UK’s ‘Harry Potter’ parody show headed to Dubai

‘Potted Potter’ creators and stars Daniel Clarkson and Jefferson Turner. (Supplied)
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Updated 27 August 2022
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UK’s ‘Harry Potter’ parody show headed to Dubai

  • ‘Potted Potter’ played to sold-out theaters globally

DUBAI: If the Muggle in you has been craving some wizardry and magic, a Harry Potter stage show may be just what the doctor ordered. The “Potted Potter” play — a 70-minute parody that summarizes all the major plot points of the seven Harry Potter books — is headed to Dubai this October. Fans can expect two shows a day on Oct. 22 and 23 at the Theatre by QE2.

Playing to sold-out theaters all over the world, the Olivier Award-nominated “Potted Potter” has been created by and stars Daniel Clarkson and Jefferson Turner. From a live Quidditch game and a fire-breathing dragon to all the major characters from the beloved book series by J.K. Rowling, the show aims to be a treat for both Harry Potter fans and newbies alike.

The show was staged at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in 2006 and has had two off-Broadway runs over 30 weeks, along with five West End runs and has also traveled to Las Vegas, Canada and Australia.

Tickets to the show start from AED140 ($38).
 


Saudi driving influencer urges women to get behind the wheel

Balqees has not only become a professional driver but an advocate for women’s empowerment on the road. (Supplied)
Updated 01 July 2024
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Saudi driving influencer urges women to get behind the wheel

  • TikTok star Balqees tells viewers of her driving content to ‘invest’ in themselves

RIYADH: Balqees, a trailblazing Saudi female driving enthusiast, is channeling the power of social media to empower women to get their license to drive — and do it well.

“I began driving and developing a fascination for it as a teenager, seeing it as a way to make life easier and, honestly, an adventure,” she told Arab News.

Her love and enthusiasm for driving only grew stronger after she left the Kingdom to pursue her studies. Upon her return in 2010, Balqees became a vocal advocate for women’s empowerment on the road.

Balqees, Saudi driving influencer

Recognizing the need for more accessible and engaging driving education for women, Balqees created a TikTok account to share her knowledge and expertise with the masses.

“My team was very supportive of me and insisted that I open a TikTok account, even though I was initially skeptical about whether that was my target audience,” she explained.

HIGHLIGHT

Recognizing the need for more accessible and engaging driving education for women, Balqees created a TikTok account to share her knowledge and expertise with the masses. 

The decision proved to be a game-changer, as Balqees’ account on TikTok (@b9ths10) has since amassed nearly 600,000 followers, indicating a market for such content tailored toward women in the region.

Balqees’ videos are meticulously produced, tackling topics like safe driving, common driving mistakes and obstacles in an engaging and informative manner. She also demonstrates and explains what to do in tricky situations on the road.

“We work very hard on our videos as one video takes days to create and produce, but the team helps and supports me,” she noted.

Invest in yourself and learning experiences because you are the only one who will save yourself.

Balqees, Saudi driving influencer

Despite facing naysayers, Balqees has remained steadfast in her determination to contribute her perpsective on the skill.

“Not all people in my life were supportive, as many were asking me to stop having big dreams and give up on my passions, but I didn't listen to the negativity and continued doing what I like to do and didn’t give up,” she said with unwavering resolve.

Balqees’ perseverance has paid off in remarkable ways. Her compelling content and infectious enthusiasm for driving have attracted the attention of major brands, both in the automotive industry and beyond, making her a prominent voice in the community.

“Social media is a sea full of opportunities, and we should watch it to benefit from and exchange experiences and make a profit,” she added.

Balqees’ message to young women who are still hesitant to start driving is one of empowerment and self-belief: “Invest in yourself and learning experiences because you are the only one who will save yourself.”

Balqees stands as an example of what can be achieved when women are given the freedom to pursue their passions and dreams.

Her story is a testament to the power of perseverance, resilience, and the transformative impact that women can have on society when they are empowered to take the wheel.

 


Saudi Arabia’s XP Music Futures announces theme for 2024 edition

Updated 01 July 2024
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Saudi Arabia’s XP Music Futures announces theme for 2024 edition

DUBAI: XP Music Futures, the annual music conference held in Saudi Arabia, has announced the theme for its 2024 edition: Flourish.

The theme focuses on scaling up on the reach and impact of XP by collaborating with educational entities to grow impact on the youth, work with partners on experiences and demo lab, plus focus on the maturity of the event’s six initiatives.

The MDLBEAST event, to be held at Riyadh’s JAX District from Dec. 5 to 7, is due to offer a  program that spans both day and night. The three-day conference returns with dozens of sessions including fireside chats, keynotes, panel discussions, fishbowls and workshops designed around growing the music scene and industry within the MENA region.

In this year’s edition, XP Music futures will once again play host to a number of initiatives that encourage growth within the regional music industry.

Xperform will provide a platform to regional talents to perform at XP Music Futures and grow their music career with MDLBEAST Records. Judges for this year are Shamma Hamdan, Defencii, Hassan Abouelrouss and Rawan Alfassi.   

Xchange tackles the latest issues in the region’s music industry and curates a series of workshops that take place in cities ahead of the XP conference. The key objective of the workshops is to invite key experts to dive into XP’s pillars to identify hot topics for the conference programme, and to give an opportunity for community building between  members of the region’s music industry.

Hunna, derived from the Arabic plural of “she,” is a women-led initiative on a mission to amplify women in the music industry.  

Storm Shaker, a DJ competition, will invite aspiring DJs from all over the MENA region and beyond, to showcase their craft.

The Artist Management Bootcamp (AMB) is also set to return as a hybrid two-week bootcamp designed to equip aspiring artist managers with the skills and knowledge needed to navigate the music industry.

Sound Futures will invite aspiring musicians and innovators to pitch their ideas to music industry investors, with the goal of securing funding and mentorship for their careers. 


Ismail Kadare: A bright light in Albania’s darkest days

Updated 01 July 2024
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Ismail Kadare: A bright light in Albania’s darkest days

  • Ismail Kadare: ‘Literature has often produced magnificent works in dark ages as if it was seeking to remedy the misfortune inflicted on people’
  • Kadare was often tipped to win a Nobel prize for his towering body of work which delved into his country’s myths and history

TIRANA: Novelist Ismail Kadare — who has died aged 88 — used his pen as a stealth weapon to survive Albania’s paranoid communist dictator Enver Hoxha.
His sophisticated storytelling — often likened to that of George Orwell or Franz Kafka — used metaphor and irony to reveal the nature of tyranny under Hoxha, who ruled Albania from 1946 until his death in 1985.
“Dark times bring unpleasant but beautiful surprises,” Kadare told AFP.
“Literature has often produced magnificent works in dark ages as if it was seeking to remedy the misfortune inflicted on people,” he said.
He was often tipped to win a Nobel prize for his towering body of work which delved into his country’s myths and history to dissect the mechanisms of totalitarianism.
Kadare’s novels, essays and poems have been translated into more than 40 languages, making him the Balkans’ best-known modern novelist.
The prolific writer broke ranks with isolated Albania’s communists and fled to Paris a few months before the government collapsed in the early 1990s.
He wrote about his disillusionment in his book “The Albanian Spring — The Anatomy of Tyranny.”
Born in Gjirokaster in southern Albania on January 28, 1936, Kadare was inspired by Shakespeare’s “Macbeth” as a child and counted the playwright, as well as Dante and Cervantes, among his heroes.
Ironically, the dictator Hoxha hailed from the same mountain town.
Kadare studied languages and literature in Tirana before attending the Gorky Institute of World Literature in Moscow.
After returning to Albania in 1960, he initially won acclaim as a poet before publishing his first novel “The General of the Dead Army” in 1963, a tragicomic tale that was later translated into dozens of other languages.
His second novel, “The Monster,” about townspeople who live in a permanent state of anxiety and paranoia after a wooden Trojan horse appears outside the town, was banned.
His 1977 novel “The Great Winter,” though somewhat favorable toward the regime, angered Hoxha devotees who deemed it insufficiently laudatory and demanded the “bourgeois” writer’s execution.
Yet while some writers and other artists were imprisoned — or even killed — by the government, Kadare was spared.
Hoxha’s widow Nexhmije said in her memoirs that the Albanian leader, who prided himself on a fondness for literature, saved the internationally acclaimed author several times.
Archives from the Hoxha era show that Kadare was often close to being arrested, and after his poem “Red Pashas” was published in 1975 he was banished to a remote village for more than a year.
Kadare, for his part, denied any special relationship with the brutal dictator.
“Against whom was Enver Hoxha protecting me? Against Enver Hoxha?” Kadare told AFP in 2016.
Academics have often pondered whether Kadare was a darling of Hoxha or a brave author risking prison and death?
“Both are true,” suggested French publisher Francois Maspero, who raised the question in his book “Balkans-Transit.”
Writing such work under a government in which a single word could be turned against its author “requires, above all, determination and courage,” Maspero wrote.
“My work obeyed only the laws of literature, it obeyed no other law,” Kadare said.
In one of his last interviews in October, when he was clearly frail, Kadare told AFP that writing transformed “the hell of communism... into a life force, a force which helped you survive and hold your head up and win out over dictatorship.
“I am so grateful for literature, because it gives me the chance to overcome the impossible.”
In 2005 Kadare won the inaugural Man Booker International Prize for his life’s work. He was described by judge John Carey as “a universal writer in a tradition of storytelling that goes back to Homer.”
A father of two, Kadare told AFP that he enjoyed seeing his name “mentioned among the candidates” for the Nobel prize, even if the topic “embarrasses” him.
“I am not modest because... during the totalitarian regime, modesty was a call to submission. Writers don’t have to bow their heads.”


Dates announced for 2024 AZIMUTH festival in Saudi Arabia’s AlUla

Updated 01 July 2024
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Dates announced for 2024 AZIMUTH festival in Saudi Arabia’s AlUla

DUBAI:  The annual AZIMUTH festival in Saudi Arabia’s AlUla will run from Sept. 19-21 under the theme “Until the Sun Comes Up,” organizers announced on Monday.

The 2024 line-up will feature more than 30 local, regional, and international artists, with the performers set to be revealed in the coming weeks.

Previous headliners include Jason Derulo, The Chainsmokers, Tinie Tempah, The Kooks, Jorja Smith, Peggy Gou and Thievery Corporation.

The event is part of the AlUla Moments calendar, which features five festivals offering experiences in art, culture, music, nature, wellness, equestrian activities, dining, and astronomy.

The debut edition took place in 2020, followed by the second edition in 2022 and a third in 2023.


Review: Despite all-star cast, ‘A Family Affair’ is one to forget

Updated 01 July 2024
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Review: Despite all-star cast, ‘A Family Affair’ is one to forget

LONDON: Despite the dreadfully derivative title of “A Family Affair,” this new Netflix movie does appear to have some pretty serious heft. It’s directed by Richard LaGravenese (writer of “The Fisher King” and “The Horse Whisperer” and director of “Beautiful Creatures” and “P.S. I Love You”), and stars Nicole Kidman, Zac Efron, Joey King and Kathy Bates. Zara (King) quits her job as personal assistant to movie star Chris Cole (Efron), but when he comes to her house to beg her to come back, an unlikely romance blossoms between Chris and Zara’s mother, Brooke (Kidman). Despite Zara’s protestations, the two carry on their relationship — cue a series of sort-of romantic, sort-of comedic set pieces and some awkward exchanges between Zara (keen to forge a career in the movie business) and her mother. Where this formula breaks down is that “A Family Affair” isn’t particularly romantic, or even particularly funny.

'A Family Affair' is now streaming on Netflix. (Supplied) 

Efron is far more entertaining as the empty-headed Hollywood douchebag at the movie’s outset and Chris’s transition to heartfelt nice guy simply doesn’t land – it’s hard to see what Brooke (supposedly an extremely talented and intelligent woman) would even see in the obnoxious idiot who caused her daughter to quit. King makes for an enigmatically clumsy lead and is by far and away the best thing about the movie — largely because most of her scenes aren’t transfixed by the awkward romance between Brooke and Chris. Kidman, on the other hand, is really slumming it here, saddled with material that is a waste of her considerable talents. Writer Carrie Solomon’s dialog, at times, is simply two people repeating lines back at one another — it wasn’t cute during the heyday of the rom-com and it’s not cute now.

For all the movie’s potential, “A Family Affair” just winds up feeling empty. An exploration of the power dynamic between an older woman and a younger, famous man — and the impact it can have on families on both sides — could have been fascinating. Sadly for this movie, it’s a subject explored in far more interesting way in “The Idea of You,” which starred Anne Hathaway and Nicholas Galitzine and came out several months ago.