top of page
Newberry_folioT500_Syrian Dancer_edited_

الأداء

PERFORMANCE

Introduction

Introduction

Before the turn of the twentieth century, Arab actors and performers in the United States entered the financially lucrative arena of “exotic” spectacles that was fueled by Euro-Americans’ desire for “Oriental” culture and a growing global entertainment industry. Circuses, amusement parks, traveling shows, and world’s fairs offered some of these early immigrants a pathway to the United States, and work to make a living. This trend continued into the burgeoning film industry with Arab actors and actresses portraying mainly “villains.” While financially profitable, these shows simultaneously fostered U.S. Orientalist attitudes towards Arab cultures and Arab Americans’ bodies, and stereotyped the “Arab” as the exotic but backward antithesis of the “modern” American. Some performers struggled to counter this Orientalist pastiche by painting an “East” as a place of rich cultures and venerable civilizations which predate and anticipate the “West.” They also positioned themselves as uniquely able to mediate between the two places, thus aiming to deprive their audiences of the power of their condescending gaze.

Arab American performers in the oriental Cairo Street exhibition in Buffalo, New York’s Pan American Exposition
Performers in front of the Streets of Cairo exhibition at the 1901 Pan American Exposition in Buffalo, New York. Library of Congress.
Orientalism

Orientalism

Play Video
World Fairs

World's Fairs

arab actors, arabian people, arab american
Themes from the Chicago Exposition’s Cairo Street became immersed in American culture through music and dance, solidifying stereotypical perceptions of the Middle East. Courtesy of Chicago History Museum.

As early as the 1870s, Arab performers captivated American audiences at world’s fairs. In Philadelphia, Chicago, and St. Louis performers capitalized on Americans’ love affair with “the Orient,” objectifying their bodies and customs to create spectacles of belly dancing, Arabic singing, and “re-enactment” of public and private lives. These performances contributed to the creation of Arab stereotypes that permeated Western society and showed that Arab performers understood the Orientalist constraints they performed within to please their Euro-American audiences.

 

The 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago provided the first and greatest mass exposure of Americans to “Oriental” culture. There, nearly 28 million visitors walked across 690 acres of exhibitions from 46 countries. The most popular region was the collection of Middle Eastern and North African exhibits including: the Algerian and Tunisian Village, A Street in Cairo, the Moorish Place, the Persian Concession, and the Turkish Village. These concessions (many constructed and run by early Arab immigrants) responded to America’s desire for the Oriental “exotic” with “authentic” life-sized replicas of coffee houses, bazaars, Bedouin villages, and mosques. They invited visitors into their exhibits with live entertainment by belly dancers, sword fighters, and strongmen, while performers reenacted Muslim wedding ceremonies, and sold camel rides, souvenirs, and enticing street food.

Sword Peformers

Sword Perfomers

Sword and shield used by sword fighters in World’s Fairs
Sword and shield used by sword fighting performers. Courtesy of the Arab American National Museum.
Arab performers and acrobats at the 1893 Chicago World’s Fair
Performers in the Bedouin Encampment at the Chicago World’s Columbian Exposition, 1893. Halsey C. Ives, The Dream City: A Portfolio of Photographic Views of the World's Columbian Exposition, N.D. Thompson Publishing, Co., St. Louis, MO, 1893.
A Cairo Street Walkthrough

A Cairo Street Walkthrough

Play Video
Traveling Shows

Circuses, Traveling Shows & Amusement Parks

Cairo Street replica at Coney Island
Syrian business owners Jabour and Akoun built competing replicas of Cairo Street at Coney Island. Jabour also opened a Turkish smoking parlor, Kairo Cafe, in Brooklyn. Courtesy of New York Historical Society.

As performance entertainment grew in popularity throughout the 1870s, troupes and venues employed Arab performers as acrobats, horse riders, dancers, and actors to satiate non-Arab audiences’ fascination with the exoticized East.

 

Circuses like Barnum and Bailey’s Greatest Show on Earth and the Ringling Brothers’ Big New Parade hired Arabs, sometimes as many as 250 performers, to act out “authentic” scenes from the “East.”

 

Coinciding with the Chicago fair, but continuing for nearly two decades after, Buffalo Bill’s Wild West and Congress of Rough Riders of the World and Pawnee Bill’s Far East Show featured as many as 40 Arab immigrant acrobats and skilled equestrians in acts such as  “A Group of Riffian Arabian Horsemen” and “The Real Sons of the Soudan.”

 

Like circuses and traveling shows, amusement parks capitalized on Oriental performances to draw crowds outside the world’s fairs. In 1894, Coney Island amusement park added belly dancers from the Chicago fair, such as the famous “Little Egypt,” because of their overwhelming popularity with American audiences.

 

These entertainers used their bodies and performances as a means to assert their hybridized Arab American identity. They paired their Eastern costumes and acts with the hard-working trait of the American working-class to speak of their transnational lives.

Performers
Photograph of performer and whirling dancer Marrie Bayrooty
Artistic rendition of performer Marrie Bayrooty’s whirling costume

Marrie Bayrooty

Individuals, like Marrie Bayrooty “The Greatest Whirling Dancer on Earth,” displayed impressive strength and endurance during their performances at amusement parks. This artist’s rendition adds color and character to the nationally inspired costume worn by Marrie Bayrooty circa 1908. Illustration by Erin Jester, 2020; photograph courtesy of the Khayrallah Center Archive.

Dancers at the 1893 Chicago World’s Fair

Click on images for expanded views

Women and children from the Arab world danced at the 1893 Chicago World's Fair as part of the Cairo Street exhibition. These women auto-Orientalized their performances to placate Western audiences.

World’s Fair Performers

Click on images for expanded views

Lecturers & Sermonizers

Although most performers worked in large cities like Chicago, Atlanta, and San Francisco, others circulated through America's smaller cities and towns. These individuals delivered lectures and sermons about the "East" in churches and for civic organizations.

 

This group of performers includes Abraham Rihbany, Ameen Rihani, and the Arbeely family. But perhaps the most impressive of them all was “Princess” Rahme Haidar.

Born in Baalbek (modern day Lebanon) in 1886, Haidar was educated at a local English school, and later at the American Seminary for Girls located in Saida, Lebanon. In 1899, her conversion to Protestant Christianity, as well as her missionary school education, contributed to her desire to migrate the the United States. Once in the U.S., she studied at Denison University, and then received a diploma in public speaking from the University of Southern California in Los Angeles, where she also became the superintendent of the Baptist Mission.

Sheet music cover for performer Rahme Haidar’s movie Gems of the East
Music score for “Gems of the East,” Haidar’s movie filmed near her birthplace of Baalbek. Khayrallah Center Archive.

From the 1910s to the 1930s, Haidar performed for church audiences across the United States and Canada. Often her visits to these places lasted for three days in which she would give a lecture titled “Under Syrian Stars” and perform one or two of the plays she had written concerning the Biblical characters of Naaman, Ruth and Naomi, or Esther. After 1929, her performances began to include “Gems of the East,” a moving picture show of the “Holy Land” that she and her secretary and romantic partner Lucille Burgess filmed during 1928 while sojourning near Baalbek--Haidar’s home.

 

In her book Under Syrian Stars, Rahme Haidar said that her motivation for giving lectures and performances was due to how little “truth” Americans knew about her homeland. While her goal was to break down negative stereotypes and falsehoods concerning the “Holy Land,” her self- or auto-Orientalization contributed to the notions of East versus West. In her performances, Rahme Haidar positioned herself as a “Syrian” princess with a 2,000-year lineage.

​A map of locations Haidar performed in the United States. Khayrallah Center Archive.

Map instructions: This interactive map charts Haidar’s traveling tour across the United States and Canada

  • Click the map to engage with it.

  • Zoom in and out with the + and - symbols in the top left corner.

  • Each dot on the map represents one or more appearance by Haidar. The larger the dot the more performances she made at a particular location.

  • Click on the dots and press “Browse Features” to view individual newspaper articles about Haidar’s and Lucille Burgess’s performances. You can download the newspaper page to your computer.

  • Scroll through articles using arrows at the top of pop-up windows.

Lecturers
Lobby card for silent film Anna Ascends featuring Syrian character Anna Ayyoub
Released in 1922, Anna Ascends, a Broadway play and silent film, became the first silent film to feature an Arab American character. Anna Ayyoub, the title character, was cast as a hard-working, patriotic immigrant, which contrasted negative stereotypes of Arab characters portrayed in film throughout Hollywood’s “Golden Age.” Wikipedia Commons.

Cinema

As the Hollywood film industry grew from its infancy to the era of silent films in the 1910s and 1920s and into the so-called Golden Age in the 1930s, Arab actors and actresses remained marginalized throughout the industry. When Arabs were represented in film, plotlines centered around stereotypical Arab villains and cultural misrepresentations of the Middle East. With the growth of television in the 1950s, these scenes flooded screens across the United States. 

Read More ...

Frank Lackteen in Timber Queen

Frank Lackteen in Timber Queen

Play Video

The Timber Queen, a silent film serial released in 1922, features Frank Lackteen as Vance in one of his earliest acting roles. In this clip, Vance, a lumberyard workman, warns Don, a farmer in love with the film's heroine Ruth, of another lumberjack's plot to sabotage Ruth's claim to the lumberyard. This scene offers a glimpse into Lackteen’s acting career, and is a unique example of a role that didn’t overtly Orientalize or racialize his character.

Biographies

Frank Lackteen

Frank Lackteen (Mohammed Hassan Yachteen, Qab Elias, Lebanon, August 29, 1897 – July 8, 1968) was a talented actor who appeared in at least 200 Hollywood films. After emigrating to the United States in the early 1900s, Lackteen made enough money through factory work to move to Los Angeles and pursue acting. His film career, which spanned over 50 years, survived Hollywood’s rampant racism from early silent films into the Classical Era of the 1960s.

Arab American actor Frank Lackteen

George Hamid, Sr.

George Hamid, Sr. (February 4, 1896 – June 8, 1971, Brummana, Lebanon) became a performing acrobat, learning from his uncle, at a young age. In 1907, Hamid joined Buffalo Bill Cody’s Wild West Show and performed in vaudeville shows across the United States. In 1919, he created his own business, Hamid’s Oriental Circus, and spent the entirety of his career operating various circuses, fairs, and entertainment attractions.

Arab American circus performer and entrepreneur George Hamid

Joseph Arbeely & Sons

Joseph Arbeely (Yusef Awad Qaloush from Arbil c.1828 – August 12, 1894), his wife, six sons, and niece are considered the first Syrian family to immigrate in the United States. In 1880, while a professor at Maryville College in Tennessee, he began a lecture circuit joined in various combinations with sons, Negeeb, Khaleel, Habeeb, and Nasseem. Playing to America’s fascination with the exoticized East, the Arbeelys presented “costumes, manners, and habits” perceived as the “authentic Orient.” These theatrical demonstrations included pipe smoking, coffee preparation, and performing Islamic marriage rights. The success of the Arbeely’s tour inspired other Syrian immigrants to embrace stereotyped cultural performance as a vocation.

Arab American performers Joseph Arbeely and his two sons

Marrie Bayrooty

Marrie Bayrooty “the Greatest Whirling Dancer on Earth” performed with the Bayrooty Bros’ Oriental Troupe at Barnum & Bailey’s Freak Hall in New York, the Stones Museum in Boston, and 9th and Arch Dime Museum in Philadelphia during the early twentieth century. On April 7, 1905 she whirled 2,240 times in 37 minutes while eating an orange and a banana at Madison Square Garden, setting the new world record.

Arab American actor Frank Lackteen

Rahme Haider

Rahme Haidar (1886 – 1939) toured her character "Princess" Rahme throughout the U.S. and Canada with her romantic partner and musical accompanist Lucille Burgess. As a cultural mediator, Haidar used “traditional” Syrian dress and Orientalized drama and music-based adaptations of Biblical stories to correct the negative stereotypes and myths Americans held of the East. Haidar used her performances to raise funds for relief efforts in areas of the Middle East that lacked essentials due to War World I.

Arab American performer and lecturer Rahme Haidar

Julia Taweel

Julia Taweel (December 3, 1903 – November 9, 1976, Sahel Alma, Lebanon) emigrated to Chicago with her two children in 1910. Taweel garnered fame at the 1933 Chicago World’s Fair, where she was purportedly the only “artistic” (versus scandalous) dancing performer. After the fair, Taweel toured the country as a solo dancer, along with an all-Syrian troupe of vocalists and musicians.

Arab American dancer Julia Taweel

Hanna Korany

Hanna Korany (1871 – 1898, Mt. Lebanon, Lebanon) was a lecturer and writer who gained prestige at the 1893 Chicago World’s Fair as the Syrian delegate at the Congress of Representative Women. Korany’s influence as a cultural mediator between the Middle East and United States won her notoriety across the world. She wrote for the Egyptian women’s magazine al-Fatat and lectured at women’s associations and conventions across the United States to speak about Syrian culture and gender issues.

Arab American actor Frank Lackteen
Biographies

EXPLORE EARLY ARAB AMERICAN PERFORMANCE 

Explore More
Music_Header.jpg

Previous Section

MUSIC

miraatheader_edited_edited_COLOR.jpg

Next Section

PRESS

bottom of page