‘Mind2Mind: Connected’ performers give Dubai the Las Vegas experience

Dubai-based magician-and-mentalist duo James Harrington and Marina Liani of “Mind2Mind: Connected” are making waves in the entertainment world. (Supplied)
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Updated 02 April 2024
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‘Mind2Mind: Connected’ performers give Dubai the Las Vegas experience

  • The pair won the golden buzzer on “Ukraine's Got Talent,” performed on “Britain's Got Talent” in 2019 and enjoyed a warm reception on “America's Got Talent” in 2022
  • They The couple perform weekly at Dubai’s Jumeirah Beach Hotel

DUBAI: Dubai-based magician-and-mentalist duo James Harrington and Marina Liani of “Mind2Mind: Connected” are making waves in the entertainment world, with their Las Vegas-style spectacles earning praise from industry titans such as British TV personality Simon Cowell, who lauded their act as “mind-blowing.”

The couple, who met in 2017 in the UAE, perform weekly at Dubai’s Jumeirah Beach Hotel.

 

 

The couple’s goal is to “perform three or four times a week, basically the Vegas show model, which doesn’t exist in Dubai yet,” they told Arab News.

“It’s the best thing we’ve ever done,” Harrington, who is British, added. “It’s incredibly satisfying. Every week we have kind of a gathering after the show where we get to meet and talk to people who have just seen the show, and the feedback so far has been incredible.”

“I think it’s kind of almost there already,” added Ukrainian Liani. “It’s just that one thing that’s missing — a little bit more shows.” 

 

 

The pair won the golden buzzer on “Ukraine's Got Talent,” performed on “Britain's Got Talent” in 2019 and enjoyed a warm reception on “America's Got Talent” in 2022.

“When we performed at The Magic Circle, which is the world’s most prestigious magic organization based in London, they awarded us with something that I never thought I would get, which is membership to the Inner Magic Circle,” Harrington said. “There can only ever be 200 members of the Inner Magic Circle. And I think currently, there are only about 10 of them that are women. So, the fact that Marina was awarded it as well is incredible.”

 

 

The pair will also take part in the coveted International Federation of Magic Societies (FISM) convention, scheduled for the summer of 2025 in Italy. 

Like many magicians and mentalists, the couple often face accusations of employing planted audience members and covert electronic devices for communication. 

“Those are things that we go to incredible lengths with within our show to prove that we’re not using,” Harrington said. “We also have $100,000 reward to anyone that can prove we use actors or secret electronics, because we don’t, and I think it would be incredibly boring. There would be no art in it if we were just faking those things.”


Lebanese singer Fayrouz’s second son dies just months after his brother

Updated 08 January 2026
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Lebanese singer Fayrouz’s second son dies just months after his brother

  • Hali Rahbani’s passing described as ‘painful loss’ to family
  • Elder brother, composer Ziad, died in July last year

LONDON: Hali Rahbani, the son of renowned Lebanese singer Fayrouz and her late husband, composer Assi Rahbani, has died at the age of 68.

Lebanon’s Minister of Information Paul Morcos announced the news on X. He described it as a “painful loss for a family that has given Lebanon and the world an invaluable artistic and humanitarian legacy.”

Rahbani’s death comes less than six months after his brother, Ziad, the acclaimed composer and playwright, died at the age of 69.

Hali, who had physical and intellectual disabilities, was confined to a wheelchair and was cared for by his mother. He was last seen in public in July at his brother’s funeral in Beirut, which was attended by thousands of mourners.

Fayrouz, 91, had four children with Rahbani. The elder of her two daughters, Layal, died in 1988 at the age of 29. Her second daughter, Rima, born in 1965, is an artist and singer.

The Rahbani family were key figures in Lebanon’s golden era of musical theater from the late 1950s to 1975.