Tayeb Saddiki Explained

Tayeb Saddiki
Native Name:الطيب الصديقي
Native Name Lang:ar
Occupation:playwright, comedian, author, calligrapher.
Birth Date:5 January 1939 [1]
Death Place:Casablanca, Morocco
Languages:classic Arabic
Moroccan Arabic
French -->
Distinctions: Ouissam al-Massira
Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres
Officier des Arts et des Lettres
Ouissam al-Kafaâ al-Fikria -->

Tayeb Saddiki (; 5 January 1939 – 5 February 2016) was a Moroccan theatre director and one of the most iconic and prominent Arab artists, and is considered among the foremost Arab dramatists of the twentieth century.[2] Trained in classical Western theater, Saddiki also embraced traditional Moroccan theatrical styles, fusing the two into a path-breaking combination of Western and traditional Moroccan theater. Known for staging spectacles played to large crowds in big arenas, Saddiki developed a style of festive theater that became a popular in the Arab world.

He is a pioneer of Arab theater, an actor and a film director, but he was also an award-winning author writing in both Arabic and French.[3] From a family of scholars, he was born in Essaouira and grew up in Casablanca. After training courses with André Voisin, at the age of 17 he went abroad to France to study theater at Comédie de l'Ouest - CDO, directed by Hubert Gignoux. Back in Morocco, together with the Union Marocaine du Travail (UMT) he founded a Workers' theater / Al Masrah Al Oummali (1957). After that, he returned to France to further study theater tecnics at the TNP -the National Popular Theater in Paris-, under the direction of Jean Vilar.

At 23, he became artistic director of the Mohamed V theater (théâtre national Mohammed-V). After that he worked as director of the municipal theater of Casablanca (théâtre municipal de Casablanca) from 1964 to 1977.[4]

He founded several theatre companies: Firqat Saddiki / Saddiki's troupe, Al Masrah Al Jawal / Traveling theater, Masrah Ennas / People's Theater and also his own cultural center at Casablanca, Espace Tayeb Saddiki (Tayeb Saddiki's center) at the boulevard Gandhi in Casablanca.(Source : Tayeb Saddiki Foundation)

Biography[5]

Distinctions

CountryDecorationYear
1976
Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres / Knight of Arts and Letters1979
Officier des Arts et des Lettres / Officer of Arts and Letters1983
Price of the first work at Carthage Film Days (journées cinématographiques de Carthage) for his film Zeft1984
Commandeur des Arts et des Lettres / Commander of Arts and Letters1997[6]
Ouissam al-Kafaâ al-Fikria / The Medal of Intellectual Competence, décerné par le Roi Mohammed VI2005

Works

Cinema actor

Scenarios and productions

Motion picture

Movie Scenarios

Documentaries

Institutional films

Adapted works for television

Plays

1955-1956

1956-1957

1957-1958

1958-1959

1959-1960

1960-1961

1961-1962

1962-1963

1963-1964

1964-1965

1965-1966

1966-1967

1967-1968

1968-1969

1969-1970

1970-1971

1971-1972

1972-1973

1973-1974

1974-1975

1975-1976

1976-1977

1979-1980

1980-1981

1982-1983

1983-1984

1984-1985

1985-1986

1989-1990

1990-1991

1991-1992

1993-1994

1996-1997

1997-1998

1998-1999

1999-2000

2000-2001

2001-2002

2003-2004

2005-2006

2010-2011

2018-2019

Notes and References

  1. https://archive.today/20100307054047/http://www.tayebsaddiki.com/biographie.html Biographie de Tayeb Saddiki
  2. Web site: imdb .
  3. Ghassan Maleh, Don Rubin, The Arab World, ed. Taylor & Francis, 1999,, p. 172
  4. Web site: Tayeb Saddiki and the Re-invention of Tradition in Contemporary Moroccan Theatre: An Obituary.
  5. Web site: Home . tayebsaddiki.com.
  6. https://www.siv.archives-nationales.culture.gouv.fr/siv/rechercheconsultation/consultation/ir/pdfIR.action?irId=FRAN_IR_026438 Archives of the ordre des Arts et des Lettres.