Neva Small is an American theatrical, film, and television actress and singer. She made her singing debut at the age of 10 at the New York City Opera, and her Broadway debut the following year. She has numerous acting credits on and Off-Broadway. She is best known for her portrayal of Chava, the third of Tevye's five daughters who marries a gentile, in the 1971 film Fiddler on the Roof.
Small made her Broadway debut in the 1964 musicalSomething More! Other early Broadway stage credits include The Impossible Years, Henry, Sweet Henry, Frank Merriwell, and Something's Afoot. Her early Off-Broadway performances include Ballad for a Firing Squad and Show Me Where the Good Times Are. She turned down a part in Godspell to play the title character in F. Jasmine Addams, the first musical staged at Circle in the Square Theatre, in 1971. Based on the novelThe Member of the Wedding by Carson McCullers, the one-act play was cancelled after six performances. She also appeared in Leonard Bernstein's Mass, Yentl the Yeshiva Boy, Styne After Styne, and a revised edition of Blues in the Night that toured the East Coast in the mid-1980s. In 1985–1986 she played in 277 performances of The Golden Land, a Jewish cultural revue, at the Second Avenue Theatre. In 1990, she appeared in Hannah...1939 at the Vineyard Theatre.
''Fiddler on the Roof''
Small made her film debut as Chava, the third of Tevye's five daughters, in the 1971 film adaptation of the long-running Broadway musicalFiddler on the Roof. Her character leaves the Jewish faith to marry a gentile. While Small had wanted to audition for the original Broadway show, she was told by the play's producers that she "wasn't Jewish enough". She screen-tested for the characters of both Hodel and Chava, and won the latter role. Since she was under 18, she required a guardian during the filming; her older sister Gail assumed this role.
Later work
Small has continued to act and sing in musical productions. In 2007 she starred in the one-woman showNeva Small: Not Quite an Ingenue, a theatrical revue based on her musical career, at The Actors' Temple. Her television credits include Law & Order, , and The Hijacking of the Achille Lauro. Small provides "edu-entertainment" for children at Jewish community centers, discussing the background of Sholem Aleichem's stories, Marc Chagall's paintings, and the Russian Jewish experience that inspired the Fiddler on the Roof story and film. She has also performed as a puppeteer.
Musical recordings
In 1966, at the age of 14, Small recorded four singles for the MGM Records label. In 2004, Small recorded her only solo album, My Place in the World. This compilation of melodies that she sang during her stage and film career is noted for including "many generally obscure show tunes".
Personal life
She and her husband Dr. Frederic Fenig, a dermatologist, have two daughters. They reside in New York City.