[page 267]
Mahmood Karimi-Hakak
Religion and the Actor:
The Art of Mastering Double Standards Under The Theocratic Islamic Regime
of Iran
"What
is interesting in an actor is what he can not do yet he tries," says
Joseph Campbell, and thus he summarizes in one sentence what the acting
profession has faced within the Islamic Republic of Iran for the past
quarter of a century.
Speaking
about the actor and his religious beliefs within the world of Islam is
indeed a monumental task, which would require years of research and a
lifelong dedication of a team of experts and scholars -- a task that is
both beyond the patience of this speaker and the scope of this panel.
Islam is a huge religion worldwide and there are many different interpretations
of Islamic laws within the Muslim societies.
Therefore
instead of speaking in general about Islam's treatment of the art of acting,
I will narrow my attention to my native Iran, and within Iran's Islamic
history I will concentrate on the last twenty-five years, and the Islamic
Republic of Iran, which claims to lead the world of Shiite Muslims. And
since this paper is not to exceed fifteen minutes allowed, I will further
focus on what I personally witnessed in my seven years of theatre and
film experience in Iran, from 1993-1999.
The
actor, in his portrayal of the character, is indeed in search of an identity.
This search finds a more urgent need within a society that oppresses its
artists by creating vague limitations that are solely dependent on the
interpretation of the officials in charge. Therefore acting under such
conditions is often reduced to a series of gestures, which can then be
interpreted by the audience, allowing for a more immediate interaction
between the audience and the stage.
In
his life off the stage, too, the actor is required to put up a "front",
to borrow Erving Goffman's phrase used in his 1959 book, The Presentation
of Self in Everyday Life, in order to avoid labels of un-Islamic behavior,
which will surely follow official objections to the actor's working in
his [page 268] profession. Thus, an
actor's acting is no longer limited to the portrayal of a character on
stage; rather, his entire life becomes one big search for both his artistic
and his social identity.
"The
process of establishing social identity," describes Adam Barnhart
in his 1994 essay on Goffman "then becomes closely allied to the
concept of the 'front,' which is described as 'that part of the individual's
performance which regularly functions in a general and fixed fashion to
define the situation for those who observe the performance." And
his "Interaction is viewed as a 'performance,' shaped by environment
and audience, constructed to provide others with 'impressions' that are
consonant with the desired goals of the actor" both on and off the
stage.
It
is within this unique circumstance that the training of an actor in Islamic
society is a mishmash of hurriedly and illogically chosen exercises borrowed
from various techniques and adapted, often inaccurately, to the limitations
prescribed by the Islamic laws.
As
result, in a country with hundreds of schools, universities, colleges,
institutions and public and private acting classes, and thousands of interested,
dedicated and talented students, only a handful of so-called "trained"
actors are equipped to portray even the least complicated characters.
Thus
the Iranian film directors (and I use film as an example because the western
audience is more acquainted with Iranian films than Iranian theatre) use
raw and untrained actors to portray their major and more complex characters.
When
an individual is interested in studying acting at the university level
in today's Islamic Iran, he or she, like all other incoming freshmen,
is expected to go through a series of steps where his or her degree of
Muslimness is tested. Religious minorities are exempt from this stage,
although they too must abide by all Islamic codes of conduct when in public.
While
this degree of belief testing varies from instructor to instructor, and
class to class, participation in all classes--including the private ones--requires
a certain code of standard behavior and conduct including separation of
male and female students, observance of a certain [page
269] level of distance, and the use of the plural "you"
when addressing or working with people of the opposite sex, and of course
the Islamic dress code.
These
differences from the way we conduct our acting classes here in the west
create a tremendous number of limitations on the instructors' teaching
and/or the student's learning process. The enforcement of these laws and
regulations is also interpretational and depends on the judgment of the
Chair, VPAA, President and the owners and/or directors of the private
institutions, and their personal relationship with the in-house clergy
whose job it is to represent and enforce the laws of Islam within that
specific institution.
All
this will call for some very creative solutions to the problems of training
an actor. For example, a western-educated female friend of mine who teaches
at one of the largest theatre departments in the country has found a solution
for teaching breathing to her students that would keep this basic exercise
within the limits of the law, while helping her students learn this essential
step in their career.
Being
a woman, she cannot touch the belly of her male students. Because the
Islamic laws do not permit the students to wear tight fitting shirts,
she would not be able to tell whether they are actually using their abdomens
to breath with. Therefore she devised a creative solution. She had a wooden
stick made in a shape of a T with which she could feel the students' abdomens
without getting close to them.
In
another incident, one of my own directing students faced an interesting
challenge when he decided to present the balcony scene from Romeo and
Juliet as his final project. As the laws require, the actors were
not allowed to touch one another, nor could they even look into each other's
eyes. Such behavior was considered immodest and thus un-Islamic.
This
creative student found his solution in casting a sister and brother in
the two roles. The school clergy agreed with the scene's presentation
only if the director would announce at the start of the scene that these
two actors are indeed brother and sister, even though their names printed
in the program would have already suggested that such was their relationship.
[page
270] However, because all these "laws" and "regulations"
are totally dependent on the interpretation of the person in charge, in
this case the clergy, this same scene was acted by two unrelated actors
a semester later, who were permitted to even hold hands, and of course
exchange voluptuous glances with each other.
When
I questioned the gentleman clergy on his contradictory verdict, he responded
that "Surely you know that this [the later] scene is directed by
someone who is a true believer and a devout Muslim!" and went on
to say that because of her undoubted devotion to Islam, and the Islamic
laws, the audience will recognize the "purity" in her direction.
These
double standards exist all over the society and students, regardless of
where they study, realize early on their journey that an official code
of conduct is in force and they must abide by it regardless of whether
or not they believe in it.
The
actor, therefore, learns to pretend to observe Islamic laws, if he is
to have any hope of appearing on stage. Such pretence causes a constant
struggle within the actor who may not practice these restrictions at home
and/or in private.
The
actor is encouraged, on the other hand, by almost all methods and techniques
of actor training, to be truthful in order to be believable.
Such a behavioral binary may lead to a kind of artistic schizophrenia,
if you will, that I witnessed in almost every actor I trained, worked
with, or otherwise came in contact with while in Iran.
"The
actor," to use Barnhart again, "in order to present a compelling
front, is forced to both fill the duties of the social role and communicate
the activities and characteristics of the role to other people in a consistent
manner." And because, regardless of the mental state of the actor,
the curtain must go up, the actor is expected to find ways to communicate
to his audience, his dilemma. Thus, the actor tries to invent a series
of often-original verbal and non-verbal symbols in portrayal of the character.
These symbols are in turn interpreted and understood by the audience,
who themselves live under similar imposed social and behavioral restrictions.
[page
271] Therefore "believability" is constructed in
terms of what the audience knows the actor cannot do in presentation of
the character's intentions. This kind of communication between the stage
and the audience launches a unique connection that is often more immediate
and urgent and thus more risky and at times even dangerous to the authorities.
Therefore
a great part of the artists' training is concerned with inventing ways
to get around the system, portraying as truthful a character as possible
without having their names added to the official black list. Among the
most important concerns for the survival of theatre practitioners are:
- For playwrights, choosing subject matter
that is of religious significance, i.e. stories about religious figures
and their families
- For directors, casting people recognized for their
loyalty to the ruling religious figures: i.e., bearded men in positive
roles and cleanly shaven men wearing a tie in the negative roles
- For the entire company, observing the Islamic codes
of conduct during the rehearsal period and performances.
To
an audience not acquainted with the limitations imposed, the effort that
is made on the stage may go unnoticed. For instance, in a production of
a popular Iranian play, a few years ago, two young characters, a boy and
a girl, collaborated together to achieve a small victory over their rival
group.
Ecstatic
with their simple victory, they jumped joyfully in the air to give each
other a "high five". Suddenly their hands froze midair. They
pulled away their hands; looked directly at the audience and murmured
"Oh, Oh. That was close! The whole production could have been in
trouble."
The
audience cheered. My companion, who had returned to Iran for the first
time since the Islamic Revolution, could not understand the reasons for
the audiences' enthusiasm. I explained: "It is un-Islamic for a man
and a woman to touch. That is why these two stopped [page
272] their hands from touching in mid air. The audience cheers
to let them know that they understood their point."
A
few months later, I saw a play directed by a person who was considered
a devoté of the regime and thus was less likely to have his work
censored or restricted. In this play there was a bedroom scene in which
a man was to woo his loverhere, for the sake of the public's chastity,
changed to his wife.
The
creative director staged the scene in such a way that its content was
communicated to the audience beyond words. A bed was placed in the center
of the stage with the man and the woman standing on each side of it facing
the audience. The lines were directly delivered to the audience, thus
avoiding any possibility of eye contact between the two.
There
was a basket of fresh cucumbers in front of the male actor. He passionately
peeled the cucumbers, one by one, working his way from the smallest to
the largest. As he spoke, he handed them to the woman, who eagerly ate
each and every one of the cucumbers as she delivered her lines. The audience
cheered violently, at times even making arousing remarks.
This
scene, I was told, was modified after the night I had seen the play, which
was during the first week of its performances. The director was forced
to add other fruits to the basket and change a few of the sentences. However,
there is no doubt in my mind that, were the director someone less known
for his or her loyalty to the ruling Islamic ideologies, the entire scene
or even the whole play would not have received performance permission.
The
theatre officials and/or agents of censorship are not the only cultural
authorities in charge of protecting the public's chastity. An objection
could be raised by a single audience member even after the play has been
observed by the officials and received performance permission.
These objections may be as simple as a gesture, a contact, a glance or
a line, whatever that audience member, often placed in the theatre by
the authorities themselves, would deem immodest.
[page
273] In my own production of Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's
Dream an objection was raised to a point in act 2, scene 2. In this
scene the actor playing Hermia was to push Lysander away when he attempts
to lie next to her in the woods. Knowing full well that they could not
touch, I had blocked the scene so that when Hermia makes a pushing gesture
toward Lysander, he would roll away from her. There was at least 10 inches
distance between the two.
An
objection was made because, to quote the official from the Office of Observation
and Evaluation of Theatrical Activities, "There may be a seat among
the audience where, from the angle of a person sitting in that seat, he
may think that the actors touched." We had to increase the distance
to satisfy this Office.
It
is interesting to note that during the same period another play of Shakespeare,
Richard III, was performing in the center of Tehran, in which Richard
actually kneeled down and kissed the hand of Ann. Again the response to
my objection was the degree of loyalty of the other director to Islam
and his apparent observance of Islamic laws.
It
must be mentioned that as I experienced it first hand, often one's degree
of devotion is not measured solely by one's practicing the teachings of
Islam, or even the length of his beard (as was the case in Taliban's Afghanistan),
but by the amount of bribe that one can afford.
After
all, it is a common practice--at least in the Islamic Republic's interpretation
of Islam--that one can purchase back one's missed prayers to the almighty,
thus paving his way to the Promised Land through his pocketbook. Therefore,
paying for one's artistic sins is not totally out of place.
Within
the first couple of years of living in Iran (right after my first film
was pulled off the screen), a friend of mine--himself a world-renowned
film director--came to console me. He gave me an invaluable word of advice.
"Now that you have come to live and practice your art here",
he remarked, "remember! Everyday when you leave your home to meet
with the officials, to secure permissions required for practicing your
art, you must take a few masks with you. [page
274] One for each encounter." Facing my amazed look, he
continued jokingly, "Do not worry, you can put them all back into
the closet once you return home."
Obviously
I did not heed his advice. Midsummer was raided and closed down,
and I was prosecuted for Outrage against the public decorum.(1)
To
summarize, in a society where an artist's work is judged by the degree
of his supposed devotion to a certain set of laws and regulations, or
to certain ideology (and I am talking about the Islamic Republic of Iran),
the actor's artistic survival does not depend on his talent, creativity,
knowledge and training, or even who he know in the business.
What
it does depend on is the length of his beard, the sign of worship stamped
on his forehead and his apparent devotion to the Islamic ideology, all
of which are buyable if the actor had the right price to offer.
He
is therefore wise to learn the art of lying, mendacity and dishonesty
instead of honesty, sincerity and presentation of the truth. And yet,
as Shakespeare reminds us in As You Like It, "the truest poetry
is the most feigning" (3.3.16).
Even
under Islamic regulations, which seek to preserve decorum over truth,
theater practitioners find indirect ways to convey their truth to the
audience. In contemporary Iran--as throughout theatre historythe
arts adapt to restrictions imposed upon them, and through their adaptation,
new styles are created.
Endnotes
- [During his presentation
at ATHE, the author told us that the judge gave him three choices as
punishment for his crime: to pay a rather large sum of money, to spend
a couple of years in prison, or to receive a number of lashes. Mr. Karimi-Hakak
told the judge that he chooses the lashes. The judge asked him why.
Mr. Karimi-Hakak told the court that when he returned to the United
States, he wanted to show them his professional resumé by removing
his shirt and displaying the scars on his back. Outraged, the judge
ordered him to leave both the courtroom and the country. After some
time of harassment, Mr. Karimi-Hakak and his family left the country.
Editor's note]
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