Mahmood Karimi Hakak

President

Mahmood Karimi Hakak, MFA, SED, is a poet, author, translator. In addition, he is a theatre and film artist whose artistic and scholarly works are focused on peace-building through the arts. He is the founder and CEO of Café Dialogue LLC, and Founder and President of Free Culture Invisible LLC. He has created over 70 stage and screen productions in the U.S., Europe, and his native Iran. His creative works explore the ideas of intercultural dialogue and peace-building. His 1979 production of Passion of Ashura aimed at alarming his country against a rushed revolution, where one dictator may replace another. In 1991 he created Seven Stages: A Symphony in Seven Movements as a dialogue between Forough Farrokhzad, Jalal-al-Din Rumi, and seven American youth. Selection from Rumi’s Mathnavi (2000) employed actors from seven different nationalities, each speaking in their native tongue on stage. In his 2001 adaptation Six Characters in Search of An Author, Pirandello’s characters appear through the ruins of the Twin Towers, forcing the attackers and the attacked to face each other. His 2008 adaptation of Aeschylus’ The Persians enforced the devastating aftermath of American military-industrial expansion as evident in the Iraq war. In HamletIRAN (2011), Mahmood placed Shakespeare’s prince within the Iranian Green Movement of 2009, encouraging him to appreciate the significance of “each citizen one vote.”

Karimi Hakak, has published seven plays, two books of poetry, five translations from and into Persian, and numerous articles, reviews, and interviews in both Persian and English. His translation of Hafez (with Bill Wolak), entitled Your Lover’s Beloved: 51 Ghazals by Hafez (CCC Press 2009) was nominated for the Best Translation of Poetry by American Literary Translators Association (ALTA) in 2010. He is a recipient of a number of merits and awards, including Critic’s Choice (1999), three ACTF Merit Awards for Best Direction (2003, 2008, and 2011), and The Raymond Kennedy Excellence in Scholarship Award (2005).

In 2009, Professor Karimi Hakak received a year-long Fulbright award to create an original theatre production with Palestinian and Israeli actors. However, facing the difficulties of staging such play forced him to rethink his idea, instead making The Glass Wall, a documentary film where theatre practitioners of both sides express their opposition to the barrier that has divided them physically, intellectually and artistically.

Professor Karimi Hakak has taught at City University of New York, Towson, Southern Methodist, and Rutgers universities in America, University of Antwerp in Belgium, and Tehran, Azad, Soore, and Teacher’s Training Universities in Iran. Presently he serves as Professor of Creative Arts at Siena College in Upstate New York.