The National - News

Assad meeting sets Syrian TV industry on course to reclaim former glory as filming returns to home soil

▶ New collection of bold dramas broadcasti­ng during Ramadan are gaining regional acclaim, writes

- Bab Al-Hara. Danny Makki

After a tumultuous decade of instabilit­y, fragmentat­ion and security concerns, Syrian television dramas are re-emerging with bold themes and renewed spirit for Ramadan 2024.

The nation’s television sector, long renowned for dynamic performanc­e style and regionally-resonant series, had been in decline.

Syrian shows were produced in neighbouri­ng countries such as Lebanon and Egypt for years, but the industry is now returning to its roots. As the environmen­t in Damascus improves, local filmmakers are able to overcome logistical and bureaucrat­ic challenges.

It is no coincidenc­e that, earlier this month, senior industry figures met Syrian President Bashar Al Assad to discuss removing the obstacles that had impeded TV production­s.

Among those in attendance for the milestone moment were industry luminaries Abbas Al-Noury, Bassam Kousa, Taym Hassan, Bassem Yakhour, Qusai Khawli, Suzan Najmeddine and Nadine Tahseen Beyk. For many, it was their first meeting with the president for years.

Director Rasha Sherbatji was also among those who attended. “The meeting was really aimed at seeing which ways drama production­s could be supported,” he tells The National. “Syrian television is a big part of our lives and something the country is famed for. Its role in society is crucial.

“We spoke about some of the problems we are facing, including censorship and the stages that any filmmaker has to go through to get a production done in the country.”

With a focus on enhancing drama production efficiency, Syria is now aiming to reclaim its role as a major player in the Middle East TV industry. Sherbatji continues: “Syrian shows are popular and in demand. There needs to be a logistical ease to make them, so we presented our concerns because this is an important time for Syrian television drama.”

The outcome of the meeting is already bearing fruit. Ramadan 2024 has been a rejuvenati­on period for Syrian dramas, with fresh bold concepts and many successful production­s captivatin­g audiences.

Top of the list comes Badea’s Children. Sherbatji’s show is currently being shown regionally through streaming site MBC Shahid. It delves deep into the Damascene underworld, following an epic series of confrontat­ions with the four children of a street beggar named Badea (played by Emarat Rizk) who marries a wealthy tannery factory owner.

The gritty drama unfolds with lead actor Sulafa Memar (who plays Sugar – Badea’s only daughter) in a violent, greed-driven struggle for the inheritanc­e of Badea’s tannery tycoon. Sugar is a dancer who lives in an abnormal atmosphere. She stands at odds with her three brothers over money, who view her behaviour as problemati­c.

Sherbatji tells us: “This kind of work is something different. It reflects the street and characters. In every person there is good and bad, dark places and light places. Life takes us to places we don’t want to go, to unexpected situations and circumstan­ces.”

Ali Wajih, who wrote Badea’s Children with fellow screenwrit­er Yamen Al-Hajali, has become one of the sought-after names in region’s drama landscape. In the series, Wajih also takes on an acting role, playing Yaseen, Badea’s youngest child.

Wajih says: “Badea’s Children is the culminatio­n and a new milestone on the writing journey myself and Yamen al-Hajali have been on for the past three years. We are completing our survey of Syrian society. We are documentin­g the psychologi­cal, social and economic changes in the country and its impact on broader society.

“That includes the fall of social norms and values, relationsh­ips and principles, even the change in how love is shown or lived. All of that is central to our themes. We wanted to depict this to the maximum.”

Even outside of Badea’s Children, this year’s Syrian Ramadan season appears to be all about shaking things up and moving away from tired stereotype­s of life in Damascus.

Wajih adds: “Syrian drama this season has seen a sharp developmen­t, especially in terms of distributi­on. There are several high-quality shows that are in the top spots. They have been well received by the Arab masses.”

Taj, meaning crown, has been one of the most acclaimed shows thus far. It is set in Damascus during the French colonial period, with lead actor Taim Hassan playing the role of a boxer in a time of local resistance, split loyalties and betrayal.

The programme has received plaudits for its accurate depiction of Damascus in the 1940s. The show has been praised for tackling the time period with more realism than the long-running series With an overwhelmi­ng visual presence of the city and its architectu­ral characteri­stics in that time period, director Samer Barqawi, who gave the Arab world popular Lebanese drama Al-Haybeh, excels at presenting an unseen history of Damascus.

Constructi­ng entire neighbourh­oods took five months and preparatio­ns before that had taken over a year and a half. Female characters are characteri­sed by the classic looks of the 1940s, a decade renowned famous for distinctiv­e hair accessorie­s. The character Nouran, played by popular Syrian singer Faia Younan in what is her first acting role, is consistent with that style.

Another series that has depicted the Damascus underworld is Qabban’s Money. Directed by Saif Al-Sibai and produced by Ahmad Al-Shiekh, it is also written by Ali Wajih.

The word qabban denotes the scale used by fruit and vegetable merchants. Here, it specifical­ly refers to when a merchant manipulate­s or falsifies the weight of materials to cheat the customer.

The series revolves around a judge called Fares, played by Khaled Al-Qish, who married a woman named Raghad (Sulaf Fawakherji) before she becomes jailed. After her release, she finds herself confronted by the knowledge that her daughter is being raised by his second wife.

Audiences across the region have responded positively to each episode, welcoming the clear departure from previous themes that had left Syrian drama in a state of paralysis, both logistical­ly and creatively. From now on, the Syrian film and television industry aims to build on that momentum and reclaim its central role in the region’s cultural imaginatio­n.

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 ?? MBC ?? Bab Al-Hara was once one of the most popular Syrian dramas, but new programmes on varoius streaming platforms are aiming to outshine it now that production has returned to the country
MBC Bab Al-Hara was once one of the most popular Syrian dramas, but new programmes on varoius streaming platforms are aiming to outshine it now that production has returned to the country
 ?? MBC; Rasha Sherbatji ?? Taj is one of the current big drama hits, top left and right; Rasha Sherbatji, above, directs Badea’s Children
MBC; Rasha Sherbatji Taj is one of the current big drama hits, top left and right; Rasha Sherbatji, above, directs Badea’s Children

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