 |
|
 |
Googoosh: Iran's Daughter The film by Farhad Zamani tells the story of Googoosh - Iran's pop diva, who is still banned from performing in her homeland.
Googoosh was Iran's most famous and beloved pop diva, until she was silenced following the 1979 Islamic revolution when female singers were labeled “temptresses” and forbidden to release records or perform publicly in the presence of men. In this award-winning documentary from First Run Features, Googoosh: Iran's Daughter, Iranian-American filmmaker Farhad Zamani provides a thoughtful examination of the phenomenon of Googoosh. The documentary from 2000 is now out on DVD.
Made during the time when Googoosh was forbidden to grant interviews or perform, the film artfully pieces together clips from Googoosh’s career on stage and screen, creating a portrait of a woman who is a cultural icon for a country trapped between tradition and modernization. The rise and fall of her career—from her beginnings as a child star prodded by her entertainer father, up to and including her twenty years of silence—is placed in the political and historical context of the ever changing status of women in Iran. Zamani explores his enigmatic subject through interviews with close friends and family, including her only son. And although still banned from performing in her homeland, Googoosh has recently rekindled the hearts of Iranians living abroad on the international touring circuit with sold out shows at such venues as: the Staples Center, Wembly Stadium, and the Air Canada Arena in Toronto. Read more / order film |
|
 See also the chapter "Singing in a theocracy: female musicians in Iran" (in Shoot the Singer! Music Censorship Today, Zed Books/Freemuse, 2004) |
 |
| Related reading: |
| Googoosh: Iran's Daughter |
| Googoosh was Iran's most famous and beloved pop diva, until she was silenced following the 1979 Islamic revolution. The award winning documentary on Googoosh is now out on DVD |
| 14 December 2004 |
 |
| Mahsa Vahdat |
| Video interview with female Iranian singer Mahsat Vahdat. Women, religion, and music censorship in modern Iran |
| 17 January 2006 |
 |
| Iranian rapper talks a fine line |
| Chart-topping Shahkar Binesh-Pajouh targets unemployment, poverty and westernised Iranian girls in his new album, which the culture ministry took four years to approve. The ministry passed it only after he deleted six songs from his original ten |
| 04 September 2004 |
 |
| Shoot the Singer! Book |
| "Shoot the Singer! Music Censorship Today". The first worldwide presentation of contemporary cases of music censorship, with cases from i.a. Burma, Mexico, Middle East, France, Algeria, Zimbabwe, USA, South Africa, Turkey. Edited by Freemuse director Marie Korpe, published by Zed Books, May 2004. |
| 25 May 2004 |
 |
| Iran: Six musicians arrested |
| Authorities in Iran have reportedly detained at least six members of underground music bands and shut down their studios, Radio Farda reported |
| 24 April 2007 |
 |
| Iran: Report about art and censorship in Iran |
| “Artists self-censor in fear of risking harassment, arrest, flogging, or worse still, imprisonment,” stated a report about art and censorship in Iran published by Article 19 |
| 05 October 2006 |
 |
| Iran: Concerts cancelled |
| Bureaucratic obstacles have turned into a kind of musical oppression in Iran, reports Shadi Vatanparast from the Iranian web-magazine Tehranavenue.com |
| 21 October 2004 |
 |
| Fresh Iranian bands ready to rock |
| A music competition aims at introducing new talent in the Islamic Republic. But when you live and work in Iran, there are certain limitations on forms of self-expression. Subjects such as censorship, quality, and who should be the judge turned many meetings into lengthy discussions |
| 09 February 2004 |
 |
|
|
 |