6 minute read

HOTTER THAN EGYPT PLAYWRIGHT EXPLORES THE PATHOS AND COMEDY INHERENT IN EVERY DAY LIFE

BY LEO ADAM BIGA

IIn Hotter Than Egypt, playwright Yussef El Guindi explores the tragic-funny misunderstandings of a culture clash rich in existential, social, political baggage.

While on holiday in Egypt, middle-aged Americans Paul and Jean find their marriage unraveling in the company of a young couple, Seif and Maha, who serve as their guides and conscience. Cut off from routine, conflicts and intrigues surface that cause everyone to confront harsh, yet humorous truths.

After a well-received 2020 Colorado New Play Summit staged reading, Egypt is back at the Denver Center for the Performing Arts with a fully staged production.

“I was blessed with a great cast and director. [DCPA Theatre Company Artistic Director] Chris Coleman shepherded the first workshop, so it’s gratifying to have it return for a full production under his direction,” said El Guindi.

Born into a family of notable creatives in Egypt, El Guindi studied in the United Kingdom and America, where he eventually settled. The award-winning playwright’s first passion was acting.

“I applied to six acting programs and one program for playwriting. All six acting schools rejected me, while Carnegie Mellon accepted me into their playwriting program. So, basically, I’ve been living Plan B. But I also never let go of my desire to become an actor.”

He worked in theaters in San Francisco, then got a job teaching playwriting and a dramatic literature class at Duke University. But he still pursued an acting career after landing in Seattle, where he resides.

He was in his late 30s when he finally gave up on acting and fully committed to playwriting. Seattle’s ACT Theatre became his creative home.

“Having a place receptive to my work and more than willing to consider it for production is vital. It prompts me to write the next play. And for that I am enormously grateful. Having ACT in my corner is a great boon. Such support is essential for me as a playwright.”

FRAMING THE ARAB-MUSLIM DIASPORA

His work interrogates the fraught Arab-Muslim experience in America.

“Part of the impetus in telling these stories is to counter the sometimes horrendous reductiveness of mainstream depictions of Arabs and Muslims,” he said. “Rather than some agenda-driven goal in writing these plays, it’s really just about presenting fully-formed Arab-Muslim characters in different kinds of stories — and not as plot points in flattened narratives about the region or cultures.

“Presenting them as regular folk in varied storylines becomes a radical act all by itself.”

His Back of the Throat (2005) deals with Arab-American fears in the post-9/11 environment.

As members of ignored or demonized populations push back on negative narratives by telling their own stories, he said, “these formerly marginalized groups very slowly and painfully become a tiny bit more integrated into the mainstream cultural life.”

Mining Truth Through Farce

His chosen form for sussing out truth: farce.

“I was very taken by farce very early on. The manic and merciless quality of the genre appealed to my youthful writer self wanting to get a rise out of the audience. There’s nothing like laughter to plug an audience into a moment, and the play as a whole, hopefully. It’s also very gratifying as a writer to hear that laughter. But farce is also very close to tragedy in its unrelenting propulsion towards inevitable ends. In both farce and tragedy we are pawns to forces greater than ourselves. We feel powerless, at times, in our attempt to be agents in our own destinies.”

The vagaries of leaving one culture for another make fertile ground for farce.

“You come to a new country and have to adjust to the way it operates, while also letting go of some of the protocols, manners and values of the country you were raised in. The larger the leap, the bigger the adjustment,” he said.

Returning this season — Talkbacks with the cast!

In the wash, misunderstandings occur. “A stranger in a strange land becomes a potential source of comedy as the character tries to figure out what’s what,” El Guindi said. Hotter Than Egypt ’s protagonists stumble about in the mess they make, negotiating new definitions of their relationships, power dynamics and selves.

“Everyone,” he said, “has a moment where they break things down and offer their opinion or analysis.” In Hotter Than Egypt :

● Paul chases a faux new beginning

● Jean demands liberation from a prescriptive life

● Seif doubles down on what matters to him

● Maha’s desperation turns to healthy ambition

What’s meant to be a vacation from reality turns into a crucible of open wounds and greener pastures.

“There is some truth to the feeling there is surely a better alternative ‘over there,’ whether a place or a person, if you could just make it happen. Shorn from old habits and rituals, we are a little lost on holidays, sometimes wonderfully so, and in that in-between place we are able to gain the kind of perspectives hard to come by in our regulated lives back home.

“The sin sometimes is to feel one is absolutely right and the other person is wrong or on much shakier ground than you.” As a cross-cultural wayfarer himself, El Guindi draws on personal experience for these crises of identity and longing. His milieu is his material.

Play It As It Lays

His advice to new playwrights is to “endure” in finding their own voice.

“Stay at it, practice your craft — which means finding ways to hearing your plays read by others. You’ll only learn in the doing. Make the needed adjustments with each reading-staging. Find like-minded theater practitioners and work with them. Don’t wait for the big theaters to legitimize you. Be a self-starter and make things happen for yourself.”

Playwriting groups are another way to connect. “It’s lovely having this community out there.”

ASL Interpreted and Audio Described performance: March 5 at 1:30pm

These free post-show discussions are held after select DCPA Theatre Company performances to extend, deepen and enrich your experience. Moderated by DCPA Education & Community Engagement, you’ll have the opportunity to stay after the play to delve into themes and connect with fellow audience members.

Join us after the evening performances on these dates:

LAUGHS IN SPANISH

Thu, Feb 23

Thu, Mar 2 HOTTER THAN EGYPT

Tue, Feb 28

Thu, Mar 9

THE COLOR PURPLE

Tue, Apr 11

Thu, Apr 13

Thu, Apr 20

Thu, Apr 27

THE 39 STEPS

Thu, May 18

Thu, Jun 8

BY MADISON STOUT

OOver the last few years, students from DCPA Education’s Adult program have emerged on professional stages across the area.

Ryan Omar Stack, Business Analyst-turned-Actor, is one such student seizing local opportunities, scoring himself roles in the Colorado Shakespeare Festival and The Queen’s Ball: A Bridgerton Experience.

Stack moved to Denver in 2010 to pursue a career in business. After several years, he found himself hungering for a creative outlet and returned to acting. While searching for a place to continue to grow as an actor, he discovered the DCPA.

“It felt new,” Stack shared. “After so long, I was uncomfortable performing in front of people.” But the hesitancy quickly wore off. “The staff was so willing to provide feedback at any time,” Stack explained. “Having people to confer with and learning from people who’ve studied the art and applied it is incredibly helpful.”

Following his time studying with DCPA Education, Stack auditioned around town and became a resident actor at Benchmark Theatre. “I slowly transitioned from performing in front of students and small audiences in master classes to month-long performances in front of paying audiences.”

Following breakout roles in Benchmark’s productions of George Orwell’s 1984, Airness and Parfumerie, Stack joined DCPA Education’s Shakespeare in the Parking Lot sharing abridged performances of Romeo and Juliet, A Midsummer Night’s Dream and Macbeth at high schools and community centers.

“Work gets work,” Stack explained. “As I continued to book more jobs, I gained more confidence and comfortability being in the room. Shakespeare in the Parking Lot gave me the tools needed to get into CSF.”

Now Stack is venturing into less traditional theatre experiences. Recently he worked with Deck Nine Games, providing voice-over and facial motion-capture for the video game Life is Strange: Remastered Collection, and this fall joined the cast of The Queen’s Ball: A Bridgerton Experience

“I love doing jobs where I work with different creatives,” Stack said, “where we can all learn from each other.”

To learn more about DCPA Education, visit denvercenter.org/education

• Intro to advanced-level classes

• Taught by professionals in the field

• Spring/Summer Child & Teen classes now enrolling

• Spring Adult registration opens Jan 31

Browse Classes

DENVERCENTER.ORG/EDUCATION

Sponsored by

This article is from: