logo
How Bahrain's Ali Daylami became first person from Gulf to win a Tony Award

How Bahrain's Ali Daylami became first person from Gulf to win a Tony Award

The National6 days ago

In an industry shaped by familiar choruses and blockbuster adaptations, news that an original musical about two star-crossed robots had won Broadway 's top prize made an impact from Manhattan to Manama.
With it, Ali Daylami became the first Bahraini, and person from the Gulf overall, to receive a Tony Award as part of the team that produces Maybe Happy Ending, which won Best Musical earlier this month. It is a personal achievement, but also offers a path forward for a region more accustomed to experiencing drama from the seats.
'I'm definitely energised and inspired to keep going, to find new pieces and work that speak to me and hopefully resonates with people in the same way this show did.' Daylami tells The National from New York.
'But I would love nothing more than to bring that energy back home to the Mena region. Not just as a show, but as something that's built for us, by us.'
Daylami is keenly aware his achievement represents something larger than a testament to personal perseverance. While producers and impresarios emerge from the US, Europe and increasingly Asia, Arab voices in the industry remain rare. That road to a Tony Award is arduous not because of a lack of talent, he notes, but due to the absence of supporting infrastructure.
'We are sorted when it comes to the infrastructure, as we can see with places like Dubai Opera and the Royal Opera House Muscat,' he says. 'While we know how to build the spaces, what is needed are places to develop local talent, like academies and conservatories that train performers, artists and artisans. That is beginning to happen now with places like the Sharjah Performing Arts Academy.'
Dynamic content is also needed, Daylami adds, to widen the palette of regional audiences raised on familiar material.
'How many times can someone see Phantom of the Opera or Hamilton? A content strategy is also needed that appeals to artists who want to make the work, and to audiences who want to see it again.'
Daylami's own foray to the stage began as an audience member in Dubai Opera.
'It all started for me when Les Miserables premiere at the Dubai Opera,' he says, referring to the 2016 Cameron Mackintosh production. 'That was a bespoke Dubai production with a western cast. And I said to myself, this is happening here now. I got to be part of it.'
The experience crystallised the need to remove himself from his job at an advertising firm in Bahrain to study theatre management and producing at New York's Columbia University.
'I needed to have theatre credits to apply confidently for the programme,' he recalls. 'That was the challenge. So I said to myself that I have got to start somewhere.'
That beginning was a local production of Piaf, a play by British playwright Pam Gems about the life of French singer and Second World War dissident Edith Piaf.
Premiering at the Manama Theatre Club in 2019 and featuring a cast made up almost entirely of artists living in the kingdom, Daylami says its relative success revealed an important lesson he later carried with him to Broadway.
'The shows that work are the ones you can scale down – something you could do in a car park, a garage, a park or even a living room – and still carry that spirit, intimacy and ability to reach people on a personal level,' he says.
' Piaf was assembled locally in Bahrain with a fantastic team and amazing local talent and it remains one of my favourite experiences.'
Following a stint as a creative consultant during preparations for the musical, Umm Kulthum: The Golden Era, ahead of its West End premiere at the London Palladium in 2020, Daylami had gained enough experience to join what he recalls as one of only two Arab students in Columbia University's theatre management programme.
It was in New York amid the cut and thrust of the industry that he worked on as many jobs as he could, landing production stints on the blockbuster Wicked and the jukebox musical The Heart of Rock'n'Roll.
While describing those experiences as useful CV-building exercises, Daylami became aware of an off-Broadway English adaptation of the Korean musical Maybe Happy Ending, which already proven to be a hit in its home country.
'My area of study at Columbia gave me a strong interest in what was happening internationally as well as on Broadway and in the West End, so I was always tracking what was going on globally,' he says. 'So with Maybe Happy Ending, I knew it had an amazing reputation overseas.'
Admiring the show from the stands is one thing. Being part of the team that brought it to Broadway defied some industry conventions. Maybe Happy Ending is not a recognisable brand based on popular source material or a historical backdrop. And the story itself, a tender tale of two outdated helper robots in Seoul, is a difficult marketing pitch.
Daylami says the decision to back it was not shaped by university coursework or commercial trends. It was pure instinct.
'It was the music. It was absolutely divine,' he says. 'It is optimistic, heartbreaking and honest. It reminded me why we go to the theatre in the first place.'
After an admittedly slow start since premiering on Broadway last year, the risk began to pay off.
'Our show came in with a lot of scepticism, but people fully embraced it,' he says. 'I think this is a great statement for the industry to reward itself for taking a huge gamble and supporting great art and supporting new writers and new composers and new theatre makers.'
Now with a Tony Award to his name and the production continuing to pack in audiences at New York's Belasco Theatre, Daylami is already looking for another hidden gem to bring back to the Gulf.
'I would love to move away from the touring model,' he says. 'I would love to create something that is more bespoke for the region. Something that speaks to the local audiences. Something that appeals to their own histories, their own passions and their own experiences.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Dave Chappelle roasts Trump, Israel-Iran conflict and DJ Khaled's silence: 'This isn't how it works, champ'
Dave Chappelle roasts Trump, Israel-Iran conflict and DJ Khaled's silence: 'This isn't how it works, champ'

The National

timea day ago

  • The National

Dave Chappelle roasts Trump, Israel-Iran conflict and DJ Khaled's silence: 'This isn't how it works, champ'

Dave Chappelle roasted Donald Trump's handling of the Israel-Iran conflict during his show in Abu Dhabi on Friday night. Travelling to the Gulf days after a ceasefire went into effect, the American comedian made light of the US President's unpredictability during his performance at a sold-out Etihad Arena as part of Abu Dhabi Comedy Season. 'Trump – I don't know about this guy. I can't tell if he's going to do good or not,' Chapelle said, adding: 'What a week you guys must have had over here in the Middle East.' The 51-year-old entertainer also brought up the US President's Saturday Truth Social post announcing the air strikes on three Iranian nuclear facilities. 'Trump wrote that 'we did a meticulously perfect attack. We have disabled their nuclear facility.' And then at the end of the post he said, 'and now is the time for peace!' Word? I don't think that's how this works, champ,' Chappelle said. The comedian also made reference to the March security scandal surrounding US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth, who shared attack plans on the Houthis through his Signal account. 'Trump bombed Iran, in an attack that was carefully planned on WhatsApp,' Chapelle said. Chappelle made light of growing concerns in the US regarding the ongoing regional conflict, saying: 'Everybody in America is scared. It's not good when Bible places are in the news. That means it might be the end of times. And if it is, you know what? I had a good run.' When an audience member yelled out the name of Palestinian-American musician DJ Khaled, the comedian questioned why the DJ has remained silent on the ongoing war in Gaza. 'DJ Khaled, let me tell you something. For a Palestinian, this man is awfully quiet right now. And as a Palestinian, how could you be that quiet right now? And why are you so fat? People are starving. He's the only fat Palestinian on earth right now,' Chappelle joked. Chappelle has been outspoken about the suffering of Palestinians ever since the Israel-Gaza war began. Last year, during his show in Abu Dhabi, he described Israel's actions in Gaza as ' genocide ' to cheers from the audience. He's tempered his criticism of Trump since his re-election, urging the American leader to have empathy for the people of Palestine during his January appearance on Saturday Night Live. And while he did not comment directly on Palestine in his latest UAE performance, he did end by making his stance on the matter clear. 'Now that I'm a big powerful voice in America, I've learnt that I have to be careful. I can get in some kind of trouble and they'll try to extort me and put words in my mouth so that I come out here and lie to you,' Chappelle said. 'So if that ever happens, we need a phrase. It has to be something that I would never say. So that if I say it, you know not to listen to anything I say after that. You ready? The phrase is: I stand with Israel.' Abu Dhabi Comedy Season 2025 is set to conclude next month with US comedian Bill Burr's performance on July 12.

'Blood and Gold' launches in Dubai, confronts the hidden history of the Munich Olympics
'Blood and Gold' launches in Dubai, confronts the hidden history of the Munich Olympics

Khaleej Times

time4 days ago

  • Khaleej Times

'Blood and Gold' launches in Dubai, confronts the hidden history of the Munich Olympics

A powerful new book titled Blood and Gold by acclaimed author Christie Sikora has been launched this week, reigniting global conversations around the 1972 Munich Olympics and the way modern history is shaped, remembered, and often, deliberately forgotten. The book is being distributed globally with the support of international literary houses and is now available in the Middle East. Unveiled in Dubai as part of its international rollout, Blood and Gold takes readers beyond the well-known headlines of the Munich tragedy to uncover a far more complex, human, and politically layered narrative. In a time where global attention remains fixed on conflict and displacement in the Middle East, the book lands with piercing relevance - raising questions about media framing, institutional failure, and the long-term consequences of unresolved history. Sikora's work revisits the 1972 Olympic Games, which were tragically marred when members of the Black September organisation infiltrated the Olympic Village, taking eleven Israeli athletes hostage. The event, televised and immortalised in a single, haunting image of a masked man on a balcony, has long stood as a symbol of political violence. But Blood and Gold shifts focus to explore the deeper forces that led to the crisis - decades of Palestinian displacement, Western-backed territorial reshaping, and an Olympic environment designed more for spectacle than security. Christie Sikora's launch in the Gulf is deliberate. 'The Middle East is central to this story, yet so often its people are excluded from how it's told. This region deserves more than a single-frame portrayal of its past,' she said at the private launch event in Dubai. With a blend of literary storytelling and investigative depth, Blood and Gold reframes the Munich events not as a singular act of terror, but as the tragic culmination of global inaction, historical displacement, and institutional blindness. Now available across major bookstores and digital platforms, Blood and Gold is already being hailed as one of the most thought-provoking releases of the year. It does not seek to rewrite history, but to expand it - to make space for the silenced, the displaced, and the forgotten. And in doing so, it may finally allow the world to understand Munich not just as a moment of grief, but as a turning point in a story that remains unresolved.

How Bahrain's Ali Daylami became first person from Gulf to win a Tony Award
How Bahrain's Ali Daylami became first person from Gulf to win a Tony Award

The National

time6 days ago

  • The National

How Bahrain's Ali Daylami became first person from Gulf to win a Tony Award

In an industry shaped by familiar choruses and blockbuster adaptations, news that an original musical about two star-crossed robots had won Broadway 's top prize made an impact from Manhattan to Manama. With it, Ali Daylami became the first Bahraini, and person from the Gulf overall, to receive a Tony Award as part of the team that produces Maybe Happy Ending, which won Best Musical earlier this month. It is a personal achievement, but also offers a path forward for a region more accustomed to experiencing drama from the seats. 'I'm definitely energised and inspired to keep going, to find new pieces and work that speak to me and hopefully resonates with people in the same way this show did.' Daylami tells The National from New York. 'But I would love nothing more than to bring that energy back home to the Mena region. Not just as a show, but as something that's built for us, by us.' Daylami is keenly aware his achievement represents something larger than a testament to personal perseverance. While producers and impresarios emerge from the US, Europe and increasingly Asia, Arab voices in the industry remain rare. That road to a Tony Award is arduous not because of a lack of talent, he notes, but due to the absence of supporting infrastructure. 'We are sorted when it comes to the infrastructure, as we can see with places like Dubai Opera and the Royal Opera House Muscat,' he says. 'While we know how to build the spaces, what is needed are places to develop local talent, like academies and conservatories that train performers, artists and artisans. That is beginning to happen now with places like the Sharjah Performing Arts Academy.' Dynamic content is also needed, Daylami adds, to widen the palette of regional audiences raised on familiar material. 'How many times can someone see Phantom of the Opera or Hamilton? A content strategy is also needed that appeals to artists who want to make the work, and to audiences who want to see it again.' Daylami's own foray to the stage began as an audience member in Dubai Opera. 'It all started for me when Les Miserables premiere at the Dubai Opera,' he says, referring to the 2016 Cameron Mackintosh production. 'That was a bespoke Dubai production with a western cast. And I said to myself, this is happening here now. I got to be part of it.' The experience crystallised the need to remove himself from his job at an advertising firm in Bahrain to study theatre management and producing at New York's Columbia University. 'I needed to have theatre credits to apply confidently for the programme,' he recalls. 'That was the challenge. So I said to myself that I have got to start somewhere.' That beginning was a local production of Piaf, a play by British playwright Pam Gems about the life of French singer and Second World War dissident Edith Piaf. Premiering at the Manama Theatre Club in 2019 and featuring a cast made up almost entirely of artists living in the kingdom, Daylami says its relative success revealed an important lesson he later carried with him to Broadway. 'The shows that work are the ones you can scale down – something you could do in a car park, a garage, a park or even a living room – and still carry that spirit, intimacy and ability to reach people on a personal level,' he says. ' Piaf was assembled locally in Bahrain with a fantastic team and amazing local talent and it remains one of my favourite experiences.' Following a stint as a creative consultant during preparations for the musical, Umm Kulthum: The Golden Era, ahead of its West End premiere at the London Palladium in 2020, Daylami had gained enough experience to join what he recalls as one of only two Arab students in Columbia University's theatre management programme. It was in New York amid the cut and thrust of the industry that he worked on as many jobs as he could, landing production stints on the blockbuster Wicked and the jukebox musical The Heart of Rock'n'Roll. While describing those experiences as useful CV-building exercises, Daylami became aware of an off-Broadway English adaptation of the Korean musical Maybe Happy Ending, which already proven to be a hit in its home country. 'My area of study at Columbia gave me a strong interest in what was happening internationally as well as on Broadway and in the West End, so I was always tracking what was going on globally,' he says. 'So with Maybe Happy Ending, I knew it had an amazing reputation overseas.' Admiring the show from the stands is one thing. Being part of the team that brought it to Broadway defied some industry conventions. Maybe Happy Ending is not a recognisable brand based on popular source material or a historical backdrop. And the story itself, a tender tale of two outdated helper robots in Seoul, is a difficult marketing pitch. Daylami says the decision to back it was not shaped by university coursework or commercial trends. It was pure instinct. 'It was the music. It was absolutely divine,' he says. 'It is optimistic, heartbreaking and honest. It reminded me why we go to the theatre in the first place.' After an admittedly slow start since premiering on Broadway last year, the risk began to pay off. 'Our show came in with a lot of scepticism, but people fully embraced it,' he says. 'I think this is a great statement for the industry to reward itself for taking a huge gamble and supporting great art and supporting new writers and new composers and new theatre makers.' Now with a Tony Award to his name and the production continuing to pack in audiences at New York's Belasco Theatre, Daylami is already looking for another hidden gem to bring back to the Gulf. 'I would love to move away from the touring model,' he says. 'I would love to create something that is more bespoke for the region. Something that speaks to the local audiences. Something that appeals to their own histories, their own passions and their own experiences.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store