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yuy DEATH OF YAZDGERD
  October, 2005

Written by Shahin Sayadi – original translation of Bahram
Beyzaie’s Mard Yarzdgerd

Directed by Shahin Sayadi
Set design by Shahin Sayadi
Costume design by Shahin Sayadi and Joan Smith
Lighting design by Shahin Sayadi
Sound design by Shahin Sayadi
Stage Manager: Pip Bradford

Cast: Kevin Curran, Marty Burt, Janice Jackson, Anna
MacLean, Pasha Ebrahimi

Other: Miya Turnbull (visual art and animation),
Jake Dambergs (technical direction, video editing)

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  Introduction
Yazdgerd III, of the Sassanid Dynasty, was the last of the
Iranian kings before the Islamic era. During his reign, the Arab
invasion of Iran intensified, and with his death in 651 A.D., a
lengthy epoch in Iranian history came to an end.
The ancient Iranian calendar was a fragmented one. A new
calendar started at the first year of the throning of a new King
and ended with his death. The time period between the end of
one era and the beginning of another, known as Shamiran,
was indeed a period of chaos, disorientation and timelessness.
This play is about a Shamiran. It depicts Day Zero of the Year
Zero of the Iranian calendar- a time when an old order has
collapsed and a new order has yet to emerge.
For ancient Iranians the King was a symbol of glory and divine
destiny. And if a King's glory was lost due to his misdeeds, his
reign was doomed to collapse. In such event, it was a common
belief that only the King's death could spare the country from
further disaster.

  Background of the play
Death of Yazdgerd was originally written and performed in the
unstable political and cultural aftermath of the 1979 Iranian
revolution. Death of Yazdgerd deals with an historical event
with a mysterious ending. When Islam was established in the
Arabia, messengers were sent to four corners of the world to
ask people to conform to the new religion. Upon receiving a
negative response from the Persian Empire, Iran was attacked
with great force by the Arabs. The army of Young Yazdgerd III
was defeated and, in search of support, he rode east. Some
time later, he was found dead in a flour mill and the miller was
charged, by Yazdgerd's ministers, with the King's death.

Synopsis
In the turmoil of the Arab invasion of Persia, the doomed King,
Yazdgerd, disappears only to be found, sometime later, dead
in the house of a poor miller. As the King's ministers and spiritual advisors attempt to understand what has happened, a
variety of plausible stories emerge from the miller, his wife, and daughter, who are trying to exculpate themselves. As each
member of the family takes turns describing, from the King's
perspective, what occurred, it becomes clear that both the
mother and the daughter were victims of sexual violence at the
hands of the King. To add to the confusion of events, the King
has always been and is now masked; no one, including his
closest advisors, can be sure that the dead man is actually the
King or that the man claiming to be the miller is not, in fact,
Yazdgerd. Throughout the play the concept of invasion serves
as a thematic foundation. Islamic forces have invaded Persia;
the King has invaded the miller's house; the wife and daughter
have been physically invaded, and even the masked ersonage
of the King has not been untouched.

Death of Yazdgerd was built using our unique working
philosophy, which included three workshops and public
presentations.

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