Latest news with #Scheherazade


Web Release
6 days ago
- Entertainment
- Web Release
'Scheherazade' Revives Her Legends in a Majestic Orchestral Performance at IXSIR
At sunset on July 10 and 11, the hills of Ixsir will transform into an open-air stage for two magical evenings. More than a concert, this orchestral performance offers a fully immersive artistic experience—where every detail becomes part of a sweeping narrative of beauty and myth. Inspired by the enchantment of One Thousand and One Nights, the performance is conceived, designed, and conducted by Lebanese-Armenian Maestro Harout Fazlian. It brings East and West into harmony, blending oriental instruments with Rimsky-Korsakov's iconic Scheherazade (1888)—a masterpiece of the Russian school known for its vivid orchestral storytelling. Under the summer sky, the all-female Firdaus Orchestra – a pioneering initiative by ExpoCity-Dubai dedicated to empowering women through music – will take the stage with 26 professional musicians. With delicate artistry, they will weave melodies and tales into a singular moment suspended between mountains and vineyards.

Sydney Morning Herald
31-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Sydney Morning Herald
Winter might be setting in, but there's still plenty to do
For those who love the great outdoors, winter can be a challenging time. Fortunately in Melbourne there are always plenty of options when it comes to the arts and culture. Scheherazade Hamer Hall, June 2 For a transcendental start to your week like no other, join the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra's 'quick fix at half six' on the first Monday of June – a 75-minute performance that kickstarts with excerpts and insights from the conductor before a work is performed in full. On this night in question, the conductor is Hong Kong-born, internationally renowned conductor Elim Chan and the work is Scheherazade, a symphonic suite composed by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov in 1888 and based on One Thousand and One Nights. First Voices Showcase Iwaki Auditorium, June 4 Celebrate the culmination of one of the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra's most exciting artist development programs, the First Voices Composer program, at this showcase event. Hear the premiere of works by Jaadwa composer, producer and sound artist James Howard and Yorta Yorta, Wurundjeri and South Sea Islander multi-instrumentalist and vocalist Nathaniel Andrew, performed by musicians of the MSO, in an evening that celebrates the vital contribution of First Nations artists to the ongoing vitality of the orchestral sector. Noongar violinist, violist, composer and conductor Aaron Wyatt will conduct and present on the night. The Birds Malthouse, until June 7 Forever immortalised on film by master of suspense Alfred Hitchcock, Daphne du Maurier's chilling thriller The Birds has been adapted into a stage production at Malthouse Theatre. Directed by Malthouse's former artistic director Matthew Lutton and brought to life by playwright Louise Fox, the one-woman show stars Paula Arundell – one of Australia's most compelling stage actors – in an unforgettable tour de force. Armed with individual headsets, theatregoers are thrust into an adrenaline-fuelled soundscape of flying feathers and murderous swoops as relentless, supernatural birds attack a coastal town. Chinese Textile Donations from Tyon Gee Museum of Chinese Australian History, June 8 This one-of-a-kind event will unveil a beautiful capsule collection of Chinese garments donated by Tyon Gee, an early Chinese migrant who moved from Guangdong to Sydney in 1939 with her husband and two children. Her story and wardrobe reflect the resilience and cultural heritage of Chinese Australians in the 1930s, highlighting the tension at the time between tradition and assimilation and the preservation of cultural roots. It's a special opportunity to explore history through fabric, fashion, and migrant-led storytelling.

The Age
31-05-2025
- Entertainment
- The Age
Winter might be setting in, but there's still plenty to do
For those who love the great outdoors, winter can be a challenging time. Fortunately in Melbourne there are always plenty of options when it comes to the arts and culture. Scheherazade Hamer Hall, June 2 For a transcendental start to your week like no other, join the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra's 'quick fix at half six' on the first Monday of June – a 75-minute performance that kickstarts with excerpts and insights from the conductor before a work is performed in full. On this night in question, the conductor is Hong Kong-born, internationally renowned conductor Elim Chan and the work is Scheherazade, a symphonic suite composed by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov in 1888 and based on One Thousand and One Nights. First Voices Showcase Iwaki Auditorium, June 4 Celebrate the culmination of one of the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra's most exciting artist development programs, the First Voices Composer program, at this showcase event. Hear the premiere of works by Jaadwa composer, producer and sound artist James Howard and Yorta Yorta, Wurundjeri and South Sea Islander multi-instrumentalist and vocalist Nathaniel Andrew, performed by musicians of the MSO, in an evening that celebrates the vital contribution of First Nations artists to the ongoing vitality of the orchestral sector. Noongar violinist, violist, composer and conductor Aaron Wyatt will conduct and present on the night. The Birds Malthouse, until June 7 Forever immortalised on film by master of suspense Alfred Hitchcock, Daphne du Maurier's chilling thriller The Birds has been adapted into a stage production at Malthouse Theatre. Directed by Malthouse's former artistic director Matthew Lutton and brought to life by playwright Louise Fox, the one-woman show stars Paula Arundell – one of Australia's most compelling stage actors – in an unforgettable tour de force. Armed with individual headsets, theatregoers are thrust into an adrenaline-fuelled soundscape of flying feathers and murderous swoops as relentless, supernatural birds attack a coastal town. Chinese Textile Donations from Tyon Gee Museum of Chinese Australian History, June 8 This one-of-a-kind event will unveil a beautiful capsule collection of Chinese garments donated by Tyon Gee, an early Chinese migrant who moved from Guangdong to Sydney in 1939 with her husband and two children. Her story and wardrobe reflect the resilience and cultural heritage of Chinese Australians in the 1930s, highlighting the tension at the time between tradition and assimilation and the preservation of cultural roots. It's a special opportunity to explore history through fabric, fashion, and migrant-led storytelling.

The National
28-04-2025
- Entertainment
- The National
Hussein Fahmy says 'shortcut culture' is undermining Egyptian television and drama
Hussein Fahmy says diminishing standards – from storytelling to production – are affecting Egyptian television and drama. Speaking at the Abu Dhabi International Book Fair, the veteran actor and Cairo International Film Festival president attributed the decline to what he describes as a 'shortcut culture' within the industry, where trends and commercial appeal are prioritised over strong narratives and craftsmanship. The result, he suggested, is an increasingly skewed portrayal of Egypt and its people on screen, along with a disregard for classical Arabic texts that have long served as a rich source of inspiration for Egyptian film and television. 'What we are lacking today, I believe, is seriousness,' he said. 'I see a lot of shortcutting in writing and execution, and what this ultimately does is reduce the value of drama. This is played out in how we no longer treat heritage texts seriously and instead run after market demands with superficial works. True success comes when the work is good and has substance. Only then does it ultimately succeed.' It was a pointed message that Fahmy, 85, directed not only at his colleagues, but at the audience as well, suggesting that it is they who ultimately control the standards of what is acceptable, not the other way around. 'No one controls public taste,' he added. 'The audience does. The public has the right to change the channel, to stop watching, to not go to the cinema. I place a major responsibility on the audience. When the audience supports meaningful work, producers will follow. But when audiences chase commercial, shallow works, producers will replicate them. 'When the public accepts meaningless productions, they deny us the opportunity to offer them refined culture. The public must help us artists by choosing quality, supporting fine comedy, fine drama, and rejecting vulgarity. 'I am against the idea that you are 'forced' to listen to bad music. If you hear a bad song, don't listen to it again. We all bear a social responsibility to uplift public taste.' Fahmy's reflections came as part of a wider discussion on the inspirations behind his near seven-decade career, particularly the ancient anthology One Thousand and One Nights, designated as the Abu Dhabi International Book Fair's key text and dubbed 'Book of the World' for this year's event. One of Fahmy's most memorable roles was in the Egyptian television adaptation of Alf Leila wa Leila (One Thousand and One Nights), which aired during Ramadan in 1984. Starring as Shahrayar, the despot who spares Scheherazade's life due to her ability to spin evocative tales, Fahmy was initially hesitant about the character. 'He is portrayed in the text as a vengeful king who killed someone every morning, and I told myself, 'I can't just play him like that,'' he said. 'I concluded that the only way viewers would empathise with him – and not condemn him immediately from the onset – is if he secretly loved Scheherazade from the very beginning.' Fahmy, who first heard stories from One Thousand and One Nights as a child on Egyptian public radio, said the lasting appeal of these tales lies in the freedom they give readers to imagine them in their own way. 'There are various characters in the book that we can all relate to, and they are so open to interpretation that they don't need a director's vision imposed on them,' he said. 'That's why the work will always endure – and why I believe there will never be a definitive television or film version of it. 'It also goes to show you the power of books – how they allow you to shape your imagination in your own way. You live the story through your mind, not someone else's vision.' Screen adaptations like Alf Leila wa Leila, universal in their appeal across the Arab world, are what is currently missing from Egyptian film and television. 'Today, Arab cinema has become too localised,' he continued. 'In the past, Egyptian films spoke to all Arabs – you could see yourself in them whether you were from Tunisia, Morocco, Syria or anywhere else. Today, Egyptian films have become so local that they no longer represent the wider Arab audience, and that is a major loss. 'Historical dramas used to be a way to bring people together, but now they face more difficulties. Political sensitivities and historical disagreements often block wider distribution. It has become more difficult to produce them – let alone more expensive. Hence, we are seeing different kinds of stories being produced today.' The Abu Dhabi International Book Fair is running at the Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre until May 5


Al Etihad
22-04-2025
- Entertainment
- Al Etihad
Your guide to Abu Dhabi International Book Fair 2025: Events, discussions, notable participants
23 Apr 2025 00:14 ABU DHABI (ALETIHAD)The 34th edition of the Abu Dhabi International Book Fair (ADIBF) takes place from April 26 to May 5 at ADNEC year's edition features more than 2,000 cultural events designed to engage all age groups and cater to a wide range of intellectual, artistic and cultural with the launch of the first phase of a community campaign to promote sustainable reading, the fair aligns with the UAE's declaration of 2025 as the Year of campaign, initiated by the Abu Dhabi Arabic Language Centre (ALC), is held under the theme 'Knowledge Illuminates Our Community', and supports the Centre's ongoing mission to elevate the Arabic language and embed a culture of reading across year, more than 1,400 exhibitors from over 90 countries will be participating, and 120 exhibitors taking part for the first fair will also welcome publishers from 20 countries, spanning four continents and representing more than 25 languages. ADIBF 2025 will include 28 international pavilions, 87 local and international government entities, 13 author-publishers, 15 universities and 8 initiatives dedicated to supporting the publishing ALC will host over 2,000 cultural events, including 1,700 creative activities aimed at fostering a lasting culture of reading across the and SessionsVisitors will be able to attend informative and stimulating talks daily at ADIBF 2025, which will host the sessions in 6 different discussion programme will include topics including education, culture and world cuisine, led by well-known experts and academics. Sink your teeth into talks such as: The Art of Mastering Emirati Cuisine: Towards Professionalism, Recognition, and Sustainability, with Chef Muna Almansoori; The 50 Most Important Novels of the 21st Century; From Scheherazade to the World: The Narrative Power of One Thousand and One Nights; Imam Ahmed Al-Tayeb's Vision: Renewing Islamic Jurisprudence and Advancing Peaceful Coexistence; and From Dreams to Reality: The UAE's Journey into from Abu DhabiThe third edition of the 'Podcast from Abu Dhabi' programme will be held as part of the fair and will feature more than 50 of the world's top podcasters to present more than 50 different topics. Over 20 content creators will be making their debut at the programme's thoughtful discussions will highlight the diversity and creativity of the Arab cultural landscape, building on the success and popularity of the programme's first two from Abu Dhabi covers a wide range of topics, including literature, poetry, art, technology, youth, society, children, social development, games, and entertainment, among many others. The topics cater to the audience's passion for knowledge, offering a platform for constructive cultural debate. Each episode spotlights a different experience that combines education and talks blends heritage and modernity, creating a space for intellectual and artistic conversation, which enhances the role of podcasts as a cultural platform that helps to promote knowledge and build an engaged, intellectually driven year's notable participants include podcasters 'Mics' from Saudi Arabia and 'El Podcasters' from Egypt, alongside platforms such as 'Edraak' and 'Samawah', and other podcasts including 'Paper Samwich' and 'The Arab Youth Podcast', among remain hugely popular among listeners. Together, the creators participating in the Podcast from Abu Dhabi programme have 7.5 million followers on TikTok, 4.2 million on YouTube, and 4.5 million on Instagram. For tickets and other information, visit