

Edit it once and use it as much as you want throughout the footage. This handy option means you don’t have to work extensively on the same clip several times. Premiere can support most types of video coding, from mobile phones to digital cameras.Īpply effects and play around with different tools while a clip is in the media bin.

Import footage from virtually any device. Within minutes, even a new user can edit media projects like a pro.

What sets Adobe Premiere apart from its competitors is how easy it is to use. Short clips, films, and music videos are just a few of the types of projects that Premiere can help you with. (Yasir and Karima's youngest children, Yousif and Marwa, are heard but not seen).Edit your videos the way you envisioned, with this easy-to-use software and its powerful tools.Īdobe Premiere caters to all types of projects. We meet the couple, their oldest son Mazin (Ali Louis Bourzgui), oldest daughter Layal (Becca Khalil) and her husband, Sahir (Waseem Alzer), upon their jubilant return from Layal and Sahir's wedding, which is to be quickly followed by the younger couple's planned departure for the United States. The superior first act takes place in March 2003 at the well-appointed Baghdad home (a tastefully sumptuous space by casaboyce) belonging to Iraqi government official Yasir Ibrahim (Mattico David) and his wife, Karima (Atra Asdou). At its core, however, "Layalina" is an affectionate, well-meaning celebration of unconditional love and acceptance and the sacrifices family members make to ensure each other's happiness. To that end, the play embraces familiar tropes: the conflict between maintaining cultural traditions and embracing new ones, and young people laboring under the burden of their elders' expectations and their fears. Mattico David, left, and Atra Asdou play siblings who immigrated from their native Iraq to Australia and the United States, respectively, in Goodman Theatre's premiere of "Layalina" by Martin Yousif Zebari.
