For A Palestinian
By (Author) Bilal Hasna
By (author) Aaron Kilercioglu
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Methuen Drama
5th September 2022
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Literary studies: plays and playwrights
Modern and contemporary plays (c 1900 onwards)
812.6
Paperback
56
Width 129mm, Height 198mm
"An astonishingly powerful play with a mesmeric performance from Bilal Hasna. He is an important young Palestinian voice who deserves a wide audience." - Palestine Solidarity Campaign But theres this feeling. And it really is impossible to translate. But if you feel it you know what it is. If youre watching this and youre Palestinian, you know what it is. Bilal has always been obsessed with love stories. Here he tells you his favourite: the true story of Palestinian translator Wael Zuaiter. Join Bilal as he ventures through the orange groves of Jaffa, Rome's piazzas, and the Duty-Free aisles of Luton Airport, piecing together this untold story, and asking what it means to be a Palestinian in the West. After receiving standing ovations and glowing audience reviews when it appeared as a work in progress in 2021, WoLab returned to Camden Peoples Theatre and transferred to the Bristol Old Vic in Autumn 2022, with Bilal Hasna and Aaron Kilercioglus acclaimed, For A Palestinian. The play was supported by P21 Gallery, Palestine Solidarity Campaign, Naamod, Bristol Palestine Museum and Cultural Centre, and New Diorama Theatre.
An astonishingly powerful play with a mesmeric performance from Bilal Hasna. He is an important young Palestinian voice who deserves a wide audience. * Palestine Solidarity Campaign *
Aaron Kilercioglu was raised in Vienna by Turkish-Canadian parents. He has recently written plays about diasporic identity formation, Middle Eastern politics, and how funghi might just be the key to saving our world. Aarons previous work has won the Methuen Drama Other Prize and the BOLD Playwrights Prize, as well as being shortlisted for the Theatre503 International Playwriting Prize. He has been a member of the Royal Court Young Agitators and the London Library Emerging Writers Programme. His short films have been screened at festivals across the world. He also translates between English, German, and Turkish. Aaron lives and works in South London.