The Early Years
This street overlooks Stuyvesant Square. Diagonally across the park was the house where Antonin Dvorak lived during his stay in New York. (The Dvorak house was demolished a few years ago to make way for an AIDS hospice.)
Bernard Herrmann described visiting this neighborhood library where he could find musical scores and literature.
Second Avenue between Houston and 14th Streets was the cultural center of the immigrant Jews. Many former Yiddish theatres still exist as performance spaces.
During the 1920s, the Herrmann family lived at 193 Second Avenue, located at 12th Street. Abraham Herrmann probably walked along the sidewalk pictured on the right of the photograph to his office at 236 East 14th Street (off Second Avenue).
In an interview for Max Wilk’s book They’re Playing Our Song, Bernard Herrmann recalled growing up along Tin Pan Alley and Second Avenue, and claimed that he played violin for some Yiddish theatr productionse. While that claim may be exaggerated, he did attest to his knowledge of Yiddish Theatre when composing The King of Schnorrers. It is likely that Herrmann attended shows at neighborhood theatres, including the Yiddish Art Theatre directly across the street from his home.
It was restored in the 1980s and converted into a multiplex movie theatre. Though the vast interior was divided to accomodate multiple screening rooms, the lobby is still a magnificent sight.