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Miriam Bernstein-Cohen

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Miriam Bernstein-Cohen
Born
Maria Yakovlevna Bernstein-Kogan

1895 (1895)
Kishinev, Russian Empire (now Moldova)
Died1991(1991-00-00) (aged 95–96)
Nationality Israel
Occupation(s)Actress, director, poet, translator
Notable workFounder of the first Hebrew-language periodical dedicated to theater, Te'atron ve-Omanut
Awards1975: Israel Prize for theatre

Miriam Bernstein-Cohen (Russian: Мария Яковлевна Бернштейн-Коган Hebrew: מרים ברנשטיין-כהן‎), 1895–1991, was an Israeli actress, director, poet and translator.

Miriam Bernstein-Cohen was born in Kishinev, Russian Empire. Her father was the doctor and community activist Jacob Bernstein-Kogan. She grew up in Kharkov. After training as a medical doctor she enrolled in drama school. She studied with Konstantin Stanislavski in Moscow in 1918 before returning to Moldova as an actress, where she worked under the name Maria Alexandrova.

After immigrating to Palestine, Bernstein-Cohen settled in Tel Aviv and joined the country's first professional theater company.[1] In 1925, she founded the first Hebrew-language periodical in Palestine dedicated to theater, Te'atron ve-Omanut.

Awards and recognition

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ Miriam Bernstein-Cohen in the Jewish Virtual Library
  2. ^ "Israel Prize Official Site - Recipients in 1975 (in Hebrew)".