|
This
article by MEISSOUN was first published in German in the magazine
TanzOriental 5/2000.
Most
beginners of Oriental dance are not very ambitioned. They start
to dance for fun. But after some time a few of them also want to
perform. And finally they see other dancers who "have made
it": Those glamorous, glittery beings who show their art night
after night for an enthusiastic audience in the 5 star hotels of
Arabic metropolises. Well, and that's the moment when some dancers
in Europe or America only have one goal: Pack their bags, and go
to Cairo to become a big star!
But
what is the life of the stars and starlets in the Middle East really
like? What happens when the orchestra stops playing and the lights
go out? Reality - as most of the times - is much less glamorous.
For this article I interviewed several experienced dancers who worked
in Egypt, Lebanon, Turkey and other Oriental countries. Besides
this I analysed some French and German TV documentaries.
The
Start
Let's
start at the beginning: How to get there? Just as for any job in
a foreign country, a permit is necessary. Depending on the country
this can be more or less complicated. But Arabic countries are famous
for their art in bureaucracy... In the Lebanon, a dancer must be
a Lebanese citizen, in the Emirates, a sponsor is needed (most of
the time the hotel one is working for), in Egypt a sponsor as well
as a work permit is demanded. It's possible to work for a short
time without a permit in Turkey, but it's better to have one. It's
advisable to arrive with all the necessary papers and a contract
- or one might have to go home without having unpacked a costume.
There
are different motivations for dancers to go to the Middle East.
While some are looking for a challenge - "If I can make it
there..." - others start their work more through a coincidence
while traveling.
|
For
example Tamrahenna from the States: After finishing university,
she just wanted to travel and take some dance lessons in Egypt.
She started with 3 costumes in her bag - and ended up working
in the Middle East for 7 years! Being rather young it was
easy for her to start this new life.
It
was different for Amera from Australia: After a first job
in Dubai she worked in different Arabic countries between
1990 and 1999. When she went there, she was already well known
in Australia - but in the Middle East she had to start again
from the beginning and leave her "western" self
behind which wasn't easy for her.
Mishaal
(Japan/USA) landed her first contract rather accidentally
when she jumped in for another dancer. Unlike the other dancers
she only works in Turkey during the summer and then returns
to Japan.
|
Tamrahenna

|
But
when you finally arrive it's not as if everybody has been waiting
just for you... There's a lot of competition going on! It can take
up to one year to establish a name and being offered good jobs.
Many dancers have a manager who arranges the contracts. This can
make things easier especially if a dancers works in different countries.
These managers might also take over the tasks of visiting banks,
offices etc. which can be very time consuming in the Orient. Of
course these service have their price too.
It's
easier to become known if one works in a limited area like Cairo
or Beirut. When dancing in different countries for a few months
it is harder because one isn't as frequently seen and will soon
be only a distant memory to the audience.
Places
for performance
We've
all heard about those five star hotels in Cairo. But there are many
other countries where the interviewed dancers have worked: Lebanon,
Syria, Jordan, Emirates, Oman, Turkey etc. As luxury hotels are
rare almost everywhere they only offer work to a limited number
of dancers. Besides the hotels there are night clubs, weddings,
circumcisions and other festive occasions as well as tourist shows.
Weddings offer the most work opportunities. And one can always count
on a numerous audience in a good mood. On the other hand, night
clubs have better technical equipment and a dancer has more artistical
freedom to choose her dance and music. At a wedding people expect
a dancer to support the cheerful ambiance and to dance with the
bride and groom and maybe also some of the guests. In the United
Arab Emirates where raks sharki is theoretically forbidden, it can
bee seen in hotels and Lebanese nightclubs.
Music
an dance
Normally
dancers work with live musicians whom they have to pay themselves.
It's the dancer who decides how big her orchestra will be. If she
has a bigger show, she will also hire some folklore dancers. Many
dancers told me about the wonderful musicians, especially in Egypt.
Therefore one of the best things about dancing in the Middle East
is the possibility to work with gifted live musicians. A dancer
discusses the music she wants to dance to with the orchestra - also
changes in tempo, accents etc. This way she creates her own show
that will fit her. Of course it's indispensable to have some knowledge
about Arabic music. Most of the time there will also be an opening
peace (mise en scene / majensi) that has been composed especially
for the dancer and becomes her trade mark.
For
shorter engagements in different countries dancers work with the
band of the respective hotel or night club. Most of the time the
dancer arrives a day before the start of her contract, talks to
the musicians, does some rehearsals - and the next day she starts
to work!
Amera
|
Many
dancers, like Sahra Saeeda, work with choreographers. TamraHenna
choreographes the opening peace and one or two songs in a
show. Amera does mostly improvisation.
Sometimes
an audience member wishes to hear a certain song. If the musicians
know it, they will play it and the dancer just goes along.
So it's vital to have a talent for improvisation.
|
Education
A dancer
who wants to stay on top needs to keep on learning and offering
new things. This is why most of the dancers take the opportunity
to work with local teachers. It's nearly impossible to talk to one
of these dancers without them mentioning the name of Raqia Hassan
sooner or later. She is the teacher who has trained most of the
Western dancers in Cairo and all over the Middle East. Other popular
teachers are Farida Fahmi, Ibrahim Akef, Nadia Hamdi and Aida Nour.
But the musicians can teach you as well. Many of them have worked
with a range of dancers and know what the audience will like.
How
important is it to dance like a "real" Oriental woman?
Some dancers, like Amera, just dance from their heart and get it
right. As Amera danced in various regions she is not attached to
a certain style. Sahra Saeeda, who always worked in Cairo, studied
the Egyptian dancers very closely and had to let go of some "Americanisms"
that were strange to her Egyptian audience, like certain arm positions.
And then one has to know that there are some movements that are
forbidden in Egypt!
TamraHenna
also thinks it's important to dance like an Egyptian but she also
adds some personal details. To dance "Arabic" is not only
a question of technique but it is also about feelings and expressing
the music. Most of the western dancers regard it as the highest
compliment to be told that they dance like an Oriental, because
it means that they have captured the essence of the Oriental feeling.
In Turkey where there are many styles and tastes it is not as important
for Mishaal to dance typically Turkish - besides this many Turkish
dancers are very influenced by foreign styles.
Living
and social life
If
a dancer is lucky, she can live in the hotel where she dances. But
there are others who change from contract to contract and have to
look for an apartment which isn't easy. Some live with friends.
If a dancer works in changing countries every 2 or 3 months she
will nearly always live in the hotel. To "live out of the suitcase"
is an expression many dancers know only too well.
When
a dancer arrives in a new town, very often she knows nobody. It
happens therefore that the foreign dancers stick together eventhough
the constant competition is not very favourable for friendships.
The late working hours make it very difficult to have normal social
contacts. Dancers work at night, some until 5 a.m., and sleep during
the day.
Of
course it's also important to learn the local language after some
time. Very often a dancer is on her own and many of her daily contacts
include people who speak nothing but Arabic or Turkish. To find
local friends is not easy: Oriental men generally have no "friendships"
with women and they will see a dancer from the sexual point of view.
The women on the other hand mistrust the foreigner and constantly
expect her to do something scandalous.
But
social control of a dancer is constant and gossip is a favourite
pastime: Everybody knows where she has been, she can hardly leave
her room without make-up. A dancer has to watch her reputation and
even has to justify herself if she's wearing jeans for a change.
Amera remarked that in the Lebanon it's very important to speak
with the right people, wear the right costume, be seen at the right
places...
It's
generally recommended not to tell everybody that one is a dancer,
as many people see this profession as unhonourable. Some dancers
tell people that they are language teachers or journalists. And
only when they know someone better they reveal their true profession.
Money
From
time to time rumours spread about the loads of money that a dance
star earns. But if you're not Fifi, Amani or Asena, the situation
is quite different: Even if one is paid well, dancing is not a way
to get rich. Most of the income is spent immediately on new costumes,
musicians, the folklore group, the hairdresser, tips.... The musician
get paid not only for performances but also for rehearsals. And
then there's the rent for the bus and driver to bring the whole
bunch to the parties.
With
a contract at a hotel a dancer typically works 6 nights a week,
wearing 3 different costumes every evening. Which means that she
needs to have at least 18 different costumes for variety. This is
where she spends a lot of money! Another possibility is to work
at 4 to 5 weddings and other parties every night. But very often
the additional jobs at weddings pay more than for example the fix
engagement at a nightclub and therefore help to make a living.
While
it was possible to earn quite good money through the 80ies and 90ies,
some places now prefer cheaper (in every sense) dancers to the better,
more expensive ones. It can be generally said that business is going
worse, even well known nightclubs are closing down. One of the reasons
in Egypt is the political and religious climate. But the taste of
the audience has changed as well: Young people will rather go to
a disco than to a nightclub to see a show. Fifi Abdo is blaming
the "Russians" for the lowering prices - Russians being
the synonym for all fair skinned foreigners, no matter whether they're
form Rumania or the USA.
A
day in the life of a dancer
The
main activity of a dancer besides her performances is sleeping.
First of all to relax from a long, exhausting night, second to be
fresh for the next evening. If she's not dancing or sleeping, the
dancer may visit her costume tailor, rehears with her band, work
on her choreographies or meet friends.
In
the evening her preparations start. Putting on make-up, doing her
hair etc. Some dancers have their own hairdresser who is in charge
of the perfect fitting of her hairpiece. Finally she takes a taxi
or the bus she hired to head for the place of her performance. Dancers
who mainly work for weddings and parties will have to hurry up now
- It has happened before that someone else who was there earlier
had taken over her job! The news about a wedding is spreading fast
- who comes first, will dance.
If
a dancer has a really busy agent, she might dance at 4 places in
one night - each show being 45 minutes. This really uses up all
the energy one has and is not very healthy if done for a longer
time. Other dancers use the time after their shows to go and see
the big stars to study them closely. Those shows only start early
in the morning. Which brings us back to sleep...
Future
|
For
dancers who have been in the business for some time it's very
hard to imagine a different future. Some of them always tell
themselves that "this will be the last year" - and
stay much longer.
Amera
stopped to go back living in Australia and having a family.
She teaches at her own school and abroad for workshops (also
in Europe), owns a shop "Amera's Palace" and continues
to perform in Sydney.
Sahra Saeeda is in her 40ies now and travels a lot. She not
only teaches in America and Europe but also dances from time
to time in Egypt.
TamraHenna
just returned to the States after seeing no further potential
for development in the Middle East.
Mishaal on the other hand is looking forward to her next summer
in Turkey and would like to do more traveling to explore and
teach the dance.
|
Mishaal

|
Of
course age is a subject for dancers. Whereas a well established
dancer can easily work in Egypt even if she's over 40, other audiences
like Lebanese or Turks prefer younger dancers. So some of them cheat
a little on their age. And not only there: In Turkey (and probably
other places) many of the local dancers have been through cosmetic
surgery to survive in a business that is ruled by men who have their
own ideas about the qualities of a good dancer.
Pros
and Cons
The
life of a dancer in the Middle East is a life out of the suitcase.
Contracts typically last for 3 months, then you have to move on.
Competition is hard and so are the working conditions. Of course
there are good sides to this: For some dancers just to be in the
Orient is a good feeling. And of course the dancing itself: To work
with excellent live musicians for an audience that appreciates Oriental
dance not only as a nice show but as a part of its culture. Those
are the things that tie Western dancers to the Middle East and hardly
let them go...
Sources:
Personal
contacts with dancers
TV documentaries
various articles in dance magazines
Links:
www.ameraspalace.com.au
www.hpo.net/users/mishaal/
www.sahrasaeeda.com
www.middleeasterndancer.com/
Articles
and Interviews:
Collected
by DiscoverBellydance
"Tummy
trouble in Cairo" This article talks about the influx of foreigners
in Cairo. It also has a photo of Katia performing and a great shot
of Dina. Most information in the article is correct, with exception
to the references to the Awalim and Ghawazee.
www.middle-east-online.com/English/Features/Sep2000/Belly_dance.htm
"The
gyrating belly" This interview definitely gives a different
perspective on the popularity of Russian dancers in the Middle East.
But remember that this interview is the perspective of the interviewee,
not of all Russian dancers.
www.russiajournal.com/ls/article.shtml?ad=391
"The
Mystique of Belly Dancing" Although this one contains those
irritating adjectives that only someone from outside the dance can
come up with, it does have an interesting perspective with the descriptions
of the dance clubs aimed at tourists.
savvytraveler.com/show/features/2000/20000422/belly.shtml
"Navel
warfare in Egyptian night clubs" Another perspective on the
Islamic influence on Middle Eastern dance and interview with Francesca
"Yasmina" Sullivan, from London.
www.mg.co.za/mg/news/99jun2/24jun-belly.html
Interviews
with Amera and Russian dancer Katia: www.discoverbellydance.com.
How
to get a permission as a dancer in Cairo: http://www.cairolive.com/newcairolive/zaieem/belly.html |