Maggie Gyllenhaal connected to the most ancient Jewish women by PBS' "Finding Your Roots"

April 22, 2012

Maggie Gyllenhaal arrives at the 82nd Academy Awards in Hollywood, California, nominated for supporting actress for "Crazy Heart," March 7, 2010.


Photograph by Sgt. Michael Connors, courtesy of the U.S. Army.

The lineage of actress Maggie Gyllenhaal, Oscar-nominated star of Crazy Heart, The Dark Knight, and Secretary, goes back on her father’s side to Henry I of England and Swedish nobility (Gyllenhaal literally means “golden hall” in Swedish).  But her mother’s line of descendants traces back over 3,500 years to ancient Judea and the most ancient female progenitors of Jewish history. 

In an episode of the PBS series Finding Your Roots shared with actor Robert Downey Jr., host Henry Louis Gates Jr. revealed to the actress the results of DNA testing.  Gyllenhaal’s DNA is similar to that of 3.5 million Jews descended from four Jewish women who lived in the ancient Near East.  As the geneticist who did the research says, with Gyllenhaal’s DNA, they “hit the jackpot” with a direct connection to the oldest genetic line in Jewish history.  Gates comments that Gyllenhaal is “as Jewish as Jewish can be.”

On her father’s side, she is also related to John Lothrop, an English preacher who rebelled against the Church of England and in 1634 journeyed to Cape Cod, pursuing religious freedom.  Later descendants from Sweden were resident in Pennsylvania and were Swedenborgian, a Christian mystic sect.

Following forebears who passed through Ellis Island and worked in the garment trade on the Lower East Side of New York, Gyllenhaal’s grandmother was a respected doctor and working mother in Brooklyn who developed an early test for birth defects in children.  Award nominations seem to be genetic too:  they include Emmys (for her father, director Stephen Gyllenhaal) and Oscars (for her mother, screenwriter Naomi Foner and brother, actor Jake Gyllenhaal).

For the wife of actor Peter Sarsgaard and mother of two, making waves and history seems to be part of her makeup, whether because of genetics or environment, nature or nurture.  As she has said, “I find myself more and more interested only in roles which move the world forward.”

Source: Finding Your Roots, PBS.org.

4 Comments

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

Watched the show years ago, it was fabulous... What a lineage.. And what a talented family 👏

Those four Jewish women are named Bilhah, Zilpah, Leah and Rachel named in the Bible. They were all married to Jacob who God renamed as Israel. Jacob is a direct descendant of Abraham his grandfather through Isaac who is Jacob's father and is also Abraham's son. All the twelve tribes of Israel came from Rachel, Leah, Zilpah, Bilhah and their husband Jacob. Those 4 women are the 4 ancient Jewish women where the 12 tribes of Israel began. Amazing that dna and genetics give proof of the Lord's word. Look at the genealogies in the Bible, the 12 tribes Israel began from those 4 women.

This is an exciting discovery!

I find it odd in the description that they don't reveal that Maggie also comes from a long line of European aristocracy going all the way back to King Henry of England. She's also a distant cousin to George Bush.

Donate

Help us elevate the voices of Jewish women.

donate now

Listen to Our Podcast

Get JWA in your inbox

Read the latest from JWA from your inbox.

sign up now

How to cite this page

Jewish Women's Archive. "Maggie Gyllenhaal connected to the most ancient Jewish women by PBS' "Finding Your Roots"." (Viewed on November 21, 2024) <https://jwa.org/thisweek/apr/22/2012/this-week-in-history-maggie-gyllenhaal-connected-to-most-ancient-jewish-women>.