more tolerant. I just wish I could do more work that brings people closer together. Sometimes it’s hard to be a producer.” But she has managed it since 2002, producing numerous series, a film – A Summer Story – and documentaries while developing a sixth sense for scripts that touch souls. Take the Shtisel moment when Shulem (Dov Glickman) buries his face in the scent of his dead wife’s clothes or when his indignant brother Nuchem (Sasson Gabai) conducts an imaginary orchestra from the balcony as Mahler’s fifth plays in his head. To create such emotion with a single act brought Dikla to a story that has won hearts and minds internationally. “The new tech world is interesting to us, but eventually we look for a series about ourselves,” she surmises. In Elon’s The Conductor, Dikla’s most recent series, Lior Ashkenazi plays an acclaimed musician who leaves New York to return to Petach Tikva, where he resorts to conducting the local amateur choir to reconnect with his father. “It got the most emotional reaction in Israel – more than Shtisel,” Dikla volunteers. “People felt it was about them, particularly as it features songs from their past.” Once again, the themes of life, death and longing has made The Conductor ripe for

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