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  • Old Friends Dukakis, Ayvazian Are a Clash Act

    Washington Post, DC
    March 30 2004

    Old Friends Dukakis, Ayvazian Are a Clash Act

    By Jane Horwitz
    Special to The Washington Post
    Tuesday, March 30, 2004; Page C05


    Olympia Dukakis and Leslie Ayvazian have been friends and colleagues
    for more than 20 years. At the moment they're in Alexandria, where
    Ayvazian's "Rosemary and I" will have its world premiere. It opens
    Sunday at MetroStage and runs through May 9.



    Ayvazian, whose plays include "Nine Armenians" and "Lovely Day,"
    performed her solo show "High Dive" at MetroStage last season. She
    will also act in "Rosemary and I," a four-character memory piece
    partly inspired by her mother's childhood. Dukakis is directing with
    Nancy Robillard, who will continue rehearsals when the busy
    Oscar-winning actress has to be away for a day or two.

    Dukakis is known for her honored 1987 turn in "Moonstruck" and other
    film and TV roles, but she also has been steeped in classical and
    experimental theater. She founded and ran the Whole Theatre Company
    in Montclair, N.J., for 19 years.

    "It's very collaborative, actually, very collaborative," says Dukakis
    of the process underway at MetroStage. "Sometimes the play is taking
    new turns that Leslie didn't expect. . . . We disagree sometimes, we
    try this, we try a compromise. . . . I think the trick is to let go
    of things."

    One day last week, raised voices thundered through the closed doors
    of the theater just after the day's rehearsals had begun. The
    outburst was not part of the script. It was Dukakis and Ayvazian
    having words. Moments later, they were pals again.

    "We got very excited and then all of a sudden we were differing on
    one point and it escalated to this top level," recalls Ayvazian. "It
    was like a storm blew through, and in many ways both of us were both
    rocked by it and cleared by it and . . . ended up feeling closer than
    ever.

    "There are not many people you can come to pitched emotion with,"
    says Ayvazian of her son's godmother. "We're remarkable friends."

    In "Rosemary and I," a woman, Julia (played by Ayvazian), tries to
    conjure memories of her childhood and to understand the vague sense
    of neglect she always felt because her mother, Rosemary, a concert
    singer, traveled constantly. Julia also muses about Rosemary's
    accompanist, a woman with whom the singer shared an unexplored
    passion.

    Ayvazian's maternal grandmother was a singer, and she believes "there
    was some feeling about my mother missing her mother." The rest of the
    play is Ayvazian's invention.

    "The play comes from the work that Olympia and I have done together,
    which is the investigation of ancient mythology and . . . what it is
    for a woman to try to find her voice, even if her voice isn't within
    the normal spectrum of what is correct for a woman," Ayvazian says.

    She and Dukakis did a series of workshops that explored the duality
    of the female psyche through the mythology of two ancient Sumerian
    goddesses. They represent "the two aspects of the feminine. . . .
    It's usually the sexually aggressive part, the rage, the pain that
    somehow women are not supposed to walk around with," Dukakis says.

    The question in "Rosemary and I," Ayvazian says, is "can women live
    fully and can men live fully and can we help each other do that by
    not denying aspects of ourselves?"

    A Real 'Homebody'

    For a year or more, Brigid Cleary was "perfectly happy" just making
    people laugh in the farce "Shear Madness" at the Kennedy Center. A
    few months ago, she and her family were in the middle of a move to a
    part of Calvert County that she calls "as close to Mayberry as I
    think exists." Her phone wasn't installed yet.

    Then one night stage manager Jeanette Buck told Cleary that Howard
    Shalwitz of Woolly Mammoth had been trying to reach her. They needed
    an actress to perform the daunting monologue "Homebody," the first
    half of Tony Kushner's "Homebody/Kabul."

    Shalwitz faxed Cleary a few pages of the script; she read it and
    thought, "Oh my Lord." But a fellow "Madness" cast member prodded her
    -- "Are you an actor or not?" -- and she took the plunge into
    Kushner's "incredible, lush . . . kaleidoscope" of words.




    The "Homebody" is a middle-class London housewife who shares with the
    audience her utter fascination with the ancient city of Kabul, her
    estrangement from her family and her near-psychotic obsession with
    words. "She is telling a couple of stories at once, but all leading
    to making a decision," Cleary says.

    "I'm more of a patter-song type person, and this is an aria," Cleary
    observes. "There are sentences that are half a page long." She began
    practicing the monologue on her long commutes and credits director
    John Vreeke with guiding her through the thicket in rehearsals.

    Woolly Mammoth's production with Theater J runs through April 11 at
    the D.C. Jewish Community Center.

    Cleary has been acting on Washington area stages for about 25 years.
    Frequent theatergoers will remember her perfectly timed delivery in
    productions of "The Women" at Studio Theatre and Arena Stage, where
    she also did "Expecting Isabel." She's become known for comic roles.

    "I think I kind of become whatever I need to become in a role,"
    Cleary says. "I never thought of myself as a comic actress, and I was
    always amazed that people didn't think there was a matching flipside
    to that."

    In May she will appear in "The Cripple of Inishmaan" at Studio and
    may rejoin "Shear Madness" after that. "I am going to treat my career
    like I do my yoga classes," Cleary says. ". . . I'm going to keep
    becoming more and more limber, more and more able -- until I can't."
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