Yentl is a play by
Leah Napolin and
Isaac Bashevis Singer.
Based on Singer's
short story "Yentl the
Yeshiva Boy," it centers on a young girl who defies tradition by discussing and debating
Jewish law and
theology with her
rabbi father. When he dies, she cuts her hair, dresses as a man, and sets out to find a
yeshiva where she can continue to study
Talmud and live secretly as a male named Anshel. When her study partner Avigdor discovers the truth, Yentl's assertions that she is "neither one sex nor the other" and has "the soul of a man in the body of a woman" suggest the character is undergoing a gender identity crisis, especially when she opts to remain living as Anshel for the rest of her life.