Sid Yiddish is a Chicago performance artist who is runningfor president as a write-in candidate. He describes himself as a “Lincoln Republican” though his politics are more in line with the Democrats, but you are welcome to write him in on whatever ballot you choose; he’s not picky. He is the only candidate promising to invade Denmark.
Why Denmark? “Because it’s
there and because I can,” he said. He has performed in Denmark but did his
first show with Danish musicians over Skype for the Chicago Calling
Festival in 2009. He travels the U.S. frequently. This Friday, Jan. 22
(2016) will find him in Kansas City, Missouri at the Poetry & Absinthe Open Mic at the Uptown Arts Bar.
Sid Yiddish usually dresses like a kind of mischievous
cantor, as if The Rocky Horror Picture show took place in a Catskills summer
camp or if Fiddler on the Roof was an avant-garde punk rock opera instead of a
Broadway musical. With a prayer shawl and Kittel – a traditional garment worn
by orthodox Jewish men and a face mask, he both pays homage to and satirizes
Jewish heritage with his appearance. When he appeared on America’s Got Talent, Howie Mandel called him a “Hasidic Lone
Ranger.”
A Sid Yiddish performance is always an eclectic ensemble of
songs, poems, comedy and compelling noise. Each performance will usually
involve some form of Tuvan throat singing, which sounds like it is painful to
do and can rattle the uninitiated. He often performs with a band, the Candy
Store Henchmen. With connections in various cities, his auxiliary of Candy
Store Henchman can be summoned to perform on short notice and very little rehearsal.
[Full disclosure: I have
known Sid Yiddish for several years and have performed in the New York City
version of his Candy Store Henchmen. I met him through MykelBoard, who had the wisdom to
write about Sid much sooner.]
His presidential campaign is his latest effort in reaching
out to the world. His platform includes heavy support of the arts. “I believe
schools should cut sports from schools and give all their money to the arts.”
He would also buy everyone a new pair of shoes and hand out bubble gum with
good comics in them, not the shabby comics that have become the standard today.
He has extended his reach through some small acting roles.
He appears briefly in a Ludacris video and recently hada bit part in the Showtime show Shameless,
which stars William H. Macy. There’s an online petition to make Sid a recurring character
on the series.
While he revels in his outsider status, he makes an effort
to make each show as interesting and participatory as possible, inviting
audience members to join his band and play instruments if they choose, even if
that instrumentation consists of banging on a table top or tapping a beer glass.
He’s devised a series of hand signals that instructs the
band on what to play. One gesture means to stop, another gesture means a
free-for-all, other gestures mean other things. If you play the wrong thing, he
doesn’t ask you to change, he just may be a bit more emphatic with his
gestures. No two Sid Yiddish shows will ever be the same and he likes it that
way.
Sid Yiddish describes himself as a late bloomer and suffers
from depression. His past is littered with sad memories of where clinical depression
can lead. He hopes his work can reach people and help encourage those who also
suffer from the disorder. To him, being a performance artist is a redeeming
experience that puts him on a good path and colors his worldview. “It feels
like I take LSD without taking LSD,” he notes.
His music and acting takes up a lot of his time and he is
interested in going to another audition for America’s
Got Talent. “I’m a renaissance man, a Jack and Jill of all trades. No one
can put me in a category; you can’t pin me down. But sometimes I’ve felt that
I’m spreading myself too thin.”
The world has given up a good bit of the civility and
thoughtfulness that was more commonplace when Sid Yiddish was growing up, and
he offers himself as a one-man protest against that. Instead of waving his fist
at the world, his hand gestures conducts a motley crew making avant-garde punk
rock symphony. He can take your rejection; he’s faced it all before and just
keeps coming back, serving as a reminder that the act of creation and
expression is sometimes all that matters and all you have left.
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