The Arab Theatre Festival (7th Session) by Jaouad Radouani Arab Stages, Volume 1, Number 2 (Spring 2015) ©2015 by Martin E. Segal Theatre Center Publications
The Arab Theatre Festival is an annual event organized in a different Arab country each year by the Arab Theatre Institute.[1] This year’s session chose Morocco as the host nation.[2] The Festival took place in the capital Rabat between January 10 and 16, 2015, and was attended by theatre representatives from around the Arab world.[3] This seventh version of the Festival also corresponded with Morocco celebrating the passage of one hundred years since the establishment of a modern theatre tradition there. This gave the festival a particular focus and marked this year as one of the most notable in the history of the Arab Theatre Institute.
Ismail Abdellah, the secretary-general of the institute, during a press talk held a day before the opening of the festival, confirmed that all indications promised that the seventh session of the Arab Theatre Festival, the “Moroccanized” version, fully supported by the Moroccan Ministry of Culture, would be a great success as groundwork. He added that the institute had been looking forward to such an event since its launch in 2009, and predicted that the occasion would constitute “a new turn in the history of the Festival.” The Moroccan Minister of Culture, Mohamed Amine Sbihi, announced during the opening ceremony that the seventh celebration, which was being held under the patronage of His Majesty King Mohammed VI, expected the participation of about five hundred Arab attendants belonging to the field of theatre and performance arts, and that a hundred of them would be from Morocco. He added that the event’s effects would not be limited to the area of the capital (Rabat), but extended to reach other cities around the kingdom. All of the cultural centers around Morocco were activated during that period and hosted different cultural activities reflecting the atmosphere of the two ceremonies that were being coordinated: The Arab Theatre Festival and the Centenary of Moroccan Theatre.
The Seventh Arab Theatre Festival was marked by the organization of cultural activities of various types. One of the most important elements was the presentation of about seventy plays, of which seven dramas competed for the prize of Sheikh Sultan Bin Mohammed Al Qassimi, rewarding the best Arab theatrical show of the year 2014. The tradition of presenting such an award was established as an attempt to keep the Arab theatre active and encourage Arab dramaturgy to carry on updating itself, contemplating, and reflecting upon some of the most prevalent current issues. Moreover, the Festival held the largest scientific conference ever in the domain of theatre and performance studies organized in the Arab world. Six panels of various research topics were enriched by discussions led by some of the most prominent figures in Arab theatre and performance studies. The festival honored twenty-two Arab artists and organized workshops, training for the benefit of theater amateurs, animating workshops dedicated to children, and allotted, next to the Festival’s Book Fair, a large space to signatures (book launches) of new theatrical releases. This last activity, together with press conferences related to competing plays, was organized inside the Mohamed V Theatre.
In contrast to previous Festivals, this “most important Arab theatre event,”[4] as Khalid Amine named it in a dialogue with the press, seized the opportunity of being in Morocco and celebrated its seventh anniversary by inviting scholars representing the West and allowing a considerable space for the discussion of the concept of “interwoven performance cultures.” One panel among six,[5] was dedicated to the discussion of the theme: “Dialogue between North and South: Interweaving Cultures in Performance.” Participants in this Forum were Prof. Erika Fischer-Lichte,[6] Prof. Stephen Barber,[7] and Prof Khalid Amine[8] (Chair of the panel). They approached the idea of theatre from an interwoven performance cultures point of view. They sought to introduce the idea of “the interwoven” to Arab theatre and performance studies researchers and specialists. They, as scholars concerned with “interweaving” as a cultural process affecting the field of theatre and performance arts, defined, disclosed, and revealed the hidden mechanisms underlying the history, use, and view of this concept in the world of performance cultures.
Prof. Khalid Amine, through a guiding introduction to the theme of “interweaving” and some of its implied desires and dreams, tried to bridge East and West cultural spaces in the field of performance studies by giving a synoptic idea about what interwoven cultures in a performance arts project could stand for and could mean to the future. He provided his own reading of the hybrid and interwoven reality performance cultures are undergoing in a multicultural world where the history of cultures is fundamentally becoming more and more reflective of this processes. He initiated a heated discussion by making this statement:
It should be noted that the theme of the symposium is a continuation, not a repetition, of our discussions held in prior similar seminars, mainly that of “Theater and Cultural Identities,” which was organized by the Institute of Arab Theatre last year in Sharjah. We hope the Arab theatre gets fully engaged in this debate and that it will seek to strengthen the presence of the Arab theater inside the map of cosmic theater.
Later he provided a synoptic idea on the meaning, influence, and potential of such enterprises as the interwoven project from a post-colonial point of view. He explained that:
Erika Fischer-Lichte epitomizes the critique of intercultural performance elements that lurk in the work of various western theatrical enterprises that went East and South. “The starting point for intercultural staging,” Fischer-Lichte rightly argues, “is thus not primarily an interest in the foreign – the foreign theatre or the foreign culture from which it is taken – but rather a situation completely specific within its own culture or a completely specific problem having its origin within its own theatre.”
Thus, contributions from non-Western cultures would no longer be systematically overlooked, denying the age-old interweaving between Europe and its various Others. Erika Fischer-Lichte, the initiator of both the project and, we may say, the theory of “interweaving performance cultures,” continued the discussion by introducing the main view she presents in her book The Transformative Power of Performance: A New Aesthetics; but this time she was addressing a non-Western audience. Her argument targeted “interwoven” moments in Western theatrical history. Therefore, she gave a synopsis of past East-West theatrical interwoven encounters illustrating her own field of vision, and supported her claim by citing the following examples.
In the late 1970s and early 1980s a new term was coined in the West: “intercultural theatre.” This was used to describe productions that included elements from theatre traditions different from one’s own, such as Peter Brook’s Orghast, performed in the ruins of Persepolis in 1971; The Iks, the story of a dying African tribe, conceived in Africa (1975); The Conference of the Birds (1977), an adaption of a medieval play by the Persian mystic Attar; and the dramatization of the Indian epic Mahabharata, which triggered heated discussion in 1985. Ariane Mnouchkine’s Shakespeare cycle in Paris–Richard II (1981), Twelfth Night, and Henry IV (both 1981–1983)–as well as Robert Wilson’s Knee Plays (1984) were hailed as intercultural theatre, as were Tadashi Suzuki’s “antiquity project” The Trojan Women (1974), The Bacchae (1978), Clytemnestra (1983), and his Three Sisters (1985); similarly, Shakespeare and Brecht productions in the style of traditional Chinese opera, such as in Macbeth (1984 as Kunqu opera) and Much Ado About Nothing (1986 as Huangmeixi opera) or Brecht’s Good Woman of Szechwan (1987 as Sichuan opera), were labeled as “intercultural.”
The audience, thanks to such an excellently organized history of intercultural performances in modern Western theatre and performance arts, could recognize the undeniable line of interweaving performance that different cultures have followed, and accepted this as a phenomenon that must be investigated in Arab theatre and performance arts too. Yet, Fischer-Lichte also posed this questions: “What was so different about these productions that they called for a whole new concept–intercultural theatre?” and undertook to answer it by this observation:
The question is difficult to answer for various reasons. For one, if we go deep enough into history, we find that exchanges between the theatrical forms of neighboring and later also of distant cultures occurred wherever we have some evidence of theatre. Theatre’s interaction with elements from other cultures has been a perpetual instrument and vehicle for change and renewal.
Prof. Stephen Barber presented a paper with the formidable title “Interweaving Performance Cultures and the Generation of Cultural Knowledge, on the Axis of the North-South Dialogue: Bodies, Archives, Intermediality.” He discussed what he called: “The journeys of performance cultures from South to North,” and introduced his observations with the following words:
In this paper, I present a few tentative reflections on the question of how processes of interweaving may, in unexpected ways, generate knowledge of the histories and the contemporary dynamics of performance cultures, and also–in the context of the theme of North-South dialogue–to present one or two ideas about the rapport between North and South, or South and North, especially on the shifting topographical and spatial orientation of that vector, and the dialogues it unleashes, especially in the medium of performance.
One of the major affirmations he put forward in his discussion, which in fact explains the “interweaving” process as a struggle rather than an easy-going task, is this:
The aligning and orientation of performance cultures, as within such topographical parameters as a North-South axis, will invariably generate tensions and fractures, as well as alliances or empathies, and it’s often through such essential tensions that knowledge of performance’s defining preoccupations originates.
Such claims, and such assertions, prove the egalitarian foundation of “interweaving” as reality, vision, and project. Struggle is a symptom of equality among the coming together of performance cultures. For the Arab point of view, as a postcolonial culture, geography, and logos, the equation makes sense as lines of different cultures–in the project of interweaving–struggle over a status among other lines and do not passively submit. It also symbolizes that the process of weaving the thread of performance cultures together is a democratic performance/operation in which no culture, as a line, can stand without the support and sustenance of other neighboring cultures/lines.
The Arab Theatre Festival is an attempt to spread the culture of theatre and performance studies/arts in the Arab world. Some of its main objectives are also the promotion of Arab cultures, arts, aesthetics, and research in the domain of theatre and performance arts. It is an outstanding project combating the decline of theatrical cultures within the Arab world. It, on the reverse, tries to foster interest in this domain by offering ample opportunities to different social actors to participate in conferences, workshops, training sessions, book launches, writing competitions, watching recent plays, getting introduced to recently published books and translations in the field of theatre, and attending press conferences and many other significant activities.
Jaouad Radouani (Ph.D.) is a Moroccan researcher specializing in theatre and performance studies. He is also an active member of the International Center for Performance (ICPS) in Tangier organizing the yearly-held Performing Tangier Conference. He has participated in national and international conferences, study days, and workshops inside and outside Morocco (Europe, the Maghreb, & the Middle East) and published articles addressing questions related to topics including Arab theatre, the emergence/reception of new theatrical forms in the Arab world, site-specificity, and Moroccan ancient forms of performance arts.
[1 The Arab Theatre Institute website is found here: http://www.atitheatre.ae
[2] Previous sessions of the festival took place in Cairo, Tunis, Beirut, Amman, Doha, and Sharjah.
[3] Exceptionally, this year, two non-Arab theatre researchers attended the festival as official participants and gave talks in the scientific conference.
[4] See Al-Monâataf Newspaper (جريدة المنعطف), section: المنعطف الفني. Issue № 4964, (16, 17, 18 January, 2015). The digital version of the newspaper could be reached online here : www.almounaataf.ma
[5] The six panels are: (1) The Centenary of Moroccan Theatre. (2) Interweaving Performance Cultures: The North-South Dialogue. (3) Moroccan Theatrical Manifestos and the Future. (4) Theatre and Interaction of Performances. (5) Documentation of Moroccan Theatre: Whose Responsibility? (6) Arab Diaspora Theatre: Arab Visions or a Real Arab Theatre ?
[6] Dr. Erika Ficher-Lichte, Professor of theatre studies, Freie Universitaet Berlin, Germany, head of DFG Collaborative Research Centre “Performing Cultures,” and director of BMBF International Research Centre “Interweaving Cultures in Performance.” She has published widely in the fields of aesthetics, theory of literature, art, and theatre, in particular on semiotics and performativity, theatre history, and contemporary theatre. Among her numerous publications are The Transformative Power of Performance: a New Aesthetics.
[7] Stephen Barber is a fellow of the International Research Centre in Interweaving Performance Cultures at the Free University Berlin and a professor of visual culture in the faculty of art, design and architecture at Kingston University, London. He currently holds a major research fellowship with the Henkel Foundation. His most recent book is Performance Projections (Chicago UP/Reaktion), 2014.
[8] Khalid Amine, professor at Abdelmalek Saadi University, in Tetouan, Morocco, head of the International Centre for Performance Studies (ICPS) organizing Performing Tangier Conference, and a research fellow associated with the Centre of Interweaving Cultures in Performance, in Berlin, Germany.
Arab Stages
Volume 1, Number 2 (Spring 2015)
©2015 by Martin E. Segal Theatre Center Publications
Founders: Marvin Carlson and Frank Hentschker
Editor-in-Chief: Marvin Carlson
Editorial and Advisory Board: Fawzia Afzal-Khan, Dina Amin, Khalid Amine, Hazem Azmy, Dalia Basiouny, Katherine Donovan, Masud Hamdan, Sameh Hanna, Rolf C. Hemke, Katherine Hennessey, Areeg Ibrahim, Jamil Khoury, Dominika Laster, Margaret Litvin, Rebekah Maggor, Safi Mahfouz, Robert Myers, Michael Malek Naijar, Hala Nassar, George Potter, Juan Recondo, Nada Saab, Asaad Al-Saleh, Torange Yeghiazarian, Edward Ziter.
Managing Editor: Joy Arab
Table of Content
Essays
- Science Fiction in the Arab World: Tawfiq al-Hakim’s Voyage to Tomorrow (Rihlatun ilal-ghad) by Rani Bhargav
- Tawfik al-Hakim and the Social Responsibility of the Artist by Majeed Mohammed Midhin
- Junūn: Poetics in the Discourse of Protest and Love by Rafika Zahrouni
- Ritual and Myth in Dalia Basiouny’s Magic of Borolos by Amal Aly Mazhar
- Staging the Self: Autobiography in the Theatre of Sa`dallah Wannous by Ali Souleman
- The Arab Theatre Festival by Jaouad Radouan
- France’s Théâtre d’al-Assifa: An Arab-based Alternative Theatre Model by Magdi Youssef
- Rania Khalil’s Flag Piece by Dalia Basiouny and Marvin Carlson
- Silk Road Solos: A Three-Thread Performative Stitch by Jamil Khoury
Short Plays
- Excerpts from Jihad Against Violence: Oh ISIS Up Yours! by Fawzia Afzal-Khan
- Alternative Dramaturgy for Jihad Against Violence: Oh ISIS Up Yours! By Fawzia Afzal-Khan, Nesrin Alrefaai, Katherine Mezur
- ReOrient Theatre Festival 2015:
Bitterenders by Hannah Khalil
Lost Kingdom by Hassan Abdulrazzak
Picking Up The Scent by Yussef El Guindi
The House by Tala Manassah & Mona Mansour
Reviews
- Edward Ziter’s Political Performance in Syria – A Book Review by Safi Mahmoud Mahfouz
- The Gap Between Generations: The Revolt of the Young: Essays by Tawif al-Hakim– A Book Review by Michael Malek Najjar
Announcements
- Malumat: Resources for Research, Writing/Publishing, Teaching, & Performing Arts compiled by Kate C. Wilson
www.arabstages.org
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Martin E. Segal Theatre Center
Frank Hentschker, Executive Director
Marvin Carlson, Director of Publications
Rebecca Sheahan, Managing Director