Dina Doronne (also Doron), a theater, film, and television actress, was born in Afula in 1930. Her husband Ilan Eldad (also Ivan Lengyel, Ivan Lengiel), a theater and film director and producer, was born in Subotica, Yugoslavia in 1929. They married in 1964. The couple collected and preserved their archival materials, covering the period from 1945 to 2021. After completing her studies in Israel, Doronne went to New York City, and among other things, studied acting the Actors Studio under Lee Strasberg, and dance at Martha Graham School of Contemporary Dance. The archive includes materials collected throughout her career, with her start as a child actress the Habima National Theater, her stay in New York, during which time she acted in Broadway productions, including one of her most prominent roles in the play "The Diary of Anne Frank," Shakespearean theater, and television series, on through her participation in plays at all major Israeli theaters, following returning to Israel in 1958, including: "Irma La Douce," "A Doll's House," and "Death of A Salesman"; her participation in Israeli and international film productions such as "A Tale of Love and Darkness " and "You Don't Mess with the Zohan." In his childhood, Ilan Eldad survived the Holocaust with his mother in concentration and labor camps in the Czech Republic. After the war, he studied cinema in Belgrade. In 1950, he immigrated to Israel and began directing films as part of his military service in the Israel Air Force. The archive contains materials from theater and cinema productions directed by Eldad throughout his career, from the 1950s to the 2000s, including the documentary film "Three Hours in June" - produced in collaboration with the IDF and presenting the activities of the Israeli Air Force in the Six Day War - and the plays " The Dybbuk" and "Johnny Got His Gun." In the early 2000s, Eldad began directing shows in Hungary and the former Yugoslavia. This joint archive contains posters and show programs, plays, photographs, and videos documenting the couple's shared and individual activities in theater and cinema. In 2022, the Dina Doronne and Ilan Eldad archive was deposited with the Israel Goor Theater Archives and Museum at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.