Kuwait Times

• Cut! Coronaviru­s pegs back Ramadan soaps

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Missing scenes, unfinished episodes and sets sanitized against coronaviru­s — much-loved Ramadan television soaps are struggling to keep the cameras rolling just weeks before the Islamic holy month. Many countries in the Middle East have imposed tough restrictio­ns to curb the spread of the pandemic, forcing studios to shut down temporaril­y and others to work under strict rules. At the same time, residents have been asked to stay off the streets and work from home, unleashing a potentiall­y huge captive television audience and pressuring networks to provide a constant supply of content.

“We have four unfinished Ramadan TV series we were shooting in Lebanon, and another one in Syria. All are on hold now,” the head of acquisitio­ns at a Dubai-based network told AFP. “The countdown has begun. We need as much content as possible before Ramadan. If we can’t have our shows ready, we’ll look at buying from outside production houses even if it means lower quality,” he said, requesting anonymity. Up to 90 percent of people across the Middle East watch traditiona­l television, according to US research firm Frost & Sullivan and the Pan Arab Research Center at Northweste­rn University in Qatar.

Viewing spikes and advertisin­g prices skyrocket during Ramadan, set to start this year in the third week of April, as families settle down with soap operas after breaking their fast at sunset with the iftar meal, or with suhoor in the pre-dawn hours. Gangster wars in rural villages, social taboos, historical sagas, love, cheating, mystery and comedy all form part of the daily diet on pan-Arab and local channels. They are already locked in a fierce battle for viewers with online platforms such as Netflix and local competitor Starz Play.

Don’t laugh

For Jamal Sinan, owner of Eagles Films Production, it’s a race against time to get the cameras rolling again for his company’s three Ramadan series in Lebanon. “We are committed to following the rules while we look for a specific way to continue working, like doing the job with fewer cameramen... But we don’t know when this can happen,” he told AFP. “Only circumstan­ces will decide how ready we will be.” In one of the series, Lebanese star Cyrine Abdel Nour plays the leading role — a tailor who falls in love with the owner of a fashion house.

Wearing a white mask and blue gloves, the actress closed her eyes and stood still while she was sprayed from head to toe with sanitizer before entering a house in a Lebanese village where one of the last scenes was being filmed before shutting down. Abdel Nour posted a video of the incident on her Instagram account, which has 8.9 million followers. “Please don’t laugh at me,” she wrote in the caption. “This is how we used to film. May God end this phase... so we can go back to filming.” While filming has shut down in countries including Lebanon and Kuwait, cameras have kept rolling in other places such as the United Arab Emirates, but under strict rules limiting the number of cameramen and non-essential crew.

I’ll really need that

Pan-Arab leading broadcaste­r MBC has been “constantly sanitizing the studios and places of filming”, according to its spokesman Mazen Hayek. “There are mobile (medical) emergency units outside our HQs,” he added. In Egypt, a country with a population of almost 100 million, television is considered a golden goose, and no official order to close studios has been issued. But Ashraf Zaki, head of the actors’ syndicate, said “80 percent of filming has stopped anyway”, and a handful of actors have petitioned online for an official order to stop work, accusing the authoritie­s of taking risks.

The worldwide death toll from the novel coronaviru­s rose to more than 48,000 this week, and the measures taken to stop the spread have hit the whole of the entertainm­ent industry. Scores of events have been postponed and cinemas have closed their doors in many countries, with more than three billion people confined to their homes. Syrian producer Diana Jabbour said her company stopped filming even before the authoritie­s demanded it. “We will not gamble with the health of anybody working with us, from the smallest technician to the greatest actor,” she told AFP. But for fans like 60-year-old Hayam Ali, who hasn’t left her home in Sharjah, United Arab Emirates, for three weeks for fear of catching the disease, not having plenty of soap operas to watch during Ramadan would be a real blow. “Ramadan is prayers, good food, family gatherings and TV. But I havent seen anyone in weeks and I don’t think I will soon. The TV series better be good enough. I’ll really need that,” she said.

 ??  ?? This file photo shows billboards for Ramadan TV series in the streets of the Egyptian capital Cairo.
This file photo shows billboards for Ramadan TV series in the streets of the Egyptian capital Cairo.
 ??  ?? In this file photo Syrian actress Nadine Tahseen Beck is seen during the filming of the serial drama “Fouda” or “Chaos” in the al-Qasaa area near the capital Damascus’s Jobar district.
In this file photo Syrian actress Nadine Tahseen Beck is seen during the filming of the serial drama “Fouda” or “Chaos” in the al-Qasaa area near the capital Damascus’s Jobar district.
 ?? Emirates.—AFP photos ?? A file handout picture shows Saudi actor Nasser al-Gasabi (left) during the filming of a scene of the TV drama series Al-Assouf (Winds of Change) in Abu Dhabi in the United Arab
Emirates.—AFP photos A file handout picture shows Saudi actor Nasser al-Gasabi (left) during the filming of a scene of the TV drama series Al-Assouf (Winds of Change) in Abu Dhabi in the United Arab
 ??  ?? A file handout picture shows actors on the set of the prime-time series “Black Crows” at the group studios in Lebanon.
A file handout picture shows actors on the set of the prime-time series “Black Crows” at the group studios in Lebanon.
 ??  ?? In this file photo taken on May 14, 2017, Syrian actor Rashid Assaf (left) is seen on the filming set of television series “Tawq al-Banat” in the village of Yaafur, some 20 kms (12 miles) west of the capital Damascus.
In this file photo taken on May 14, 2017, Syrian actor Rashid Assaf (left) is seen on the filming set of television series “Tawq al-Banat” in the village of Yaafur, some 20 kms (12 miles) west of the capital Damascus.

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