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Reza Abdoh

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Name
  
Reza Abdoh

Role
  
Playwright

Plays
  
The Law of Remains


Reza Abdoh Film to Honor Theatre Visionary Reza Abdoh Cultural Weekly

Died
  
May 12, 1995, New York City, New York, United States

Education
  
University of Southern California

Reza abdoh sleeping with the devil 1990


Reza Abdoh (February 23, 1963 in Tehran, Iran – May 12, 1998 in New York City) was an Iranian-born American director and playwright known for large-scale, experimental theatrical productions, often staged in unusual spaces like warehouses and abandoned buildings.

Contents

Reza Abdoh Featured Reza Abdoh 19631995 Contemporary Performance

Adam Soch – Reza Abdoh: Theatre Visionary (Talk Back), February 25th 2016


Career

Reza Abdoh Featured Reza Abdoh 19631995 My Website

Abdoh was born in Tehran in 1963. In Reza Abdoh, academic Daniel Mufson says that Abdoh often "embellished" his achievements between 1972 and 1983. For example, he may or may not have participated in the Robert Wilson play Ka Mountain in Iran. Mufson says that according to records at the University of Southern California Abdoh studied for one semester in 1979.

Reza Abdoh QUOTES BY REZA ABDOH AZ Quotes

In 1983 he began directing plays, often adapting classics like King Lear, King Oedipus, and Medea in Los Angeles theaters.

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In 1990, Abdoh directed Father Was a Peculiar Man, a multimedia performance produced by En Garde Arts featuring more than 50 performers that occurred across four blocks of New York City's Meatpacking District. That year he also wrote and directed The Hip-Hop Waltz of Eurydice, staged at the Los Angeles Theatre Center. Abdoh called it a "gut reaction to systemic repression and erosion of freedom" in an interview with Thomas Leabhart published in Mime Journal. His work often confronted such issues as race, class and, the AIDS crisis.

Abdoh worked on several productions with the New York City and Los Angeles theater ensemble Dar a Luz, which he formed in 1991. Productions with the company included The Law of Remains (1992), Tight Right White (1993) and Quotations From a Ruined City (1994), co-written with his brother, Salar Abdoh. His later work was called "nightmarish" and used multimedia elements with downtown theater conventions to "bombard" audiences. New York Times critic Stephen Holden called Abdoh "a theatrical visionary" in his obituary.

Abdoh also directed the experimental film The Blind Owl, featuring his partner, Brenden Doyle, in 1992, and made several short videos between 1986 and 1991. He is the subject of the book Reza Abdoh, edited by Daniel Mufson; his papers and videotapes of some performances are kept at the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts [1]. Reza Abdoh: Theatre Visionary, a documentary film about him and his work, was completed by director Adam Soch in 2016.

Abdoh died due to causes related to AIDS in 1998. He was 35.

References

Reza Abdoh Wikipedia