Two Poems by Michael Waters
Poet Michael Water’s work is “novelistic in depth and reach, elegiac in its embrace of the living and the dead, raw in its fraught vulnerability.”
Poet Michael Water’s work is “novelistic in depth and reach, elegiac in its embrace of the living and the dead, raw in its fraught vulnerability.”
In which the editors of The Markaz Review and playwright Hassan Abdulrazzak present the theatre issue.
A stage director declines producing a play about a child tragically murdered during a genocide, fearing she may appear biased.
In his play, Youssef El Guindi debates whether art is merely a distraction or if it can truly change the world.
Editors at The Markaz Review recommend twelve titles published over a 20-year period presenting a broad range of Middle Eastern plays.
Al Jadid editor Elie Chalala finds that Lebanese intellectuals’ defense of expat director Wadji Mouawad contrasts with state chokehold on freedom of expression.
An original short play by playwright and theatre maker Mona Mansour: “a short, dark confession in a time of catastrophe.”
A play about the French Revolution highlights the experiences of Syrian actors and theatre makers as artists in exile.
Lameece Issaq presents a short play borrowing a popular fantasy world.
Lord Byron, a theatrical poet, created the concept of celebrity and, with his poetry, brought the Ottoman world to European audiences.
Omar Naim set out to create a film about the Lebanese theatre scene where stage honesty clashes with street deceit.
Georgina Van Welie, co-founder of Sabab theatre, shares her perspective on the “Arab” Shakespeare Trilogy for the first time