Attending Okemos High School in the 80s, award-winning playwright Heather Raffo enveloped herself in the arts. She was the lead in several plays, was a violinist in the orchestra and sang in the choir. Raffo remembers, “It was hugely exciting. I was born to be an artist but was always looking for an outlet. Okemos formed me as a bridge builder.”
Her
acclaimed play “9 Parts of Desire” will be playing at Williamston Theatre Jan.
27 – Feb. 27.
“Growing up
in Okemos was so important for me. Although my father was an Iraqi, I am white,
Catholic, and blond and I felt that I was passing. It made it possible to build
a bridge between communities. It’s the foundation for how I started my work [as
an actress and playwright]. I’m like a translator.”
From OHS,
Raffo received her undergraduate at University of Michigan. “My father didn’t
want me to be a theater major, so I majored in English literature and took all
the acting classes I could.”
After
Michigan, she went on to University of San Diego for her Master of Fine Arts,
and went to England to study at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London.
“When in
England, I traveled through Europe and the Middle East, and ended up in
Baghdad.”
Although Raffo’s father, George Raffo, left Iraq in 1976, her family had never been back.
It was her
visit to Baghdad that transformed her life and her career. She visited all of
the relatives she never knew and soaked up the Iraqi culture.
“It was a
life altering experience,” says Raffo. “I found a proud family culture that was
warm and welcoming. And I loved seeing pictures of my father when he was
eight.”
She was also
stunned by witnessing a bombed-out Baghdad, but whose people simply climbed over
the rubble to go about their daily lives.
She found a city that was both modern and ancient.
“I brought
back shoe boxes of pictures and my dad wept over then. He had been a civil
engineer and worked for the State of Michigan. He passed away in 2020.”
After
returning from Baghdad in 1993, she began to make a life for herself in New
York but was constantly thinking about her experience in Iraq. Finally she
began to write what was to become “9 Parts of Desire”, published in 1998.
She
fashioned the play as a one-woman show depicting nine Iraqi women who existed
in different time periods of Iraqi history, different religions and different
cultures, telling their stories. Each character lands in her own place and
time. It was completed during the US-Iraqi war.
Raffo says,
“It was wonderful to write but I was shocked because every theater turned it
down. There really wasn’t an understanding of Iraqi culture out there. There was no “Cosby Show” for Arabs. We were
very isolated. “
Ultimately,
there was one brave producer who agreed to mount the play (with Raffo playing
all nine characters) and it quickly became a huge hit, playing off Broadway,
selling out the house for a total of nine months. Raffo says, “We found that
audiences are willing to have deep and difficult conversations in the middle of
a war, and many institutions are not so brave.”
Raffo says,
“After the New York run we took it on tour and in 2009 we did a concert version
at the Kennedy Center. Suddenly countries from around the world wanted to do it.
So far “9 Parts” has been performed in Brazil, Turkey, India, Greece, Sweden,
Israel, Malta, England, Canada and Mexico.”
The play
received rave reviews and feature articles from all the major press outlets in
the US. The New York Times called the play “Powerful! Impassioned! Vivid!
Memorable!” The New Yorker exclaimed “An
example of how art can remake the world. A triumph. Thrilling.”
In addition,
it was recently announced that “9 Parts” is being made into a movie, sponsored
by Detroit Public Theater, Pennsylvania People Light Theater and DPTV public
TV.
One would
think that Raffo’s father would be extremely proud of his daughter traveling to
Baghdad, finding her roots and delving into the history of Iraq and write a
play. The playwright says, “Dad had very mixed feelings at first. He was
confused. He could not understand why I was working on it. He thought it would ruin my career. He never
considered himself an Iraqi-American, he was an American. He was totally
assimilated. He never looked back. And also, he was concerned with my safety.”
But after
George Raffo saw the play several times and saw how it moved the audiences,
sometimes to tears, he began to understand how powerful art can be.
When he
passed away, Raffo came back to Okemos with her family for several months and
added the experience with her father and other changes to modify “9 Parts” into
a new edition. The Williamston
production will be the first performance since Covid and the first time with
the new material.
Raffo is
thrilled that it is being produced at Williamston. “This is really really special. It’s being
done in a theater so close to my house and near the church I went to as a child,
St. Mary Catholic Church and it is staring one of my very closest friends,
Sarab Kamoo. I’m very excited.”
IF YOU GO
Opening night is Feb 4.
Showtimes: Thursday and Fridays, 8 p.m.; Saturdays, 3 p.m. and 8 p.m. and
Sundays at 2 p.m. For tickets, williamstontheatre.org or (517) 655-SHOW (7469).
1 comment:
Thank you, Ken, for this detailed background information for this powerful play. It is good to learn about this talented and dedicated author and playwright!
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