Producing for Radio

A conversation with Paola Cossermelli Messina and Scott RC Levy, two practitioners at the intersection of theatre and sound arts, about what it means to tell stories for radio, from design to production.

From arts professionals looking to expand to a new medium to arts aficionados interested in hearing how radio plays are made, this seminar, discussion, and Q+A will provide an opportunity for everyone to learn something new.

Speakers
Paola Cossermelli Messina
is a PhD candidate in Ethnomusicology at Columbia University in the early stages of her dissertation exploring music, identity and diaspora in and between Lebanon and Brazil. She holds a B.A. in Music and Writing from Sarah Lawrence College and an M.A. in Media Studies from The New School, with a specialization in sound. Her Master's thesis on the oral histories of Iranian women musicians was awarded a Middle East Studies Association's Graduate Student Paper Prize in 2016. Her most recent thesis and project, an experimental ethnography on a jukebox in a lesbian bar, was presented at Harvard's 2021 Graduate Music Forum. A sound designer and audio engineer by trade, she has worked in film and podcasts, and for the past 5 years has produced and edited the Arab Studies Institute's podcast الوضع. She teaches audio workshops at Sarah Lawrence College and, prior to pursuing her PhD, was the Project Manager for CUNY-Creative Arts Team's program Sound Thinking NYC, a free summer intensive for NYC high schoolers interested in careers in music production and audio engineering. She has been a Mason Endowed Fellow (2020-21) and was selected by the Society of Fellows and Heyman Center for the Humanities and the Center for Palestine Studies at Columbia University as the 2021-22 Public Humanities Radio Play Fellow.

Scott RC Levy is an award-winning and acclaimed artistic director, producer, director, actor and educator. He is currently the Executive Director of Green Box Arts in Green Mountain Falls. He served as the Producing Artistic Director of the Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center Theatre Company for 10 seasons. For his work at the FAC, Levy was awarded multiple Henry Awards (including Best Season of a Theatre Company in Colorado), Pikes Peak Arts Council Awards, and other national recognitions. Before moving to Colorado in 2011, Levy was the Producing Artistic Director of the Penobscot Theatre in Maine. Additionally, he has produced, directed and/or performed on, off and off-off Broadway, for the New York International Fringe Festival, at Shakespeare’s Globe in London, the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in Scotland, and in over 60 cities across North America. He has taught for several institutions including: University of Colorado, New York University, the Playwrights Horizons Theater School, the Guggenheim Museum and the University of Maine. Levy holds a BFA in Acting and a Master’s in Educational Theatre, both from New York University. He is a member of Actor’s Equity Association, and serves on the boards of the Cultural Office of the Pikes Peak Region and the Colorado Theatre Guild.

Moderator
Tom Casserly is a New York-based theatre producer and current MIA Candidate at Columbia University's School of International and Public Affairs. He is the Executive Producer of the Center’s NO PLACE | LA MAKAN | لا مكان program and the co-founder of the annual Youmein Creative Media Festival in Tangier, Morocco.


NO PLACE | LA MAKAN | لا مكان is a project of the Center for Palestine Studies produced in partnership with the A. M. Qattan Foundation, with support from Taawon, and the Society of Fellows and Heyman Center for the Humanities at Columbia University.

 
 

Writing for Radio

 
 

A conversation with two celebrated Palestinian writers, Selma Dabbagh and Ahmed Masoud, about what it means to write for radio and their experiences writing in, about, and outside of Palestine. Opening remarks by Brinkley Messick. Q&A session moderated by A. George Bajalia.

This event on 08 July 2021 opened the Center’s NO PLACE | LA MAKAN | لا مكان program, which will commission, develop, produce, and distribute four new radio plays by Palestinian playwrights in 2021-2022. A series of ancillary events will build skills in writing and producing within the audio medium and be open to the public.

Radio Plays in Palestine
In the late 1940s, the Palestinian theatre community was flourishing, marked by the establishment of the Union of Palestinian Artists and the Union of Theater Troupes. Radio dramas had been commonplace for over a decade, with new Arabic plays being produced for both the Palestine Broadcasting Station and the BBC Arabic Service. According to a contemporary critic, these works were “creating a new type of literature—providing a new expression of living thought.” The catastrophe of 1948 decimated this artistic community and its infrastructure. 

NO PLACE revives this platform for new expressions by Palestinian theatre artists working across borders. Above all, radio allows Palestinian writers to explore contemporary themes of presence and absence, public and private lives, silence and the human voice.

Selma Dabbagh is a British Palestinian writer of fiction. Born in Scotland, she has lived in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain, France, Egypt and the West Bank. Her first novel, ‘Out of It,’ (Bloomsbury, 2011) set between London, Gaza and the Gulf was listed as a Guardian Book of the Year. She has also written radio plays ‘The Brick,’ for BBC Radio 4 (nominated for the Imison Award) and ‘Sleep It Off, Dr. Schott,’ for WDR in Germany and had short stories published by Granta, Telegram and International PEN as well as writing for film and stage. Her non-fiction has appeared in the Guardian, London Review of Books, GQ and other publications. She is the editor of ‘We Wrote In Symbols; Love and Lust by Arab Women Writers,’ (Saqi, 2021) and lives in London.
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Ahmed Masoud is a Palestinian writer, director and academic from Gaza and based in the United Kingdom. He is the author of Vanished – The Mysterious Disappearance of Mustafa Ouda, among other works, including two radio plays, Escape from Gaza produced by BBC Radio 4 Play (13 January 2011) and Application 39 produced by WDR Radio in Germany.
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Brinkley Messick is Professor of Anthropology and of Middle Eastern, South Asian and African Studies at Columbia University. He was a founding Co-Director of the Center for Palestine Studies (2010-15), and currently is the Director of the Middle East Institute at Columbia.
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A. George Bajalia is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Wesleyan University and a theatre director who works primarily between Morocco and the United States. He is the co-founder of the annual Youmein Creative Media Festival in Tangier, Morocco and the Northwestern University in Qatar Creative Media Festival.
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NO PLACE | LA MAKAN | لا مكان is a project of the Center for Palestine Studies produced in partnership with the A. M. Qattan Foundation, with support from Taawon, and the Society of Fellows and Heyman Center for the Humanities at Columbia University.