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Javaad Alipoor
He/Him

Javaad Alipoor is a writer, director, performer and founding Artistic Director of The Javaad Alipoor Company

Javaad Alipoor is a British-Iranian writer, director and performer. He founded The Javaad Alipoor Company in 2019. The Company’s most recent work, Things Hidden Since the Foundation of the World, opened to five-star reviews and sell-out audiences at Battersea Arts Centre and HOME, Manchester. Things Hidden… then began a world tour, opening in the USA at The University of Michigan and Australia at The Sydney Opera House. Previously, Javaad Alipoor wrote, co-directed and performed in The Believers Are But Brothers as an international touring show, and wrote and performed in the TV adaptation for BBC Four. Its follow up, Rich Kids: A History of Shopping Malls in Tehran, also co-created with Kirsty Housley, won a Fringe First Award before the Covid-19 lockdown led it to transform into an immersive digital experience which opened at Battersea Arts Centre, before touring to Sundance Film Festival and The Public Theatre's Under the Radar Festival. Together with Chris Thorpe, Javaad Alipoor wrote and directed the trilingual theatre production, Made of Mannheim, which had its world premiere with Nationaltheater Mannheim and Theaterhaus G7.Javaad was Resident Associate Director at Sheffield Theatres from 2017-18 where he directed a new version of One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest. Prior to this he was Associate Director at Bradford’s Theatre in the Mill from 2015-17. Javaad is involved in politics and activism, co-founding The International Alliance in Support of Iranian Workers, The Syria Solidarity Campaign and a Bradford-based network supporting EU migrants after Brexit. His writing about politics and culture has been featured in The Guardian, The Independent and The Stage. His plays have been published by Oberon and Nick Hern, and his poetry by Art in Usual Places.

A man using computers and displaying his face on a large screen.
Essay

Catching History on the Fly in Javaad Alipoor’s Trilogy

8 January 2025

Playwright Javaad Alipoor’s trilogy of plays interrogates how technology, global politics, and fracturing identities are changing our world. He reflects on how technological adaptations and new political circumstances of the past decade have changed the context of the work and what the trilogy might be if written today.

A woman in red lighting holding her iPhone as if to take a picture.
Essay

The Politics of Rebuilding Theatrical and Civic Communities: Global Autocracy, Brexit, and Racism

16 September 2021

Verity Healey sits down with Javaad Alipoor to discuss themes that preoccupy Alipoor as a theatremaker and political person: racism, history, Brexit, international communities, politics, and how these things come into his work and collaborations with other artists.

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