Talking With... Yussef El Guindi
Playwright of JIHAD JONES & THE KALASHNIKOV BABES
Conducted by Rebecca Wright, InterAct's Literary Director & Dramaturg
& Kate Goldstein, Literary Intern
InterAct: In JIHAD JONES, Barry tries to sell Ashraf on the movie script by calling it a satire; at another point in the play, satire is described as “reductive and mean-spirited.” How do you see the role of satire? How is it different from other kinds of comedy? Would you describe this play as a satire? Can you talk a little bit about the decision to dramatize the very serious issues raised in this play in the form of comedy?
InterAct: You are originally from Egypt. If you don’t mind me asking, have you encountered the kind of racial prejudice and stereotyping that Ashraf experiences in JIHAD JONES? If so, how did that play a role in the genesis and development of this play?
InterAct: There are so many examples of stereotyped representation of Arabs in popular media. In your opinion, do Americans have a particular prejudicial blind spot in relation to Arabs and Arab-Americans?
InterAct: There is a lot of argument in JIHAD JONES about whether art has a responsibility to represent the world in a particular way. Where do you stand on this question? Do you believe that artists have certain moral or political obligations to the world in which they make art and/or the subjects about whom they make it?
InterAct: How do you see the relationship between art and politics?
InterAct: There is also a lot of argument in the play about money. To what extent do you think the big budgets of Hollywood films influence content and how it’s treated? Is this different in theatre (specifically the generally small-budget world of non-profit theatre)?
InterAct: What are you working on now? What’s next for you?
InterAct: Thanks, Yussef.
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