Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

American dancers stay in step with their Armenian ancestors

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • American dancers stay in step with their Armenian ancestors

    Newark Star Ledger, NJ
    Oct 7 2004

    American dancers stay in step with their Armenian ancestors

    BY ROBERT JOHNSON
    Star-Ledger Staff

    Dreams of their ancestral homeland -- far-off Armenia -- motivate the
    dancers of the Antranig Armenian Dance Ensemble, a lively group that
    draws many of its members from churches and communities in New
    Jersey. The ensemble will bring its latest folk-dance spectacle,
    "Journey Through Dance," to the Bergen Performing Arts Center in
    Englewood on Saturday.

    Though she was born in the United States, Joyce Tamesian-Shenloogian,
    who has directed Antranig since 1986, says she feels a special bond
    with the country that her grandparents fled during World War I.

    "It's not the Bahamas. It's not Hawaii," Tamesian-Shenloogian allows,
    referring to the mountainous republic in Western Asia. "But it's
    yours. There's something that always pulls you back there."

    Tamesian-Shenloogian, a graduate of Montclair State University's
    dance department, joined the Antranig Armenian Dance Ensemble when
    she was 17, generally an age when many Armenian-Americans become
    members of the company. Performing with the ensemble seemed a natural
    step for her, after spending years in after-school programs studying
    the Armenian language (which has its own 38-letter alphabet) and
    learning about her roots.

    Like these after-school programs and other cultural groups, including
    choral and dramatic societies, the Antranig Armenian Dance Ensemble
    exists under the umbrella of the Armenian General Benevolent Union, a
    national organization based in New York City. Tamesian-Shenloogian
    says the ensemble performs every couple of months.

    Antranig, which numbers 30 dancers ranging in age from their teens to
    their 40s, rehearses at St. Leon's Armenian Apostolic Church in Fair
    Lawn and recruits fresh talent from the Armenian communities in
    Tenafly, Livingston and Union City. Although the ensemble toured
    Armenia in 1989 and plans to return there next year, most of the
    younger members have never seen their dances performed in their
    native setting.

    The ensemble maintains an important link with the homeland, however,
    in the person of choreographer Gagik Karapetian, a former principal
    dancer with the State Dance Ensemble of Armenia. Tamesian-Shenloogian
    calls him Armenia's answer to Mikhail Baryshnikov.

    Karapetian has been working directly with the Antranig Ensemble since
    1988, weeding out the foreign influences that had crept into the
    immigrant group's repertoire. Many Armenian families, including
    Tamesian-Shenloogian's, followed a circuitous route to America, first
    settling in Middle Eastern countries whose own cultural traditions
    affected their practices.

    Thanks to Karapetian, "Journey Through Dance," which received its
    premiere this summer at Lincoln Center in New York, will be authentic
    in every detail, including the vivid costumes and the graceful,
    "flowerlike" hand gestures that Tamesian-Shenloogian says typify
    Armenian women's dances.

    "They're allowed to do more. They're not stoic," she says, comparing
    Armenian women with their counterparts in Georgia, another region of
    the Caucasus. The men, for their part, look bravely defiant, adopting
    a solid stance called the "Kotchari," in a dance of the same name.
    Though Armenia is a small country, with fewer than 4 million
    inhabitants, it has a rich history and more than 200 regions from
    which Antranig draws its repertory.

    While the dancers perform traditional steps arranged in geometric
    patterns, or pantomime humorous skits, the audience will hear the
    recorded sounds of ancient Armenian instruments, from the tootling of
    the duduk to the plucked strings of the kemenche and the powerful
    rhythms of the dahoul drum.

    While sharing their traditions with Americans of all backgrounds, the
    members of Antranig are able to tap something deep within themselves.
    Says Lena Jinivizian, a Rutgers University student and Antranig
    dancer quoted in the company's program: "I couldn't imagine my life
    without the passion and energy that Armenian dance brings out of me."
Working...
X