Shahreh Ghesseh
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شهر قصه
بیژن مفید
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بیژن مفید
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Bijan Mofid (1936 - 1984)
Shahreh Ghesseh (1967)
Bijan Mofid (playwright/director) was one of very few avant-garde Iranian artists whose work has reached beyond the intelligentsia to a broad general audience.
He was Born in Tehran in 1935. After teaching for several years at the University of Tehran, he founded the Theater Workshop, where many of Iran's finest actors received their training. The workshop's major production was Bijan's own Shahreh Ghesseh (City Of Tales), a profound satire that weaves social comment through adaptations of traditional music and folk tales. It opened at the Shiraz Arts Festival in 1967 and toured for several years before it was adapted into an award winning film.
Bijan's work as playwright and director has had a continuous and controversial presence in Iranian theater, both on the popular stage and in experimental productions. Nine of his plays have been produced, published and had their songs recorded. He directed over fifty productions for radio and television in addition to his stage work; his rare appearances as an actor included the lead role in Arbie Ovanesian's acclaimed production of Suddenly... at the 1992 Nancey International Theatre Festival.
The wide popular audiences drawn by Mofid's work earned him an unprecedented degree of immunity from censorship. But his relationship with the Shah's regime consisted of a balancing act between continuous harassment from the secret police and the embarrassment of official recognition and reinterpretation of his work.
During and after the revolution, political groups across the entire spectrum attempted to claim his work as representative of their ideals, but he remained independent and withdrew his plays from production when their integrity was threatened. As the resistance to the Islamic regime grew, recordings of songs from his plays were played on the rooftops of Tehran, identifying Mofid with the opposition. As a result, he lived underground for several months and eventually escaped. After coming to the U.S. in 1982 until his untimely death in 1984, Bijan directed several productions in Los Angeles, San Francisco and New York as well as the first production of his own work in translation; Dragonfly. He took these opportunities to rewrite some of his work that had suffered most heavily from censorship in Iran.
-- Kaaveh
He was Born in Tehran in 1935. After teaching for several years at the University of Tehran, he founded the Theater Workshop, where many of Iran's finest actors received their training. The workshop's major production was Bijan's own Shahreh Ghesseh (City Of Tales), a profound satire that weaves social comment through adaptations of traditional music and folk tales. It opened at the Shiraz Arts Festival in 1967 and toured for several years before it was adapted into an award winning film.
Bijan's work as playwright and director has had a continuous and controversial presence in Iranian theater, both on the popular stage and in experimental productions. Nine of his plays have been produced, published and had their songs recorded. He directed over fifty productions for radio and television in addition to his stage work; his rare appearances as an actor included the lead role in Arbie Ovanesian's acclaimed production of Suddenly... at the 1992 Nancey International Theatre Festival.
The wide popular audiences drawn by Mofid's work earned him an unprecedented degree of immunity from censorship. But his relationship with the Shah's regime consisted of a balancing act between continuous harassment from the secret police and the embarrassment of official recognition and reinterpretation of his work.
During and after the revolution, political groups across the entire spectrum attempted to claim his work as representative of their ideals, but he remained independent and withdrew his plays from production when their integrity was threatened. As the resistance to the Islamic regime grew, recordings of songs from his plays were played on the rooftops of Tehran, identifying Mofid with the opposition. As a result, he lived underground for several months and eventually escaped. After coming to the U.S. in 1982 until his untimely death in 1984, Bijan directed several productions in Los Angeles, San Francisco and New York as well as the first production of his own work in translation; Dragonfly. He took these opportunities to rewrite some of his work that had suffered most heavily from censorship in Iran.
-- Kaaveh
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1 comment:
Hmm... I don't know who Kaaveh is, but I wrote that bio for Bijan myself back in 1984 when I produced "Dragonfly." --Zara Houshmand
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