âTheater Tourâ initiative celebrates local culture across șÚÁÏÉçÇű
âTheater Tourâ initiative celebrates local culture across șÚÁÏÉçÇű/node/2595798/art-culture
âTheater Tourâ initiative celebrates local culture across șÚÁÏÉçÇű
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âBahrâ was written by Abdulrahman Al-Marikhi and directed by Sultan Al-Nawa. (Supplied)
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âBahrâ was written by Abdulrahman Al-Marikhi and directed by Sultan Al-Nawa. (Supplied)
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Updated 03 April 2025
Arab News
âTheater Tourâ initiative celebrates local culture across șÚÁÏÉçÇű
Award-winning play âBahrâ debuts in Baha, with performances in Jubail, Dammam, Al-Ahsa to follow
New project boosts local theater, community engagement and cultural awareness nationwide
Updated 03 April 2025
Arab News
RIYADH: șÚÁÏÉçÇűâs Theater and Performing Arts Commission launched the âTheater Tourâ initiative on Thursday to bring exceptional theatrical performances to cities, governorates and villages across the Kingdom.
The project aims to promote the cultural and performing arts scene while encouraging community engagement, the Saudi Press Agency reported.
The first phase begins with the play âBahrâ (Sea), running from April 3 to May 3, the SPA added.
The production will debut in Baha from April 3-5 at the Prince Sultan bin Abdulaziz Theater in the Cultural Center, before moving to Jubail from April 17-19 at the Royal Commissionâs Conference Hall in Al-Fanateer.
It will then continue in Dammam from April 24-26 at the Imam Abdulrahman bin Faisal University Theater, and conclude in Al-Ahsa from May 1-3 at the Society for Culture and Artsâ Theater.
The project is part of the commissionâs broader efforts to raise awareness of the theater and performing arts sector, while ensuring that cultural services are accessible in underserved areas and to marginalized communities, according to the SPA.
It also aims to support local theater groups, boost theatrical production and strengthen the cultural sectorâs contribution to the national gross domestic product.
Additionally, the initiative fosters investment opportunities and serves as a platform for discovering and nurturing emerging talent, the SPA reported.
The play âBahr,â written by Abdulrahman Al-Marikhi and directed by Sultan Al-Nawa, has received critical acclaim, winning several prestigious awards, including for best actor, best script, and best overall production at the inaugural Riyadh Theater Festival, as well as best musical effects and best director at the 19th Gulf Theater Festival.
DUBAI: Leading art organization Frieze announced this week its expansion into the Gulf region with the launch of Frieze Abu Dhabi, scheduled to debut in November 2026.
Under a new partnership between the Abu Dhabi Department of Culture and Tourism and Frieze, Abu Dhabiâs flagship art fair will be rebranded as Frieze Abu Dhabi.
The change marks a new phase for Abu Dhabi Art, which has been held annually since 2007 and established itself as a key fixture on the regionâs art calendar.
The new fair will represent Friezeâs first venture in the Middle East and its eighth international edition. The organization currently stages two editions in London, along with annual fairs in New York, Los Angeles and Seoul, as well as The Armory Show in New York and Expo Chicago.
DUBAI: The race for the next âTed Lassoâ continues with âChad Powers,â which seems like it was put together by a bunch of Disney execs based on focus-group results. Sports? Check (American football). Humor? Check. Recognizable storyline that plays well across demographics? Check. Recognizable star who plays well across demographics? Double-check (Glen Powell plays two roles.)
Fortunately, âChad Powersâ is not as horrific as that scenario sounds. And thatâs largely due to the undeniable charisma of its star and co-creator. Powell brings his A-game to a pretty flimsy and derivative plot, and the result is a surprisingly layered take on an old idea.
Powell is Russ Holliday, star quarterback at a major US college whose talent is matched by his narcissism. He manages to ruin his chances of a pro career by melting down in spectacular fashion at a televised championship game, punching a fan into a wheelchair-bound kid with cancer.
Time passes and Holliday is working for his dad â a prosthetics specialist for Hollywood movies with whom he has a shaky relationship at best. Russ is asked to deliver some of said prosthetics to a movie studio. On his drive there, he sees (a) a report that the floundering South Georgia Catfish are holding an open call for a new quarterback and (b) a poster for âMrs. Doubtfireâ (in which Robin Williamsâ character disguises himself as an old Scottish woman to maintain contact with his kids following the breakdown of his marriage). You see where this is going?
You do.
Holliday heads to South Georgia, where he dons a wig and prosthetics and becomes Chad Powers, a bumpkin who has rarely left the house at which he was home-schooled (a ruse dreamed up with the help of the teamâs mascot, Danny â the only person who knows Chad is really Russ). Cue various set-pieces in which Chad must avoid losing his prosthetics or wig.
And Russ needs not only to maintain his disguise, but to nurture a character entirely unlike his own â i.e. humble, likeable, and a team player. Powell convinces both as the preening braggard Russ and the shy, mumbling Chad.
Along the way, of course, lessons are learned and opportunities open up, including a possible romance with the head coachâs daughter, Ricky (Perry Mattfeld). Which sounds cheesy, but the show manages â sometimes â to undercut its often-easy choices with an uneasy tension that makes âChad Powersâ more than the sum of its unimaginative parts.
Review: âHades 2â is the best roguelike you will ever play
Updated 11 October 2025
Shyama Krishna Kumar
DUBAI: âHades 2â is a bold and dazzling sequel that leans into ambition at every turn. Where the 2020 original laid the foundation, this new chapter deepens the mythos, sharpens the combat and turns the visual dial up to 11.
The sequel follows the original hero Zagreusâ sister, Melinoe, daughter of Hades and Persephone who is born after the events of âHades.â She returns to a shattered Underworld after Chronos usurps power and imprisons key figures.
From the first few runs, the story weaves tension and mystery: Who is the real threat of time? How do the fates and titans dodge their own destinies? The narrative is layered, with revelations gradually unlocked between runs, and many dialogue moments that feel earned.
Visually, âHades 2â is a triumph, even if early runs may feel a little too familiar to the original. Every character is richly drawn; the environments shift from the, at times, claustrophobic corridors of the Underworld to the majestic heights of Olympus (and beyond) with grace. The color palette moves beyond reds and blacks, embracing verdant hues, turquoise veils and shimmering light. Even in fast-paced combat, the animations remain crisp and fluid.
Mechanically, âHades 2â innovates significantly while retaining its signature intensity. Melinoe wields physical weapons but also commands Magick, with a new âMagick Barâ that depletes and recovers based on your actions. Boons now carry elemental affinities and infusions; Arcana cards add constant passive effects you choose pre-run; Hexes summon powerful spells that evolve mid-run; and the sprint mechanic encourages fluid repositioning rather than repetitive dashing.
While the added complexity is demanding and can be frustrating at times, it is definitely worth it.
In short, âHades 2â offers a richer and more expansive mythic journey, stunning visuals, and a combat system that feels both familiar and fresh; standing as a worthy â and, often, superior â successor.
Saudi American author Eman Quotah discusses her new novel, âThe Night Is Not For YouâÂ
âI wanted to bring together concerns that are universal,â says Eman Quotah
Updated 10 October 2025
Sumaiyya Naseem
JEDDAH: Saudi-American author Eman Quotah blurs the line between the real and the monstrous in her new novel âThe Night Is Not For You,â a feminist horror tale about a string of murders that send shockwaves through a community.âŻ
Quotahâs debut novel, âBride of the Sea,â won the Arab American Book Award in 2022 and established her as a distinctive voice in Arab-American literature.
The author was born and raised in Jeddah, but she draws deeply from a life lived between continents, languages, and traditions. She currently lives in the US, near Washington D.C., with her family.
The landscape of Al-Baha was a source of inspiration for Quotah's new book. (Photo credit: Prof Mortel)
âșÚÁÏÉçÇű, during the second half of my childhood, was so influential,â Quotah tells Arab News. Indeed, the landscapes of șÚÁÏÉçÇű were a significant inspiration for her new novel, as are the fears, rumors, and suspicions that circulate when violence strikes too close to home.
âBride of the Sea,â set in the Kingdom and the US, was about secrets within a family. âThe Night is Not For Youâ expands the frame to an entire community, asking how towns tell stories about themselves and what gets whispered when violence erupts.
âThis book seems really different, but, for me, the distance isnât so far,â she says. âItâs still about family, community, history, and the stories we tell about ourselves and the people around us.â
Eman Quotah receives the Arab American Book Award in 2022. (Photo credit: Andrew Chen)
Quotah resisted rooting the novel too firmly in one geography. Instead, she created a fictional world inspired partly by Al-Baha, Abha and Jeddah, but stitched together with details from other places.âŻ
âI wanted it to feel real, but also not so specific that it could only be one place,â she says. âWe used to take vacations in Baha, and I was also thinking about the neighborhoods and architecture in Jeddah. (Itâs) a fictional world. I could draw my own boundaries. Itâs not strictly Saudi society â it could be, but it could also not be. I wanted to bring together these concerns that are universal.â
The antagonist of the novel â based loosely on a female djinn from Khaleeji folklore â becomes the focus of communal fear, a mirror for human violence and paranoia.âŻ
The cover of Quotah's latest novel, a feminist horror story. (Supplied)
âEvery culture has boogey men and women. Every culture has paranoia,â Quotah says. âI wanted readers not to say, âThatâs how they act over there,â but to recognize something universal: Human fears, human struggles around acts of violence.â
Though âThe Night Is Not For Youâ is steeped in gore and horror, Quotah insists the violence serves as more than a shock inducer.
âI wanted it to have the quality of campfire stories, but also to move the plot forward, to make us feel the grief of people whose loved ones were violently murdered, not just see the violence and move on,â she says. âI wanted to show the conversations that happen around it, how communities make sense of it.â
She was able to draw on her own experiences to ground the novel in reality.
âI actually know two people who were murdered,â she says. âItâs something I donât often bring up in conversation. Having had that experience myself helped me write about violence. Because it happens to real people, and families have to keep living with it. I dedicated the book to those two people.â
For Quotah, horror is not simply escapism; it âhelps us make sense of the really violent stuff of real fears.â
Quotah says she was six when she decided she wanted to be a writer. Along the way, her mother kept her shelf filled with books brought from the US, and her father pushed her to study abroad even when few Saudi women were doing so. It was something he had done, making him a part of history that often goes unacknowledged.âŻ
âWhen I won the Arab American Book Award, I went to Dearborn, to the Arab American National Museum (to receive the award),â she recalls. âAnd there was this one small display about students from the Gulf who came to the US to study, and I thought, âThere we are! A small part of Arab-American history.â To see how my fatherâs story was part of that larger history was really meaningful.â
Having her novels published is not only a personal milestone but, Quotah believes, part of a larger literary shift in the US. âThereâs been a history of struggle for Arab-American writers to get published,â she says. âBut over the past decade, weâve really seen wonderful growth.â
She recommends a few books from her two stints as a judge for the Arab American Book Award: âThe Stardust Thiefâ by Chelsea Abdullah; âIf An Egyptian Cannot Speak Englishâ by Noor Naga; Deena Mohamedâs graphic novel âShubeik Lubeikâ; and âDearbornâ by Ghassan Zeineddine. âThereâs still more to accomplish,â she adds, âbut weâre definitely having a moment.â
And she is doing her share to ensure that moment continues. Aside from her own writing, she is also a board member of the Radius of Arab American Writers.
âNo one writer can represent a culture,â she says. âWe need more â more Saudi voices, more Arab-American voices, more translations, more cultural exchange. I want my books to be in conversation with other works by Saudi, or Arabian Peninsula, writers.ââŻ
Her advice to aspiring writers in șÚÁÏÉçÇű reflects that ethos: âRead a lot, write a lot, and find community. If you donât see it, create it. Publish your friends, publish the people you admire. Thereâs someone waiting for what youâre writing.â
âNiyĆ« YĆ«rkâ exhibition explores MENA influence on the Big AppleÂ
Inside the first show dedicated to NYCâs Public Libraryâs Middle Eastern collections  Â
Updated 09 October 2025
Jasmine Bager
RIYADH: Outside The New York Public Libraryâs Stephen A. Schwarzman Building, the unmistakable scent of a halal food cart mingles with the sounds of various Arabic dialects, while two marble lions stand guard over Fifth Avenue. Inside, entire worlds are waiting to be discovered â including the often-overlooked stories of New Yorkâs Middle Eastern and North African communities.
âNiyĆ« YĆ«rk: Middle Eastern and North African Lives in the City,â the first exhibition dedicated to the Libraryâs Middle Eastern collections, opened Oct. 4. It will remain on view in the Ispahani-Bartos Gallery until March 8.
Berenice Abbottâs photograph from the 1930s of Syrian-owned The Lebanon Restaurant and an Arabic record store next door on Washington Street in New York. (Courtesy of The New York Public Library)
Curated by Hiba Abid, the exhibition contains around 60 objects â photos, books, periodicals and audio â dating from the 1850s to 2024. It centers specifically on the libraryâs own holdings, rather than attempting to tell a comprehensive history of MENA life in New York, Abid tells Arab News.
Drawing from over a century of rare materials the exhibition uses tangible objects to express the intangible: memory, identity and immigrant culture.âŻ
âItâs not a love letter. Itâs a realistic letter,â Abid says, adding that these communities have long navigated complex questions of belonging, language, and preservation.âŻ
Curator Hiba Abid. (Supplied)
âThe communities, from the very beginning, were wondering, âWhere should our kids go to school? If they go to the public New York schools, they would probably lose their language, but we want them to still know Arabic and be aware of our traditions and values,ââ she said.
The exhibition is divided into four chronological sections, designed to help guide visitors of all ages, from young children to seasoned scholars.
The first section, âRoads to New York,â focuses on the earliest waves of immigration. One of the first featured figures is Hatchik Oscanyan â later known as Christopher Oscanyan â an Armenian man born in what is now TĂŒrkiye. He came to New York in the mid-19th century and sought to educate Americans about the complexity of the Ottoman Empire. He wrote plays and newspaper articles, as well as âThe Sultan and His People,â a book that offers insight into the regionâs diverse ethnic and religious makeup.
The second section, âA Life in the City,â explores how immigrant communities began to form and thrive in New York, including in what was once known as Little Syria on Manhattanâs Lower West Side â an area that still exists today. They were entrepreneurs who opened restaurants, shops, and began publishing Arabic newspapers.
Richard Kasbaumâs photograph of Moroccan impresario Hassan Ben Ali, who toured the States with a troupe of acrobats, dancers, musicians and actors. (Courtesy of The New York Public Library)
One of the most groundbreaking was Al-Hoda, founded by Naoum Antoun Mokarzel and his brother Salloum. âIn the basement of Al-Hoda Press, they adapted the linotype machine from Latin characters to Arabic characters, which is very hard (because Arabic is) a cursive language,â Abid says. âBy this technological innovation, he actually allowed other presses to form and to publish newspapers, periodicals, and books,â which then circulated throughout North and Latin America â and back to the Middle East.
In other words, New York was instrumental in literally building the Arabic press and exporting news to the Middle East.
Abid emphasizes how vital the libraryâs historical collections are to telling these stories.
âThe library has been collecting these materials since the late 19th century,â she says, adding that many of them have been digitized, enabling audiences to interact with them in a new way.
The third section, âImpressions,â flips the gaze, revealing how Middle Eastern immigrants perceived New York and the US.
âMany immigrant groups embraced American values⊠but many (Arabs) actually didnât like New York and didnât like American values and left after a few years here or after a few months.â The exhibit highlights these ambivalences and the tensions of assimilation.
The final section, âIn Our Own Skin,â is the most contemporary and, for Abid, the most personal. It includes raw, vulnerable stories that reflect racial identity, Islamophobia, and resistance. Among the most powerful pieces is the short documentary âIn My Own Skin,â directed by Jennifer Jajeh and Nikki Byrd, which features interviews with five Arab women in New York, and was filmed just one month after the events of Sept. 11, 2001.
âThe interviews are absolutely amazing. Every time I talk about it, I have goosebumps,â Abid says. âThe way they talk about it â it is still very relevant today, as if nothing changed much, except that weâre probably more powerful because we are aware of this and we know how to organize and to fight back. We have the vocabulary now, and the community.â
That spirit of organization is embodied by Malikah, a grassroots collective founded by Rana Abdelhamid in 2010 as a self-defense class for Muslim women on Steinway Street in Queens. The movement has since expanded into a larger project of empowerment, healing, and solidarity â and is featured in the exhibitâs final section. The powerful sound of the athan, or call to prayer, has been important to this cultural shift.
While images of the Statue of Liberty â based on an Egyptian woman â didnât make the cut, but Abid stresses its significance on each guided tour. On this occasion, though, she wanted to focus the visitors on lesser-known gems.
Having lived in New York for the past four years as a Tunisian immigrant who spent much of her life in France, Abid says she finds New York to be more diverse than anywhere else she has ever lived.âŻ
âI live on Atlantic Avenue in the Syrian corner. The things I witnessed here and in Middle Eastern parts of New York, like Astoria, I could never see anywhere else â even Paris,â she says. âWhen you go to the exhibition, you actually think, âDamn! We actually did a lot. And weâre here, you knowâweâre here.
âIt shows how New York was central to all of these struggles and how New York â thanks to its MENA community â was actually connected and aware. It puts New York on a global map, you know? I think New York is incredible terrain for this. Itâs the space for it. Thatâs what this show is about, ultimately.ââŻ