Good Muslim Boy is a tale of procrastination, bureaucratic somnambulance and frustration, but it’s brilliantly told at a breakneck pace. It’s fast, funny and powerful and had me fretting for the hero and so much relating to his predicament of being stuck in a foreign place where no one really cared about your predicament.
It brought back harrowing memories of such a situation, and I am sure it is one many other have experienced on overseas travels.
Sami plays himself in the play. He is an actor and in rehearsal for a new show. He is also going through a marriage breakup, drinking too much and grabbing sex wherever he can. While Sami was born in Iran, to Iraqi parents, he was raised in Australia, so his father, a highly respected Muslim cleric, wants him to experience Iranian culture to bring some sense of Islam in to his life.
All goes well until his father has a heart attack and dies in a hotel room. Sami wants to take his dad back to Australia. He has the money to pay, but it turns into this cultural, bureaucratic, and logistical nightmare.
Where Sami plays himself himself, Rodney Afif and Nicole Nabout play all other characters ranging from young children to octogenarians, soldiers, policemen, drug-peddling taxi drivers to aggressive or indifferent bureaucrats – and they are marvellous in the task, even when playing gender reverse roles, with drama and comedy. Particularly funny are telephone conversations between Sami and his AFL fan mother back in Melbourne and his younger sister.
Good Muslim Boy was a play that drew me in completely. I loved every minute of the story and the performances of the trio of talented actors.
The Queensland Theatre and Malthouse Theatre co-production is showing at the Cremorne Theatre, QPAC until 4 August 2018. Bookings: qpac.com.au or phone 136 346.
Eric Scott
For more of Eric Scott’s writings on theatre, check out Absolute Theatre
Other reviews you might enjoy:
- The 39 Steps (QT) – theatre review
- Jasper Jones (QT) – theatre review
- The Longest Minute (QT) – theatre review
David Edwards is the editor of The Blurb and a contributor on film and television