Set against the glamorous backdrop of the Iranian
National Ballet Company in 1970s Tehran, awash with
money thanks to the generous patronage of the Shah’s
wife Farah Pahlavi known as the Shahbanu, ROMANCE AND
REVOLUTION is the true story of Clair Symonds, a naïve
19 year old Jewish ballet dancer who grew up in South
Africa during the era of apartheid and who sets off to
Iran without even knowing where that country is, let
alone anything about its rich history and culture.
Within a few months of her arrival she has met and
fallen in love with Arash Alizadeh, a dashing student of
architecture five years her senior and whose passion in
life, much to his father’s disdain, is classical dance -
in addition to being a fierce critic of the Shah’s
dictatorial regime. Nothing, it seems, can prevent Clair
and Arash’s romance from moving rapidly towards marriage
- even the opposition of their respective fathers.
Having been seduced by the charm and allure of her
dashing Iranian knight, Clair fails to take a stand
against the Alizadeh family’s policy of keeping her
Jewishness strictly under wraps. There were dark
mutterings, even from Arash, of the Holocaust being a
myth to justify the existence of Israel and to dampen
down sympathy for the plight of the Palestinians. Not
that such grand issues are of much concern to Clair -
she is preoccupied with dancing the role of Zarema in
The Fountain of Bakhchesarai and the great ballet
classics which are part and parcel of the company’s
lavish repertoire. Besides, she is hopelessly in love
and any criticisms of Arash’s increasingly erratic
behaviour fall on deaf ears. But Arash proves to be
considerably more charming in courtship and seduction
than in wedlock and matrimony - Clair seeing herself
thrown into the arms of her new family rather than those
of her husband. And in accepting the status quo she
reluctantly becomes more sister than wife. Undeterred,
Clair decides to marry Arash for a second time. Does
love conquer all? Are religious and cultural differences
insurmountable, as many would have us believe, meaning
that any union between Jew and Muslim is doomed to
failure from the outset?
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