Career
Born 1895 in Chicago to actors Joseph and Bessie Jacobson. He and Irving also owned some of the key venues for Yiddish theater in New York City. His first adult role was at the Architecture Street Theater in Philadelphia (1917) as the comic in Panie Romani.
In 1918 he played in the Peoples Theater and the following year was buff-comic (the company buffoon) at the Second Avenue Theater in the Yiddish Theater District.
In 1921 he played at Boris Thomashevsky"s National Theater, in 1927 at the Public Theater, then in Boston and Chicago. A coupletist, Jacobson composed both music and lyrics to many of the comic songs he sang and played piano to accompany himself.
In 1925 and 1929 Nahum Stutchkoff"s operetta Two Brides aka A Small Town Wedding featured music by Hymie Jacobson. In the 1940s he organized his own orchestra in which Paul Pinkus and the Ellstein brothers played.
They accompanied famous singers like Jennie Goldstein.
Two of his other songs were Mit Fertsik Yor Tsurik (Forty Years Ago), and Palestina Undzer Heym. He died in 1952 in Miami, Florida.