NCCA’s history is marked by pioneering programs long-standing festivals, youth engagement initiatives, professional training pathways, and international partnerships. Through these milestones, the centre has built a distinctive identity: one that places the performing arts at the heart of education, dialogue, inclusion, and human development.
The National Centre for Culture and Arts (NCCA) was established in 1987 as a non-profit institution under the King Hussein Foundation. Since its founding, the centre has grown into one of Jordan’s most influential cultural institutions, using theatre, dance, arts education, and cultural exchange to promote social development, creativity, and cross-cultural understanding. Over the decades, NCCA has evolved from a national performing arts initiative into a regional and international reference point in interactive theatre, drama in education, and contemporary dance.
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The Centre is established (1987)
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The National Interactive Theatre Troupe begins (1989)
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The International Arab Youth Congress becomes an annual NCCA platform (1994)
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MISK Dance Company is founded (1996)
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Regional recognition for youth cultural work (1997)
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International representation expands (2004)
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A new dance era begins (2009)
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The International Arab Youth Congress goes abroad for the first time (2011)
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NCCA becomes a UNFPA Global Centre of Excellence (2013)
The same period also saw major artistic visibility for MISK Dance Company, including works such as Scheherazade, which premiered at the Jerash International Festival and was also performed at the Bahrain Summer Festival.
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Dance repertoire grows (2014)
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Original contemporary works and major public stages (2016)
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New ballet productions continue (2017)
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National visibility through major ceremonies (2018)
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Education and performance continue to deepen (2019)
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Adapting through the pandemic (2020)
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Education, outreach, and festival leadership (2021)
A major milestone that year was NCCA’s role in developing the Ministry of Education “Drama in Education and Theatre Arts Techniques” Manual for teachers in grades 1–12. NCCA also trained 200 public school teachers, impacting 2,880 students.
In the same year, NCCA opened the Jerash Festival for Culture and Arts with the large multimedia production Ode to My Country, involving 120 artists from NCCA and partner groups. It also organized the 12th Amman Contemporary Dance Festival.
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Research, teacher training, youth capacity building, and regional exchange (2022)
That year, NCCA trained 100 Ministry of Education teachers from 32 schools in Irbid, Amman, Karak, and Zarqa. It also implemented projects that trained 96 young participants in creative writing and theatre techniques in Karak, Irbid, Ajloun, and Amman, with their stories turned into performances seen by 1,765 beneficiaries. NCCA also expanded regional sharing through training work in Palestine, Egypt, and Morocco, and held the 13th ACDF, welcoming artists from multiple countries.
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New productions and youth storytelling (2023)
NCCA also continued the project Untold Stories (2021–2023), building the capacities of youth through performing arts in areas including East Amman, Ajloun, and Karak. The project included creative writing workshops, adaptation of youth monologues into stage works, training in theatre, music, and singing, and grants to community organizations to carry cultural programming forward locally.
In the same year, NCCA produced the opening of the 37th Jerash Festival for Culture and Arts, presenting the performance River of Gold, which highlighted the history and cultural heritage of Jerash through music, singing, theatre, and visual performance.
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Civic participation, conflict dialogue, and international cultural exchange (2024)
The centre also produced Boat, an interactive play inspired by stories of conflict survivors, especially refugee women, using theatre as a space for empathy, peacebuilding, and dialogue. Another production, Touristic Ambition, was created to challenge social norms around women’s employment in tourism and creative industries.
On the dance and international exchange side, NCCA’s Dance Department showcased Jordanian performing arts in China, featuring Jordanian music, poetry, song, and dabke. Under NCCA’s direction, the production Evenings of Al-Hijr was also staged in AlUla, Saudi Arabia. In addition, NCCA held an interactive theatre workshop in Salalah, Oman.
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Jordanian arts on wider international stages (2025)
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A national institution with regional and international reach (Today)
From its founding in 1987 to its current international presence, NCCA has consistently used the performing arts as a practical force for education, dialogue, empowerment, and cultural development. Its history is not only the story of an institution, but also the story of how theatre, dance, and creativity became central tools for social change in Jordan.

