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IRAKESE GEESTEN

MOKHALLAD RASEM

Mokhallad Rasem meets an almost impossible challenge with brio, staging a play, imbued with humour and beauty, about the disasters that have befallen the Iraqi people because of war.

Details

Featuring spoof TV interviews, a droll riff on a Disney film, preparations for dinner amidst tumult and turmoil, a body slung over a man’s shoulder like an old carpet and the music of Nirvana, this play is an urgent cry, howling that we have not heard the last of Iraqi youth. Mokhallad Rasem meets an almost impossible challenge with brio, staging a play, imbued with humour and beauty, about the disasters that have befallen the Iraqi people because of war.

In a dozen tableaux, Irakese Geesten exposes the daily life of a people ravaged by war, yet still keenly passionate for poetry. Assisted by Iraqi actors and Belgian-German actresses, the director skilfully juggles with the past and the present, fiction and reality, surrealism and pragmatism. This is theatre under tension that trammels clichés with welcome irony.

Replete with fervent bodies, vigorous movement, pandemonium and fighting, the piece swarms with furious energy, full of jubilant life despite the devastation.

Credits

PRODUCED BY MONTY
DIRECTED BY MOKHALLAD RASEM
CO-CREATED AND PERFORMED BY DURAID ABBAS + JULIA CLEVER + SARAH EISA + AHMED KHALED + MOKHALLAD RASEM

EXECUTIVE PRODUCERTONEELHUIS

WRITTEN BY DIANE JEAN
TRANSLATED BY NEIL KROETSCH

PREMIERED AT MONTY, ANDWERP, APRIL 22, 2010

 

MOKHALLAD RASEM (BAGDAD + ANVERS)
MONTY

Dramatic Entrance
At the ripe old age of 30, Mokhallad Rasem has created outstanding works that have been highly acclaimed. His clear aesthetics and his fragmented storytelling make for stunning pieces that convey a contagious dynamism. The son of a celebrated Iraqi actor, Rasem grew up with a love of theatre. He began his career at the National Theatre of Baghdad, where he presented works from the Western canon such as Marlowe’s Doctor Faustus and Strindberg’s A Dream Play, in addition to staging works with the theatre troupe Fadaa El Timrin El Moustemer. Their presentation of Sorry, Sir, I Didn’t Mean It won the best play award at the 2004 International Experimental Theatre Festival in Cairo.

Full biography