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RUMI's MATHNAVI
For Immediate Release
Contact:
Jane Stojak
215-763-0110 OR 215-760-0230
janestojak@aol.com
PEACE SHOW BASED ON WORK OF 13TH CENTURY
POET JELALUDDIN RUMI TO VISIT TRIANGLE THEATER
A new show aimed at bringing diverse cultures together in the service
of peace, and based on the work of best-selling 13th Century poet
Jelaluddin Rumi, entitled Rumi's MATHNAVI, will visit the Triangle
Theater from March 10 - 13, 2005 at the beginning of its tour of
eastern U.S. cities.
The production of Rumi's MATHNAVI was launched on the main stage
at Catholic University in Washington, DC on February 19-20, 2005
and will travel to Baltimore and Philadelphia in March. The production
was conceived by Joe Martin, playwright, director and lecturer in
the Drama Department at Catholic University.
Rumi is the best-selling poet in the United States and has a significant
following here. According to Martin, the goals of the production
are to "bring diverse audiences together to be inspired by
the work of Rumi to pursue peace."
"Rumi is a splendid exemplar of the "Unity-of-Being which
is stressed in the wisdom tradtion of Islam," said Martin.
"That is the idea that each of us carries something 'the same'
in us - that we are all fundamentally related to all other beings."
Martin believes that the work of Rumi is an ideal vehicle for a
contemporary peace movement given that Rumi is a Middle Eastern
poet who is greatly revered in the West.
The thirteenth century poet, Jelaluddin Rumi, was born in the area
of the old Persian Empire, today Balkh Afghanistan, and lived most
of his life in Turkey writing some of the greatest Persian poetry
and spiritual discourses ever penned, He has found a sudden and
massive resurgence of interest - and this has been a topic of much
discussion lately among poets and scholars. Some attribute it to
New Age thinking, or millenarism. Others, reading the free, accessible
and sometimes amusing Coleman Barks English versions of Rumi may
sense he is working in something like the traditions of Whitman,
Blake and even Allen Ginsberg, and thus has appeal for the new "spiritual
seekers."
The production of Rumi's MATHNAVI includes dramatizations of Rumi's
text, music, dance, and choruses in the Greek style. The cast includes
Baltimore spoken word performer Brandon Welch, actor and Indian
dancer Jai Khalsa, DC actor and dancer Kim Curtis, and DC actors
Bette Cassat, Elizabeth Jernigan, Jamahl Rahmaan, Nick Scott and
Lee Ordeman; music direction is by composer Kasem Davoudian with
the Iranian trio the Hamnava Group; choreography is by Christel
Stevens; the production is directed by Joe Martin.
The tour includes this stop in Philadelphia, as well as venues
in Baltimore and New York.
Tickets are $20 ($12 for students and seniors) and are available
by calling 215-763-0110 or e-mailing triangletheater@aol.com. Shows
are Thursday - Saturday, March 10-12 at 8 PM; and Sunday, March
13 at 3 PM.
The Triangle Theater was created in 2001. Since 1999, its producing
arm, Random Acts of Theater has produced more than 10 plays based
on original material. The Triangle Theater was honored in November
2004 by the Theatre Alliance of Greater Philadelphia with a Barrymore
award for New Collaborations in Theatre, for their collaboration
with KitchenAid's The Book and The Cook festival on the Spring 2004
productions of Arje Shaw's "A Catered Affair" and Michael
A. Carson's "Front of House."
ART AVAILABLE ON REQUEST. Call Jane Stojak at 215-763-0110 or email
janestojak@aol.com for art.
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