ABOUT
Story Behind The Show
Shakespeare has always coincidentally aligned with Kamran Saliani’s life—and they say there are no coincidences. So, he has followed that sign wherever it has taken him. Born on April 23rd, 1994, to Mary and Bigan Saliani, Kamran somehow shares a cosmic connection with the Bard himself, who was also born in April… the 23rd… in 1564. From the beginning, storytelling was in his blood. He entered the world at 11:30 PM on a Saturday night at Albert Einstein Hospital in the Bronx—cementing, from his literal birth, a poetic kinship with Shakespeare.
His father, Bigan—a filmmaker who immigrated from Iran—would tell him stories of the Persian hero Rostam, filling Kamran’s imagination with the romance of his father’s homeland. His mother, Mary, who worked in film and broadcasting, read Harry Potter to him every night before bed. Growing up, his parents instilled in him a love of film, but it was his brother, Dimitri, who took him to a screening of The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King—an experience that changed everything. At age nine, Kamran discovered the magic of epic storytelling, larger-than-life characters, and the power of heightened language—the very hallmarks of Shakespeare. Needless to say, stories were his lullabies.
Kamran’s first taste of acting came as a freshman at Irvington High School, where he played Sam Warner in a play—coincidentally, again—titled Shakespeare in Hollywood. Another sign. He was hooked. He went on to perform in numerous school musicals, playing Conrad Birdie in Bye Bye Birdie, the Narrator in Into the Woods, and Kenickie in Grease. He fell head over heels in love with acting and knew it was his life’s mission.
After a grueling college audition process, Kamran was accepted into NYU Tisch School of the Arts and received his B.F.A. in Acting in 2016. He trained at the Stella Adler Studio—whose foundation, of course, is Shakespeare. At NYU, most students are cast in just one lead role during their time there. Kamran was cast in four, including Algernon in The Importance of Being Earnest, Bertolt Brecht in The Story of Black Marie, and a spy in Wilderness of Mirrors. But the role that changed everything was Pericles in Pericles, Prince of Tyre. It is one of Shakespeare’s least-known plays, and Kamran was honored to bring to life Shakespeare’s only Middle Eastern protagonist. As an Iranian-American actor, that meant the world to him and forever solidified the bond between himself and Shakespeare.
Fast forward to March 2020. COVID changed the world. In that moment of chaos and pause, Kamran realized life is too short not to go after what one loves. So, he started a Shakespeare company. With the support of the Mayor of Irvington, NY at the time, Brian C. Smith—who just happened to have a Tony Award for producing Once on This Island and is, as Kamran likes to say, “a really nice guy”—he launched the Irvington Shakespeare Company with Twelfth Night in the summer of 2021. Kamran played Malvolio. It was thrilling. And exhausting. Afterward, he took a short break to rest and regroup.
On vacation, Kamran went looking for a low-budget Shakespeare piece to bridge the gap between seasons. Like any millennial, he opened YouTube, typed “one-man Shakespeare plays,” hit enter—and boom. A grainy thumbnail of a young Sir Ian McKellen appeared. Best known to many as Gandalf (The Lord of the Rings) and Magneto (X-Men), McKellen began on the stage and became one of the great Shakespeareans of our time. The title: Acting Shakespeare. Kamran clicked. Ninety minutes later, his life had changed.
McKellen’s one-man show—part autobiography, part love letter to Shakespeare—was the most powerful theatrical experience Kamran had ever witnessed. He was in love, and after nearly twenty hours spent transcribing the script from YouTube, he found himself holding the first draft of the show—a work that would take another four years of painstaking editing and workshopping to fully bring to life.
He had to do it. The setup was simple: a few lights and a chair. Kamran started hunting for the rights—but everywhere he looked, nothing. He searched every database, every archive. Nothing. So he reached out to his former NYU director, Caroline Wood, and told her how much this show meant to him. She mentioned her husband—playwright Bruce Norris—might know someone in the London theatre world who could help. Kamran thanked her, crossed his fingers, and waited. Weeks passed. Then months. He started to let the dream go.
Until Tuesday, February 8th, 2022. At 1:04 PM, he received an email from Caroline. The message said: “I’d say you’re good to go. :)”
Attached was a long email chain between Caroline, Bruce, and some very official-sounding people. And at the very bottom… was a message.
From Sir Ian McKellen himself:
“I prefer small potatoes to large ones and I’d be very happy for Kamran Saliani to revive Acting Shakespeare for no charge. Please pass on my e-mail to him, in case I can help.”
And just like that—Kamran’s big break had arrived.
The Artist Behind the Parodies in Acting Shakespeare
Kamran performs parodies of Bo Burnham because, in his lifetime, Burnham has felt like a present-day Shakespeare. Like the Bard, Burnham reflects life back at audiences—brutally honest, funny, tender, and painfully self-aware. His work holds a mirror to the present moment with rare clarity. For Kamran, parody is a way of entering that conversation—not to mock, but to honor, interrogate, and expand it.
Parody, then, is not a detour from Kamran’s voice; it is the craft of dialogue. It allows him to stand shoulder to shoulder with the artists who shaped him, raise the mirror a little higher, and ask: What do you see now?
Bo Burnham carries Shakespeare’s torch. He “holds the mirror up to nature” in a way that speaks directly to a new generation, reconnecting shared humanity to texts that are ancient, but still urgent. To Kamran, Burnham is Shakespearean in his own right—just as Ian McKellen is in his interpretation: fearless, playful, and profoundly humane. Burnham’s voice sits in perfect conversation with the Bard. So the parodies are not departures. They are bridges. They belong.
The Words That Bind the Story
Special thanks to James Shapiro, whose generosity helped make this work possible. After Kamran’s mother and father gave him Shakespeare in a Divided America as a Christmas gift in 2021, the book became a revelation to him—illuminating the powerful and enduring bond between Shakespeare and America. With great kindness, James Shapiro granted Kamran permission to incorporate passages from his work into this show.
Those words form an essential part of the piece before the audience, serving as one of the key threads that binds America and Shakespeare together at the very heart of the story. For that generosity, Kamran remains forever grateful.

