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Wajdi Mouawad discusses Scorched, his searing play about the Lebanese war

Wajdi Mouawad discusses Scorched, his searing play about the Lebanese war

Lebanese-Canadian playwright Wajdi Mouawad probes the horrors of war in his hit play Scorched. ((Getty Images) )

In the last 10 years, Wajdi Mouawad has emerged as a major force in Qubcois theatre. The Lebanese-Canadian playwright has documented the first-generation immigrant experience through a series of powerful, often epic plays that have won him praise and prizes in his home province and abroad. He has received the Governor Generals Award in Canada and been dubbed a Knight in the National Order of Arts and Letters in France. He has founded companies in Montreal and Paris and is currently artistic director for French theatre at Ottawas National Arts Centre(NAC).

The Lebanese civil war "was a very shameful war, where fathers killed sons, where sons killed their brothers, where sons raped their mothers," Mouawad says. "They didnt want to explain to my generation what had happened.Strangers had to tell me my own story." Wajdi Mouawad

So why have so few English Canadians heard of him? Mouawad writes in French and, even though his plays are being translated, theyve had few productions outside la belle province. However, thats starting to change. Last year, Torontos Tarragon Theatre and the NAC teamed up to produce a gripping English-language version of his 2003 play Incendies translated by Linda Gaboriau, it was retitled Scorched. It was so successful (grabbing Torontos Dora Mavor Moore theatre award for best production) that the Tarragon has remounted it this season and is touring it across Canada. The show, directed by Richard Rose, will visit two major western Canadian theatres Winnipegs Manitoba Theatre Centre and Edmontons Citadel as well as Centaur, Montreals main English-language company.

Audiences confronting Mouawads work for the first time will likely be overwhelmed. Big, violent, heart-wrenching, jaw-dropping and, at times, surprisingly funny, Scorched has the broad scope we expect from Mouawads coeval, Robert Lepage, but wedded to the emotional devastation of a Greek tragedy. In fact, Scorched bids to outdo Sophocless Oedipus Rex in its final horrifying revelation.

Mouawad is quick to acknowledge his debt. "I always have Sophocles in my head," he says during a recent phone interview from his Montreal home. For Mouawad, English is a third language, after French and Arabic, and he chooses his words carefully in explaining that the Greek tragedians along with the work of that modern master, Kafka are his literary idols. "They not only inspire me, they give me the oxygen so I can live [as an artist]. I would be lost if I hadnt found them."

The classical resonance seems appropriate, since most of Scorched takes place in an unnamed land that is clearly Mouawads native Lebanon, the site of ancient Phoenicia and a country where horrors worthy of an antique tragedy have been perpetrated in modern times. The play follows the paths of immigrant twins Janine and Simon, who make separate journeys back to the Middle East to fulfil the dying requests of their mother. Janine must find their father, who they thought died before they were born; Simon must track down a brother they never knew they had. In their searching, the two siblings begin to uncover the unknown early life of their mother, Nawal, a refugee and resistance fighter during her countrys bloody civil war.

Janick Hbert, foreground, plays the young Nawal, a Lebanese peasant turned refugee and resistance fighter, in the touring production of Scorched. ((Paul Fujimoto/Tarragon Theatre))

Its a tale close to the 39-year-old Mouawads own experiences. He was born in Lebanon in 1968, but fled with his family after the civil war broke out in 1975. They went first to France, then to Canada in 1983. Like the character Nawal, Mouawads parents never spoke of the war to their children.

"It was a very shameful war, where fathers killed sons, where sons killed their brothers, where sons raped their mothers," Mouawad says. "They didnt want to explain to my generation what had happened." Instead, he learned about it from reading French and U.S. historians: "Strangers had to tell me my own story."

Now Mouawad has reclaimed that story. While Scorched is fiction, it draws on real-life characters and events. Nawal, its central figure, was partly inspired by a woman Mouawad met eight years ago, who had attempted to assassinate the commander of the South Lebanon Army in the 1980s and was interned in the armys notorious El-Khiam prison for 10 years. She spent her sentence in solitary confinement, in a cell next to the torture room, Mouawad says. "For 10 years, she heard the crying and pain of the tortured. To try not to become mad, she began to sing. She sang the songs she knew popular songs. The other people in the jail, who heard this woman but never saw her, called her The Woman Who Sings. She gave them hope and courage to survive."

Scorched is only the second play in a projected four-play cycle. The first instalment, Littoral (translated as Tidelines), won Mouawad the 2000 Governor Generals Award for French drama; the third, Forts (Forests), premiered in 2006. Mouawad is preparing to write the fourth and final play, to be titled Ciel(s) (Sky(s)), next year. All four confronting tragedies of the past, whether Lebanons specifically or, in the case of Forts, those of the entire 20th century, from the Holocaust to the Montreal Massacre.

Its heavy stuff, but Mouawads writing also has its humorous side. One of the main characters in Scorched is a fussy Montreal notary, executor of Nawals will, whose malapropisms provide much-needed comic relief. Early plays like Wedding Day at the Cro-Magnons and Willy Protagoras is Shut in the Toilets are filled with black comedy and farce. And Mouawads latest piece, Seuls, is a wry bagatelle that he wrote as a breather between Forests and Sky(s). In the one-man show, which hell perform at the NAC in October, Mouawad plays a stressed-out theatre scholar fixated on Robert Lepage.

It may be his way of dealing with inevitable Lepage comparisons. Like that multi-faceted theatre wizard, Mouawad also directs and acts; favours big, ambitious projects; works internationally; and has even branched off into film. (Mouawad directed a movie version of Littoral in 2004.) Mouawad agrees that the older man was a huge influence early in his career; he says seeing Lepages The Dragons Trilogy while he was a student at the National Theatre School in the late 1980s changed his notions of what theatre could be. However, in style and content, the two are very different artists.

The Tarragon Theatre's original production of Scorched starred, from left, David Fox, Sophie Goulet, Valerie Buhagiar and Kelli Fox. ((Paul Fujimoto/Tarragon Theatre) )

Mouawad points out that the visually stunning work of Lepage is preoccupied with the quest going out into the world while his own text-driven plays are odysseys journeys back home. "The plays of Robert are about Qubcois trying to discover the world, in Japan, Russia, France, London," he says. "In all my plays, there is the story of someone who discovers his origins are different from what he thinks, and he tries to get back to those origins." In fact, the men represent two generations of French-Canadians. Lepage, 50, is the child of the Quiet Revolution, and has sought to define his own culture by exploring others. Mouawad represents those first-generation Canadians who are still struggling to come to terms with the countries and cultures theyve left behind.

Its not that Mouawad isnt fully engaged in Canadian culture. He recently wrote a much-circulated open letter to Prime Minister Stephen Harper, protesting the governments cuts to federal arts funding. The missive, written with the same passion as his plays, accuses the Harper government of showing contempt for the arts.

"The voice of the artist needs to be heard more in Canada," Mouawad tells me. "Weve begun to think that art is not important, that politics is the business of reality and the artists are dreamers. Its important to take these opportunities to make our voices heard." To date, hes had no response from the PMs office. "If I had an answer, at least it would mean there is a dialogue," he says with a sigh. "Instead, there is indifference. The government doesnt care what the artist has to say. Its sad."

Scorched runs at Torontos Tarragon Theatre to Sept. 28; at Montreals Centaur Theatre Oct. 7-Nov. 2; at Winnipegs Manitoba Theatre Centre Nov. 13-29 and at Edmontons Citadel Theatre Jan. 10-Feb. 1, 2009. It returns to the Tarragon June 9-28, 2009.

Martin Morrow writes about the arts for CBCNews.ca.