Vancouver Sun

Strings attached

- AHMED HATEM

CAIRON In a tiny Cairo workshop, Mohamed Fawzi Bakkar designs and builds marionette­s from scratch, hoping to revive a traditiona­l art. The 32-year-old spends hours or even days designing puppets inspired by Egyptian life — farmers, street vendors, butchers and the occasional celebrity.

He devotes special care to the faces, hoping to make them as unique and realistic as possible, and then he puts on shows. Puppet shows were traditiona­lly performed for adults and children alike, often as nightly entertainm­ent during Ramadan, the holy month when Muslims fast from dawn to dusk, which began last week. The art form has deep roots in Egypt.

When the Ottoman Sultan Selim the Grim sacked Cairo in the 16th century, he was said to have been so amused by a puppet show depicting the hanging of the vanquished Mamluk ruler that he sent the puppeteer to Istanbul to perform it for his son, the young Suleiman the Magnificen­t.

The most famous show of recent times was El-Laila El-Kebira, or The Big Night, first performed in 1961. The show recreates a mawlid

— popular street festivals held in honour of local holy figures — with folk songs and dancing. The characters include a village leader, a lion tamer and a belly dancer.

On a recent night at a cultural centre in Cairo, Bakkar performed a marionette version of an Umm Kulthum concert, with a puppet standing in for the Egyptian diva, who dominated the airwaves across the Arab world from the 1930s until her death in 1975.

Bakkar laments that there are only two venues for performing puppet shows in Cairo and only a couple dozen marionette artists.

“We all dream of having an academy in Egypt that would teach the art of puppetry and to have a theatre in every city,” he said. “I really dream of having my own theatre.”

 ??  ?? Mohamed Fawzi Bakkar’s work reflects the full spectrum of Egyptian life, from farmers to celebritie­s.
Mohamed Fawzi Bakkar’s work reflects the full spectrum of Egyptian life, from farmers to celebritie­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada