Golden Thread Productions

Last updated
Golden Thread Productions
Formation1996
PurposeMiddle Eastern theatre
Location
  • 1695 18th Street,
    San Francisco, California, U.S.
Artistic director(s)
Torange Yeghiazarian, Sahar Assaf
Website goldenthread.org

Golden Thread Productions, is an American theatre company founded in 1996 in San Francisco, California, that promotes theatre as a forum for cultural exchange, exploring Middle Eastern culture and identity as represented throughout the globe. [1]

Contents

About

Golden Thread is led by the founding Artistic Director, Torange Yeghiazarian; [2] Executive Artistic Director, Sahar Assaf; [3] [4] and Managing Director, Michelle Mulholland. Founding members of Golden Thread included Maria Zamroud, Termeh Yeghiazarian, Gen Hayashida, and Kamshad Kooshan. [5] The organization is overseen by a board of trustees led by president Kia Mousavi, and an advisory board led by chairs, Marvin Carlson from the City University of New York, Graduate Center, and Hamid Dabashi from Columbia University. Artistic associates include Vida Ghahremani, Yussef El Guindi, and Roberta Levitow.

The mission is to make theatre a regular part of the Middle Eastern community’s cultural life, and to make the Middle East a regular part of the American theatre experience. The group motto has been, "Placing the Middle East Center Stage". [6] Golden Thread Productions defines the Middle East broadly and inclusively, believing that the common human experience transcends cultural and political differences. Among the nations represented in past productions are Iran, Armenia, Egypt, Israel, Palestine, Algeria, Japan, Syria, Turkey, Iraq, and Afghanistan. [7]

The annual programming consists of a mainstage season of two to three full-length productions, the ReOrient Festival of short plays, an annual Women’s Day event, touring and education program for youth, and a variety of workshops, staged readings, and special events offered throughout the year. Golden Thread Productions’ debut production was Operation No Penetration, Lysistrata 97! The classic Greek antiwar comedy was adapted to a Middle Eastern setting where Palestinian and Israeli women unite to force men into signing a peace treaty.

Golden Thread Productions was awarded the American Theatre Wing's National Theatre Company Grant in 2013 [8] and 2016. [9]

ReOrient Festival

Golden Thread Productions' hallmark event is ReOrient, an annual festival of plays exploring the Middle East. [10] Debuted in 1999, more than thirty plays have been presented at the ReOrient Festival, the majority of them world and/or United States premieres. [2] For four weeks, the festival provides a rare opportunity for artists and audiences alike to engage deeply and directly with the Middle East in a creative and supportive setting that displaces misinformation and encourages understanding. The ReOrient Festival has provided a home to some of the best known emerging Middle Eastern voices on American stage (and screen) today including: Betty Shamieh, Caveh Zahedi, as well as such established playwrights as Naomi Wallace, Eric Ehn, Israel Horovitz, and Motti Lerner.

The critical response to the ReOrient Festival has, over the years, been general acclaim: Robert Hurwitt with the San Francisco Chronicle calls it, “haunting and provocative…with reverberations far beyond its immediate cultural context,” [11] and Robert Avila with the San Francisco Bay Guardian states, “Golden Thread triumphs with the ReOrient Festival.” [12]

Fairytale Players

Over the past three years, Golden Thread has developed programming for youth in the community. In 2006, the company launched The Fairytale Players as part of their Children’s Traditional Theatre Program, created by an ensemble of actors who work together in a workshop setting to create and tour fairy tales from around the Middle East. This project is rooted in their past efforts on The Norooz Story and An Iranian Fairytale, both based on ancient tales and utilizing traditional performance elements, music, and dance from the region. These short fairytale performances were presented at the Asian Art Museum, the San Francisco TheatreFest, and Asian Pacific Islander Festival, as well as Park Day School and the Ferry Building. Golden Thread has also recently developed an after-school program in partnership with Krouzian-Zekarian-Vasbouragan Armenian School in San Francisco, and plans to expand their roster of venues in 2009 to include schools, libraries, museums and community centers.

See also

Related Research Articles

San Jose Repertory Theatre

The San Jose Repertory Theatre was the first resident professional theatre company in San Jose, California. It was founded in 1980 by James P. Reber. In 2008, after the demise of the American Musical Theatre of San Jose, the San Jose Rep became the largest non-profit, professional theatre company in the South Bay with an annual operating budget of $5 million. In 2006, it was saved from impending insolvency by a $2 million bailout loan from the city of San Jose; this was later restructured into a long-term loan similar to a mortgage.

Silk Road Rising Theatre company in Chicago

Silk Road Rising is a theatre company located in downtown Chicago dedicated to presenting plays written by individuals of Asian and Middle Eastern descent. Formerly known as Silk Road Theatre Project, the name was changed in 2011 in order to better reflect their mission statement which includes online video plays and documentaries, civic engagement projects, and education programming in addition to live theatre.

Pacific Repertory Theatre

The Pacific Repertory Theatre is a non-profit California corporation, based in Carmel-by-the-Sea, California, that produces theatrical productions and events, including the annual Carmel Shakespeare Festival. It is one of eight major arts institutions in Monterey County, as designated by the Community Foundation of Monterey County, and is supported in part by grants from the David and Lucile Packard Foundation, The Shubert Foundation, the Berkshire Foundation and the Monterey Peninsula Foundation.

Stephen Moorer

Stephen Moorer is a stage actor, director and producer based on the Central California Coast. He founded the only year-round professional theatre in Monterey County, GroveMont Theatre in 1982, renaming the non-profit organization Pacific Repertory Theatre in 1994, when the group acquired the Golden Bough Playhouse in Carmel-by-the-Sea, California.

Prince Gomolvilas is a Thai American playwright. He has written many plays which have been produced in the United States and won several distinctive awards, including a PEN Center USA West Literary Award for Drama.

Persian theater goes back to antiquity. The first initiation of theater and phenomena of acting can be traced in ceremonial theaters to glorify national heroes and legends and to humiliate the enemy, as in the classics "Soug Sivash" and "Mogh Koshi" (Megakhouni). Ancient Persian theatre and dance was significantly researched by the Greek historian Herodotus of Halikarnassos, who lived during the Persian rule in Greece. In his work Book IX (Calliope), he describes the history of Asian empires and also the Persian wars until 478 BC.

Chinese Culture Center

The Chinese Culture Center of San Francisco, California, United States, is a community-based, non-profit organization established in 1965 as the operations center of the Chinese Culture Foundation.

The Magic Theatre is a theatre company founded in 1967, presently based at the historic Fort Mason Center on San Francisco's northern waterfront. The Magic Theatre is well known and respected for its singular focus on the development and production of new plays. Sean San José is the Artistic Director.

The Fountain Theatre is a theatre in Los Angeles. Along with its programming of live theatre, it's also the foremost producer of flamenco on the West Coast.

Lamplighters Music Theatre is a semi-professional musical theatre company based in San Francisco, California. Founded in 1952 by Orva Hoskinson and Ann Pool MacNab, the Lamplighters specialize in light opera, particularly the works of Gilbert and Sullivan, as well as such works as The Merry Widow, Die Fledermaus, Of Thee I Sing, My Fair Lady, Candide, and A Little Night Music.

Ari Roth is an American theatrical producer, playwright, director and educator. From 2014 to 2020 Roth served as the Artistic Director of Mosaic Theater Company of DC and was formerly the Artistic Director of Theater J at the Washington, D.C. Jewish Community Center from 1997 to 2014. Over 18 seasons at Theater J, he produced more than 129 productions and created festivals including "Locally Grown: Community Supported Art," "Voices from a Changing Middle East", and Theater J's acclaimed "Beyond The Stage" and "Artistic Director's Roundtable" series. In 2010, Roth was named as one of the Forward 50, honoring nationally prominent "men and women who are leading the American Jewish community into the 21st century, and in 2017 he was given the DC Mayor's Arts Award for Visionary Leadership. In 2021, Roth launched a new partnership with A. Lorraine Robinson, founding Voices Festival Productions, to be the new home for his long-running "Voices From a Changing Middle East Festival." Their first public event was a virtual benefit in support of "Ukrainian Playwrights Under Siege" in partnership with the Arts Club of Washington.

Shotgun Players Theatre group in Berkeley, California

The Shotgun Players is a California East Bay regional theatre group located in Berkeley, California. It runs 6 to 7 productions per season. Its main stage is the Ashby Stage located in the Lorin District near the Ashby BART station.

Tony Taccone is an American theater director, and the former Artistic Director of Berkeley Repertory Theatre in Berkeley, California.

California Shakespeare Theater

California Shakespeare Theater is a regional theater located in the San Francisco Bay Area of California. Its performance space, the Lt. G. H. Bruns III Memorial Amphitheater, is located in Orinda, while the administrative offices, rehearsal hall, costume and prop shop are located in Berkeley.

The Lorraine Hansberry Theatre

The Lorraine Hansberry Theatre is an African-American arts institution located in downtown San Francisco. It is named after Lorraine Hansberry, who wrote A Raisin in the Sun while living in Bay Area. Since being founded in 1981, The Lorraine Hansberry Theatre has mounted productions that have included performances by Ruby Dee, Ossie Davis, Danny Glover and Ntozake Shange.

Kamshad Kooshan American film director

Kamshad Kooshan is an Iranian-born American actor, film director, screenwriter, film producer, and educator.

Back of the Throat is a play written by Arab-American playwright Yussef El Guindi. The play reflects the fear of the Arab-American community in the post-9/11 America.

San Francisco Playhouse Non-profit theater company in California, U.S.

San Francisco Playhouse is a non-profit theater company in San Francisco, California, founded in 2003 by Bill English and Susi Damilano. The theater stages nine plays yearly, including Broadway plays, musicals, and world and regional premieres.

The African-American Shakespeare Company (AASC) is a 501(c)3 nonprofit professional regional theatre company in San Francisco, California. Since its founding in 1994 Sherri Young has been its Executive Director and in 2009 L. Peter Callender joined as its Artistic Director.

Yussef El Guindi 20th-21st-century Egyptian-American playwright

Yussef El Guindi is an Egyptian-American playwright. He writes full-length, one-act, and adapted plays on Arab-Muslim experience in the United States. He is best known for his 2005 play Back of the Throat and has been called "the most talented Arab American writer of political plays."

References

  1. Najjar, Michael Malek (2021-01-28). Middle Eastern American Theatre: Communities, Cultures and Artists. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 47. ISBN   978-1-350-11705-1.
  2. 1 2 Gluckstern, Nicole (October 15, 2019). "ReOrient Festival of Middle East-Themed Plays Turns 20". KQED. Retrieved 2022-02-16.
  3. "Golden Thread Names Sahar Assaf New Exec Artistic Director". American Theatre. 2021-05-10. Retrieved 2022-02-16.
  4. Schiffman, Jean (2021-05-20). "Bold new direction at Magic Theatre, Golden Thread". The San Francisco Examiner. Retrieved 2022-02-16.
  5. Najjar, Michael Malek (2021-01-28). Middle Eastern American Theatre: Communities, Cultures and Artists. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 48. ISBN   978-1-350-11704-4.
  6. Knight, Heather (2003-04-25). "Keeping the Middle East center stage / Golden Thread battles odds so shows can go on". SFGATE. Retrieved 2022-02-16.
  7. "Golden Thread Productions Announces 2017 Season". American Theatre. 2017-01-18. Retrieved 2022-02-16.
  8. "American Theatre Wing Announces Recipient of 2013 National Theatre Company Grants". StageLight Magazine. 2013-09-03. Retrieved 2017-11-29.
  9. "American Theatre Wing Announces 2016 National Theatre Company Grants". AMERICAN THEATRE. 2016-10-04. Retrieved 2017-11-29.
  10. "Five plays 'ReOrient' focus". The Mercury News. 2008-01-14. Retrieved 2022-02-16.
  11. Hurwitt, Robert (November 4, 2003). "Short plays shine light on facets of life in the Middle East". San Francisco Chronicle Magazine. San Francisco Chronicle. ISSN   1932-8672.
  12. Avila, Robert (2008). "Short Plays, Deep Impact: Golden Thread Productions triumphs with the 'ReOrient' festival". San Francisco Bay Guardian. Archived from the original on 2016-03-03.