Lebanese actress Yumna Marwan to star in Hulu series

Yumna Marwan is famous for her roles in the TV series “Little Birds,” and the films “The Translator” and “The River.” (Getty Images)
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Updated 03 February 2023
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Lebanese actress Yumna Marwan to star in Hulu series

DUBAI: Lebanese actress Yumna Marwan is set to join the cast of the FX limited series “The Veil,” which will air exclusively on Hulu.

The “Costa Brava, Lebanon” star is joining a stellar cast including US actress Elisabeth Moss, US actor Josh Charles and French Algerian actor Dali Benssalah.

According to the official logline, the series “explores the surprising and fraught relationship between two women who play a deadly game of truth and lies on the road from Asia to Europe. One woman has a secret, the other a mission to reveal it.”

The details of each character are still under wraps, but Marwan will play the role of Adilah, Benssalah will play Malik and Charles will star as Max.

Marwan is famous for her roles in the TV series “Little Birds,” and the films “The Translator” and “The River.”

The actress spent her childhood in Beirut and her teenage years in the US.

She kicked off her professional career in 2013, when she starred in her first feature film “The Valley” by writer and director Ghassan Salhab. Since then she has taken crucial roles with renowned directors in the Arab world.

The actress starred in Mounia Akl’s debut feature, “Costa Brava, Lebanon,” which screened at international festivals.

The film won the Network for the Promotion of Asia Pacific Cinema award at the 46th Toronto International Film Festival. It also screened at the Venice Film Festival in 2021.

The movie is an eerie family drama set amid a raging climate crisis in near-future Lebanon. It also stars actors Saleh Bakri, who plays Walid, and Nadine Labaki, who plays Soraya.

Marwan stars as Walid’s sister, Alia, in the film.

Meanwhile, Benssalah, the other Arab on the show, is known for his roles in the James Bond film “No Time to Die” and the recently released “The Accidental Getaway Driver.” He has also starred in “Athena,” “All Your Faces,” and the series “Savages.”

British screenwriter Steven Knight is writing and executive producing “The Veil,” with Moss executive producing under her Love & Squalor Pictures banner, according to Variety.


Fine-art photographer looks to capture beauty of Saudi Arabia’s volcanic fields 

Updated 57 min 15 sec ago
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Fine-art photographer looks to capture beauty of Saudi Arabia’s volcanic fields 

DUBAI: British fine-art photographer John Balsdon is set to undertake his first-ever project in the Middle East this month as he heads hundreds of miles into Saudi Arabia’s isolated Harrat Rahat volcanic field to capture shots of Harrat Khaybar.

In late January, Balsdon will shoot images of lava flows, black basalt formations and sprawling desert plains while accompanied by a small film crew, drone pilot Chris Davies, and a Saudi guide.

“Saudi Arabia felt like a place of immense creative potential, one that is still largely unexplored from a visual storytelling perspective. I was drawn to the idea of documenting a country at a moment of transformation,” the lawyer-turned-artist told Arab News.

“During the research phase, I was genuinely surprised by the diversity of the landscapes. The scale and contrast, from deserts and volcanic terrain to coastlines and mountains, challenged any single perception of the country,” he added.

The photographs will be part of Balsdon’s ongoing project “Always Look Twice,” which features stunning, textured photographs from Australia, Botswana, Argentina and beyond.

“There have been several places that have left a lasting impression on me, particularly environments where the landscape feels vast and timeless. In particular, the Northern Territories in Australia and the deserts in Namibia. These are the places that recalibrate your sense of scale and remind you of how small we are within a much larger natural story,” Balsdon said.

His aerial shots blur the line between photography and fine art, capturing the textures, patterns and color gradients visible in these awe-inspiring landscapes in defined detail.

 

“I want my images to connect on an aesthetic and visceral level that is both universal and personal. Within those images there must be multiple layers of detail and interest that reward repeated viewings and, very importantly, provide clues that they only could have been taken in the (Kingdom of Saudi Arabia). These requirements present a major challenge to me, but I am relishing this opportunity.”

Balsdon will shoot still and moving imagery to be edited into a short film, as well as a photographic series showcasing Saudi Arabia’s volcanic heartlands.

“These photographs will be supplemented by a film, which will document my process, providing viewers with an opportunity to see how the photographs were taken, the vehicles used and the roads traveled, the gyrocopters and our locations, including our time and experiences in Riyadh, Madinah and the desert,” he explained.