• May 22, 2021 - Jun 13, 2021
Regular Show

Brilliant Mind

Created and Written by Denmo Ibrahim

When Dina and Yusef learn of their estranged father’s death, they step in and bury a man they never knew. Will brother and sister face their truths once family secrets come to light? Inspired by true stories of first-generation Americans, Brilliant Mind takes a hard look at generational trauma, the struggle between self and family, and the weight of carrying a legacy. It’s an excavation of the politics of gender in immigrant communities and the challenges ever present between tradition and culture. This is a story of hope, about what gets lost in translation, and what happens when we dare to love unconditionally. 

In this extraordinary live and interactive digital experience, explore the family ties that bond and break us, the healing that comes through death, and the acceptance that our parents do the best they can—the rest is up to us.

Note to patrons: Brilliant Mind is a unique interactive show. Once you purchase a ticket, you will experience the show via a different website, https://www.brilliantmindshow.com/live-show. (You will receive complete instructions from the MTC Box Office prior to your performance.) We recommend you go to the site 20 minutes before your performance. There you will find many tips and tricks for maximizing your enjoyment of Brilliant Mind. For the optimum experience, plan to watch on a computer desktop, laptop, or Windows Surface; an iPad will not work. We recommend Chrome as your internet browser. You can connect to Airplay on your Smart TV, and you can opt in for text messaging using your mobile phone. Further instructions emailed to ticket holders in advance and on the day of the performance.

Originating Live & Interactive Digital Production with Storykrapht

About Storykrapht

We are Storykrapht, an international production company disrupting live theatre in digital landscapes. Our projects seek to illuminate the human experience. We’re curious about experiments that blur the line between performer and performance, spectator and spectacle. Born in 2020 out of a need to reimagine live theatre in digital landscapes, our projects infuse live performance, interactivity, and film to create shows that are impactful, experiential, and socially conscious. Storykrapht is a women-led artistic partnership of Denmo Ibrahim and Marti Wigder Grimminck. We work internationally to experiment in digital byte-sized encounters and feature-length investigations of the now. www.storykrapht.com

Additional Artists and Staff

Animation: Camille Cherchi
Color Correction & Editing: Elizaveta Gorshkova
Dialogue Editor: John Jenkins
Digital & Interactive Assistant: Minjun Kim
Film COVID Supervisor: Williams Stafford
Film Production Advisor: Enoch Chan
Film Production Assistant Swing: Marc Lenahan
Film Script Supervisor: Mayou Roffe
Film Sound Engineer: Miguel Pena
Full Stack Interactive Programmer: Faouzi Ghodbane
Full Stack Javascript Programmer: Amine Karoui 
Full Stack Javascript Programmer: Fatma Karoui 
Graphic Design: Sean O’Leary, Andy Hodge
Interactive Mobile Programmer: Jaiden Grimminck 
>Research Assistants: Penelope Gould, Hanna Margulies and Ariella Wolfe

Nakissa Etemad

Nakissa Etemad

Dramaturg

Christina Hogan

Christina Hogan

Assistant Stage Manager

Nihan Yesil

Nihan Yesil

Composer

Denmo Ibrahim*

Denmo Ibrahim*

Bella / Noura/Nora

Ramiz Monsef

Ramiz Monsef

Yusef

Kal Naga, AKA Khaled Abol Naga

Kal Naga, AKA Khaled Abol Naga

Samir

Torange Yeghiazarian

Torange Yeghiazarian

Hala

Marti Wigder Grimminck

Marti Wigder Grimminck

Digital & Interactive Designer

Kate Bergstrom

Kate Bergstrom

Director

Johanna Frank

Johanna Frank

New Play Dramaturg

Ahmed Ashour

Ahmed Ashour

Cultural Dramaturg

Gilbert Chamaa

Gilbert Chamaa

Story Contributor

Zeina Salame

Zeina Salame

Story Contributor

Maya Nazzal

Maya Nazzal

Costume Designer

Matthew Boyd

Matthew Boyd

Cinematographer

Corwin Evans

Corwin Evans

Editor

Christopher Morrison

Christopher Morrison

Narrative Designer

Rachel Head

Rachel Head

Associate Producer

Forbes Magazine

"[Brilliant Mind is] the kind of full-immersive experience that you get in some of the world’s most innovative museums, a category of art which is undergoing its own transformation. But it begs the question: what is core to theatre. MTC and Storykrapht say that live is the core, without which this would not be theatre. But the additional modalities of experience — cinema, interaction, plentiful access to words and images — enrich this production in ways that’s hard to match.

The power of theatre resides in the presence of humans who you may not know before you enter the room, but who you know so much better after you leave. In the end, MTC — with Storykrapht, and play director Kate Bergstrom — has created a template for what a sustainable launch of a new play might look like.

It is both restating and reimagining what business it’s in. That’s pretty big news in the theatre world. I expect more and more producers hear about it."

Marin Independent Journa

“Innovative…dramatic energy. Directed by Kate Bergsgtrom, the performances are nicely nuanced and natural, exuding the easy camaraderie and comfortable annoyance of family...all woven together in a compelling package with user-friendly digital and interactive design by [Marti] Grimminck. [Denmo] Ibrahim’s Dina and [Ramiz] Monsef’s Yusef...argue and bond over shared regrets and family traumas that they remember quite differently. Kal Naga plays [the father] Samir with compelling, thoughtful equanimity. Memories spill out in fragments. I was left with a lingering longing...”

San Francisco Chronicle

"In Brilliant Mind, digital gadgetry actually does enhance storytelling in inventive ways that ought to continue and expand once theater fully reopens.

Mill Valley theater wiz Denmo Ibrahim wrote the piece based on a recent real-life incident that’s ripe for dramatization: After her absentee father died, she and her brother went through his belongings only to discover a half-sibling Ibrahim never knew about.

Audiences who log in to the show early… are encouraged to take a virtual tour of the home of Samir, who’s later revealed as the father figure in the show. Click on that option, and in comes an open floor plan rendered in 2000s-era graphics, a bit like the video game “The Sims.” You can move around and click on different objects to open them — a record player, a refrigerator, a book, a drawer — all of which puts you in the place of the mystified child who must sort through the home of the parent she barely knew any more. It also makes you start to care about characters before a show even starts.

Equally successful is the show’s texting service, which you can sign up for before Brilliant Mind starts or in its first few minutes. If you do, you’ll get texts from Samir (Kal Naga, a.k.a. Khaled Abol Naga) throughout the play.

Its structure offers promising tools for future theatrical expeditions."

Theaterdogs.net

“Brilliant Mind revels in the digital realm. The story of Brilliant Mind is intriguing in its own right as it explores the lives of Yusef and Dina, first-generation Arab-Americans, and how their lives have been (are being) affected by the lives of their immigrant parents and how a family forms its identity through cultural roots, geography, secrets and the politics of history (and the history of politics).

[Denmo] Ibrahim has long been a Bay Area actor of note, someone to rely on for depth, intelligence and emotional realism on stage. She and [Ramiz] Monsef are marvelous together as their scenes crackle with the fraught chemistry of siblings.

So well acted and produced…a great deal to enjoy, savor and ponder.” 

Theatrius.com

“Marin Theatre Company and Storykrapht have created an avant-garde story form in both real time and on film, with an abundance of ingenious tech innovations. Brilliant Mind reminds us that who we are and what we become comes from family, culture, and nation. The whole [El Musri] family has a foot in two worlds, the culture they grew up in and America. The live and filmed sections show the immigrant mind precariously suspended between two conflicting cultures. The tech messages emphasize that split. Marti Grimminck’s tech innovations are ingenious. Director Kate Bergstrom keeps the complex tale focused on questions of culture and family.”

×