Dzigan and Schumacher attempted to
leave the Soviet Union with the Polish general
Władysław Anders, but were arrested and spent four years in gulags. First in
Tashkent and then in Oktyabrsky. They were permitted to perform, for Jews and the
NKVD. They were released in 1946, rearrested in
Lwów, and finally escaped to Warsaw in 1947. They
emigrated to Israel in 1950 to rebuild their careers and faced
anti-Yiddish sentiment, but managed to attract an audience and toured the world. They replaced Polish characters with Israeli ones. They managed their own theater in
Buenos Aires from 1951 to 1952, before finally establishing their own in Tel Aviv in 1958. They broke up two years later. Schumacher died on May 21, 1961, and Dzigan went on performing solo until he died in
Tel Aviv on April 14, 1980. ==Legacy==