World Premiere
by Torange Yeghiazarian with the Fifth String Ensemble
Meet Ziryab, the 9th-century musician and cultural icon, in this family-friendly new play with live music: a musical genius, a star of the Baghdad court, and a fashion innovator. The Fifth String playfully tells the story of his beginnings in Iraq, his life as an immigrant to Cordoba, and his lasting contributions in music, fashion, and culture that continue to reverberate today. Widely credited with adding a fifth string to the oud and with introducing Persian and Arabic influences to Spanish music, his life becomes an inspiration for this modern retelling as a story-within-a-story in the tradition of 1001 Nights. Written and directed by Torange Yeghiazarian, The Fifth String is multifaceted performance created collaboratively with an ensemble of actors, clowns, and musicians. Part of Golden Thread’s Islam 101 initiative, the play features original music composed by Faraz Minooei and production design by Mokhtar Paki.
May 2, 2014 - December 8, 2014
ODC Theatre
3153 17th Street, SF CA 94110
Written by Torange Yeghiazarian with the Fifth String Ensemble
Directed by Torange Yeghiazarian
Featuring Munaf Alsafi, Camelia Ascencio Betancourt, Ali Bazyar (percussion), Jamie Coventry, Deborah Eliezer, Gari Haggerty (oud), Majd Murad, Maruf Noyoft, Naima Shalhoub
Music by Faraz Minooei
Production design by Mokhtar Paki
Appropriate for ages 8 and up | Running time: Approx. 70 - 80 min
Golden Thread’s Islam 101 initiative was launched in 2011 in response to the rising anti-Islamic sentiments in the US. By creating dynamic and entertaining plays insipired by Islamic art and philosophy, Islam 101 aims to shift the dominant negative stereotypes of Islam and provide Muslim families with a cultural experience they can share and take pride in.
Launched in partnership with the Islamic Cultural center of Northern California, Islam 101 previously premiered Rumi X 7 = Tales from the Masnavi by Hafiz Karmali.
Torange Yeghiazarian
Playwright/Director
Torange Yeghiazarian
Torange Yeghiazarian is the Founding Artistic Director of Golden Thread Productions, the first American theatre company devoted to the Middle East, where she launched such visionary programs as ReOrient Festival & Forum, Middle East America (in partnership with the Lark and Silkroad Rising), Islam 101 (with Hafiz Karmali), New Threads, and the Fairytale Players. Torange’s plays include ISFAHAN BLUES, 444 DAYS, THE FIFTH STRING: ZIRYAB’S PASSAGE TO CORDOBA, and CALL ME MEHDI. She is currently under commission by Philip Kan Gotanda to adapt his seminal play, THE WASH to an Armenian setting. Awards include the Gerbode-Hewlett Playwright Commission Award (ISFAHAN BLUES) and a commission by the Islamic Cultural Center of Northern California (THE FIFTH STRING). Her short play CALL ME MEHDI is published in the anthology “Salaam. Peace: An Anthology of Middle Eastern-American Drama,” TCG 2009. Torange adapted the poem, I SELL SOULS by Simin Behbehani to the stage, and directed the premieres of SCENIC ROUTES by Yussef El Guindi, THE MYTH OF CREATION by Sadegh Hedayat, TAMAM by Betty Shamieh, STUCK by Amir Al-Azraki and VOICE ROOM by Reza Soroor, amongst others. Her articles on contemporary theatre in Iran have been published in The Drama Review (2012), American Theatre Magazine (2010), and Theatre Bay Area Magazine (2010), and HowlRound. Torange has contributed to the Encyclopedia of Women and Islamic Cultures and Cambridge World Encyclopedia of Stage Actors. Born in Iran and of Armenian heritage, Torange holds a Master’s degree in Theatre Arts from San Francisco State University.
Mokhtar Paki
Production Designer
Mokhtar Paki
Mokhtar Paki is a Bay Area visual artist, art teacher, and sometimes architectural designer. Mokhtar is the production designer on The Fifth String: Ziryab’s Passage to Cordoba. He also designed the puppets and props on 21 Days that Change the Year. In 2012, Mokhtar designed dozens of puppets for the shadow-play, Jana and Baladoor, written and directed by Bahram Beyzaie. Mokhtar’s visual art has been shown at the Persian Center, Canessa Gallery, Intersection for The Arts, and Oliver Gallery. His caricatures and illustrations have appeared in local as well as European publications. Mokhtar has an MA in Creative Writing, and has published several short stories and articles. His novel Shamayel-e-Mana was published in Sweden and Iran. His second novel, Shahrzad the Silent in under publication.
Faraz Minooei
Music Director
Faraz Minooei
Faraz Minooei was born in Tehran and began playing santur at the young age of nine. While studying with Behnam Mehrabi, he discovered a deep spiritual desire to study music, seeing music as an “unexplainable souvenir from the eternal truth”. Faraz received his B.A. from San Francisco State University in 2008 as a Nagle Scholar and the first World/Jazz music major with santur as his primary instrument! As a full-time musician, Faraz is a performer, composer, ethno-musicologist and teacher. He views studying music as a never-ending mission. In view of that, he has also had the good fortune to study with masters such as M. R. Lotfi, H. Omoumi, Royal Hartigan, Hafez Modirzadeh, Michael Dessen, Kojiro Umezaki and Christopher Dobrian. Since 2006, he has lectured and performed at many universities including SFSU, UCI, UCLA, UCSC Stanford University and at the Society of Ethnomusicology. He has performed with noted ensembles in the United States, among which was his collaboration in 2009 with Yo Yo Ma and Kayhan Kalhor in the Silk Road Ensemble (for the 50th anniversary of the Lincoln Center) and the collaboration as a composer and santur player with the film director Bahram Beyzaie for the play “Jana & Baladour”. Recipient of numerous scholarships and grants, he earned his Masters of Fine Arts degree in music with emphasis in Integrated Composition, Improvisation, and Technology from the University of California in Irvine. His thesis, “Abstracting” Iranian Classical Music, challenges the traditional practice of Iranian Classical Music to introduce innovative and transformative functions of the music in contemporary society.
Ali Bazyar
Musician
Ali Bazyar
Born in 1980 Tehran, Iran, Ali Bazyar began his Tombak training under master Bakhtiari at nine years of age. Ali also trained with Master Bahman Rajabi and Mohammad Tayebi. Ali performed with different ensembles in Iran before leaving the country in 2004. After resettling in the US, he began experimenting with other world percussions such as Cajon, Dejembe, and Udu. Ali Bazyar currently resides in San Francisco Bay Area. He is engaged and is collaborating as a versatile percussionist with various established musicians and bands while continuing academic pursuit in music.
Gari Haggerty
Musician
Gari Haggerty
Gari Haggerty has been performing traditional music from Ireland, Scotland, France, Turkey, the Middle East and North Africa for the past twenty years. Gari performs on a wide range of traditional instruments including: Oud, violin, Turkish Saz, Yayli Tambor, Irish pennywhistle, Mandocello and flute. He began devoting his life to music with the study of Celtic and Bretagne music. From there he was led eastward into the intense practice and performance of Turkish classical and Mevlevi ceremonial music. He toured with the Mevlevi Dervish Order of America for several years, and continues to participate in Turkish ceremonial and devotional gatherings around the country. A highly sought after recording and performing artist, Gary’s repertoire and playing styles range from Turkey and Greece into the Arab lands, Iran and India. Gari’s main instruments are the oud, violin, saz and mandocello, yet he began his musical career with fiddle and mandolin, and had devoted a decade of his life to the violin before learning of his ancestral Hungarian name, Hegedus, meaning “violinist.” As a composer and performer, Gari has developed the art of taksim (improvisation) to a deeply soulful level for which he has become highly recognized.
Munaf Alsafi
Musician
Munaf Alsafi
Munaf Alsafi is a San Francisco-Bay Area actor and musician. Born in Iraq but raised in the deep south of the Unitted States, delta blues influenced his music and his love of folklore. He moved to the bay area in 1992 and has spent many years in South America, North Africa, Europe, and the Middle East living, traveling, and learning the music and instruments of those regions. As an actor, Munaf has performed in several plays including performances in the ReOerient Festival 2012, Burqavaganza, 10 Acrobats, Aftermath, and Urge For Going.
Jamie Coventry
Musician
Jamie Coventry
After being raised in central California by a family of eccentrics, Jamie Coventry studied theatre arts in Santa Fe, music in San Luis Obispo and education in San Francisco. Clown being the next logical step, Jamie completed two years of study at the Clown Conservatory at San Francisco Circus Center. Jamie has traveled the globe performing and teaching music, theater, and clown. He has worked with Flynn Creek Circus, Circus of Sound, New Pickle Circus, Sweet Can Circus, Circus Bella, The Pickle’s School Tour, and is one half of the award winning clown duet, Coventry and Kaluza. He is also the co-creator of a band that hearkens back to the days of vaudeville, the harmonica trio, Tin Sandwich.
Majd Murad
Musician
Majd Murad
Majd Murad is very excited to return to Golden Thread after being involved in its workshop of The Fifth String this summer. He is a recent graduate of the Professional Training Program at Dell’Arte International School of Physical Theatre where he explored mask, clown, and melodrama in an ensemble-based setting. His recent work includes an acclaimed one-man show,Blood Fruitabout how he came out to his Catholic-Iraqi family. Visit majdmurad.com for more information on his projects. Majd is also an aspiring mask maker specializing in leather. Check out his work on artemasks.com.
Maruf Noyoft
Musician
Maruf Noyoft
Maruf Noyoft is a native of Tajikistan. He holds BA degree in music from Tajikistan’s University of Art and Culture. Since childhood Maruf has had a love of music, theater and film. Maruf first began acting for Tajik TV and has since transitioned to his working behind the camera as a freelance filmmaker. Maruf first worked with Golden Thread in Rumi x 7 and admires Golden Thread’s pursuit to bring to the stage his shared culture to American audiences.
Olivia Rosaldo Pratt
Musician
Olivia Rosaldo Pratt
A Bay Area native and UC Berkeley graduate, Olivia Rosaldo Pratt is thrilled to be returning to Golden Thread’s stage where she was last seen in 444 Days. She has performed with Portland’s Sojourn Theatre, Seattle’s Mandala Institute, and at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival. Locally she has worked with Crowded Fire Theater, New Conservatory Theatre, Quixotic Players and Central Works.
Naima Shalhoub
Musician
Naima Shalhoub
Naima Shalhoub is a songstress, musician and educator who is thrilled to be making her Golden Thread debut in The Fifth String. After receiving her M.A. in Postcolonial Anthropology in San Francisco, Naima turned her focus toward music and song as vessels for story-telling, healing and movement building. Believing in the power of sharing messages from the soul through sound, Shalhoub immersed herself in her cultural roots in Lebanon and started writing her own music embracing both joy and sorrow, and the spaces between. In 2010 she began performing her music in the Bay Area, getting featured on radio stations and reputable venues, and began building fan bases internationally such as in Beirut and Kashmir. Naima recently released her first single and music video “herstory of soul,” and is currently teaching, performing, and working on her debut full-length album.
Adrienne Shamszad
Musician
Adrienne Shamszad
Adrienne Shamszad is honored to be making her debut with Golden Thread Productions. Adrienne is a singer-songwriter, musician, actress, yogini and teacher born and raised in Oakland California. She spent her childhood and formative years in the theater and has spent her young adulthood teaching, performing, recording and writing music professionally. Her Persian roots strongly influence her unique blend of folk, soul and rock. She is a fun and powerful performer that infuses story-telling and comedy into her live shows.
Watch video from the production: