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Shuli Rand

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Shuli Rand
Rand during a performance in Haifa, May 2011
Background information
Birth nameShalom Rand
Born (1962-02-08) 8 February 1962 (age 62)
Bnei Brak, Israel
Occupation(s)Singer, actor

Shalom "Shuli" Rand (also spelled Shuly; Hebrew: שולי רנד; born 8 February 1962) is an Israeli film actor, writer, and singer. He is a Breslover Hasid and is best known in the English-speaking world for his role as the protagonist in Ushpizin (2004), for which he wrote the screenplay.

Biography

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Shalom (Shuli) Rand was born to a Religious Zionist family in Bnei Brak. His father, Professor Yaakov Rand, a winner of the Israel Prize for his contribution to special education, is a chazzan.[1] He attended the Or Etzion yeshiva until age 18. After compulsory army service, Rand attended the Nissan Nativ Acting Studio in Tel Aviv and became an actor, abandoning Orthodox practice.

In 1996, he returned to observant Judaism.[2] He later joined the Breslov Hasidic movement and moved to Jerusalem. He is a student of Rabbi Shalom Arush.[3] Rand withdrew from acting to realize his religious aspirations, but after a six-year hiatus he returned to the theater, performing in one-man plays.[1]

Rand and his first wife had together seven children.[3] In 2004 he and his wife founded the Jewish Theatre of Jerusalem.

Rand wanted to divorce his first wife in 2016, but she refused to receive the get. After a year, Rand was granted a permission from 100 rabbis to remarry.[4] He then married TV presenter Tzufit Grant.[5]

Acting and film career

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Rand rose to stardom at age 26 after playing the lead role in Andrzej Wajda's play The Dybbuk at Habima theater. Rand was chosen Israel's Theater Actor of the Year several times.[3] In 2004 Rand wrote, directed, and starred in the film Ushpizin.[1] He cast his wife, Michal Batsheva Rand, also a baalat teshuva, as the protagonist's wife. While Michal Batsheva had no prior acting experience, Rand insisted on playing opposite her rather than another woman for halakhic reasons. In keeping with the halakhic standards of tzniut (modesty), the fictional husband and wife do not touch each other on screen.[6]

Rand has also acted in Hameuad, Eddie King (1992), Life According to Agfa (1992), and New Land (1994).[7] In 2018 he appeared in the dystopian drama miniseries, Autonomies.

Singing career

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Rand during a performance in Caesarea, October 2009

After Ushpizin, Rand embarked on a music career, performing mostly for secular audiences.[1] In 2008 he released his first album, Nekuda Tova (Hebrew: נקודה טובה, "Good Point") with 11 songs, which he composed himself based on the teachings of Rebbe Nachman of Breslov. Over 30,000 copies of the self-released CD were sold within 4 months, and it was awarded a gold album in Israel.[8]

Awards and recognition

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Rand won the Ophir Award given by the Israel Film Academy twice. He was named Best Supporting Actor in 1993 for Life According to Agfa, and Best Actor in 2004 for Ushpizin.[6]

Discography

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  • Good Point [he] (2008)
  • Shuli Rand Live (2010)
  • Back and Forth (2018)
  • Shuli Sings Benayoun (2022)

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Frankfurter, Rabbi Yitzchok. "Between Words and Silence: A conversation with Shuli Rand". Ami, 25 February 2015, pages 72–83.
  2. ^ Turan, Kenneth (19 October 2005). "MOVIE REVIEW; As if guided by an unseen hand; Belief works miracles in 'Ushpizin', an Israeli film that's bridging the gap between religious and secular Jews". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on 22 March 2016. Retrieved 7 July 2017.
  3. ^ a b c "From Lead Role to Torah Scroll". breslovworld.com. February 2008. [dead link]
  4. ^ "Shuli Rand's marriage of additional wife highlights inequality - women's orgs". jpost.com. 13 November 2021. Retrieved 6 October 2023.
  5. ^ "Ultra-Orthodox star Shuli Rand ties the knot with Tzufit Grant". 10 November 2021.
  6. ^ a b Price, Dov (Fall 2006). "A Conversation with Shuli and Michal Rand" (PDF). Jewish Action: 44–48.
  7. ^ "Shuli Rand". Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. 2012. Archived from the original on 3 November 2012.
  8. ^ אלבום זהב לשולי רנד [Gold Album for Shuli Rand]. Maariv (in Hebrew). 25 August 2008. Retrieved 8 July 2015.
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