"SPOTLIGHT ON" WRITER/PERFORMER NADIA PARVEZ MANZOOR

Who is Nadia Parvez Manzoor?

 

slide2 Nadia P. Manzoor is a writer, performer, and producer. She was born a twin, in the USA, to Pakistani parents. She was raised in Dubai, Singapore, and London, and she is as diversely talented as her geographical upbringing. She is a storyteller because she believes that the stories we tell become the stories we live and she lives as enthusiastically as she tells. Nadia moved to NYC to shake up her own understanding of self, and place, and creativity, and earned a Masters from Boston University in Social Work. Her passion to merge the arts and social reform has brought her to designing arts curriculum for marginalized teens affiliated with the Hetrick-Martin Institute, to teaching and performing improvisation with Improvolution. Throughout all of this, she has written, and her writing has now taken her to the stage where you can see her perform with wit, insight, humor and precisely real characters.

 

burq_smDo you have upcoming events you’d like people to attend?

 

Yes! Burq Off!  My autobiographical one-woman show just finished a sold out run in December, and due to its success, it’s coming back!

 

We’d love for you to join us for Burq Off!’s second run:

 Walkerspace, 46 Walker St., NYC.

 Dates: March 27 at 8pm, March 28 at 8pm, March 29 at 2pm & 8pm and March 30 at 2 pm

 Click here for info on the show.

 Click here to purchase tickets.

 

Unknown-1What is your favorite dramatic work/s?

 

John Leguizamo’s Freak is an amazing piece of theater and a big inspiration for my one-woman show. His wry, outlandish, sense of humor, his vibrant physicality, and his dance moves transform his hour and a half long solo show in a spectacle of hilarity, brilliant storytelling, and personal expose. His ability to turn stereotype on its head, and to make you laugh so hard you cry and cry while your laughing is something I really aspire to on the stage.

  

Who are the playwrights (and writers) you most admire?

 

Irshad Manji is someone I deeply admire and respect because she has the balls to ask really provocative questions in the face of an extremely dogmatic and confined religion. In her passion for reconciling faith with freedom, she is standing up and challenging the leaders of the Islamic world to reconsider and upgrade their religious and spiritual ideals. I’ve never seen anyone whose work is so deeply infused with that level of moral courage.

 

I also find Jason Silva to be pretty incredible. His ability to synthesize ridiculously complex facts about science, existentialism, and technology and put them into these bite sized poetic rants is just absolute beauty.

 

And recently, I’ve been really intrigued by Russel Brand. The way he takes the things he cares about and presents them in an entertaining and humorous light, along with his sheer lack of self-consciousness is mind-blowing to me.

 

th-1Who is your greatest inspiration and why?

 

Radhika Vaz, Indian writer and comedian, is one of my best friends and biggest inspirations. Rad’s ability to take an idea and make a show from it is what inspired me to believe that I could make a show about my life. Rad is continuously moving forward, following her passions and interests. She’s not letting doubt get in the way of her creativity, or of pursuing her dreams and putting herself out there.

 

What are the top five things you’d like to accomplish in the next five years?

 

1. Let’s start with this year, in which I hope to complete a successful international tour of Burq Off!

 

2. Once Paprika Productions has taken the show to England, Dubai, Singapore, Toronto, and India, I am absolutely dedicated to bringing the show to Pakistan in an effort to promote and raise money for women’s education in the Muslim world

 

3. In the future, I can see Burq Off becoming a Broadway show. It’s unique combination of Bollywood dancing and street dance has not been seen before, and its blend of eastern and western aesthetics and choreography would make it a brilliant piece of theater on a bigger scale.

 

rAtElgFZ5PD8sxu8fqSFjHcp-4iPeHxK_K9btbDQuKQ4. On another scale, within the next five years, Paprika Productions aims to be working on a screenplay. In fact, in five years time, my team and I would like to have completed the screenplay and to be in the beginning phases of production.

 

5. In five years time, Shugs and Fats, the comedic characters in the web series that Radhika and I are currently co-producing, will hopefully be established and recognized personalities who create laughter and conversation around taboo topics.

 

 

If you could dream of trying something in the arts you haven’t tried, but would like to, what would that be?

 

Rap and spoken word. Some of my biggest loves are the art of freestyle, movement, and hip hop. I’m enthralled with improvisation because I love the art of creating something from not knowing—you’re forced to lose yourself and respond in the moment, and there’s a realness in that. I also am fascinated with words and language and finding meaning through poetry, so for me the next step in bringing all of these elements together would be doing rap and spoken word.

 

slide5What was the best gift that someone gave you that inspired or facilitated an interest in your art?

 

The stories my mom would tell me every night at bedtime gave me the yearning to imagine and dream. I loved how a story could transport me to a different dimension, to a different world where different rules would apply. And if I let myself go into that world I would have different powers. I would imagine myself as the protagonist of the story I would be able to do all of these things that I never even imagined were possible. But because of the stories I could dream. I think breaking outside of the limitations of what we think of as real is really important for us as humans. It’s what allows us to fight the bigger fight, and to overcome the impossible.

 

Nadia P. Manzoor Website 

Nadia P. Manzoor Facebook page

AWoW MEMBER NADIA MANZOOR DISCUSSING HER PLAY "BURQ OFF" on CNN INTERNATIONAL

th-2A number of you had the good fortune to meet and watch Nadia Manzoor perform a scene from her play Burq Off! at an AWoW Showcase this past summer. Earlier this month Nadia completed a one week sold out run of her show in New York City and announced in an interview on CNN International that the play will be coming back to New York in March.  To see Nadia’s wonderful interview and to learn more about this incredibly interesting and talented person click here for Nadia’s website. And if you didn’t get a chance to see Nadia, you’ll also find ticket info for her March show as well. 

 

Burq off! is a one woman autobiographical show, directed by Tara Elliott, which charts the journey of a British Pakistani Muslim’s struggle towards self acceptance. As Nadia navigates the conflicting cultural norms of modern London and her conservative Muslim home, she embodies a cast of twenty-one characters that infuse the story with comedy, religious fundamentalism, cultural critique and spiritual depth. 

 

Along the way you meet Nadia’s aggressive twin brother, her controlling Muslim father, and the essence of joy in the family, her mother.

 

In addition, her Islamic teachers, her life long ’western’ best friend, and the first love of her life add a diversity of perspectives to this deeply moving, personal and universal story.

 

Brava, Nadia!