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Sacramento: Plays recall Armenian genocide

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  • Sacramento: Plays recall Armenian genocide

    Sacramento Bee
    April 8, 2005, Friday METRO FINAL EDITION

    Plays recall Armenian genocide

    by Marcus Crowder Bee Theater Critic


    Playwright and director Aram Kouyoumdjian returns to his roots, so to
    speak, in two ways tonight. Two one-act plays by Kouyoumdjian, "The
    Delicate Lines" and "Protest," dramas inspired by the Armenian
    genocide, are opening at California Stage for a short run.

    "The plays are being presented this month because April marks the
    90th anniversary of the Armenian genocide. I wanted to write a
    commemoration piece," Kouyoumdjian said from Los Angeles, where he
    now lives.

    Kouyoumdjian is an Elly award-winning writer (best original script
    for "The Farewells" last year) and director ("Three Hotels") who
    produced theater here with his acclaimed Vista Players ensemble. He
    left Sacramento last year to return to Los Angeles, where much of his
    family lives.

    His relatives are survivors of the 1915 genocide in which the Turkish
    army forcibly removed the Armenian populace from Armenia and
    Anatolia, then marched them to Syria. An estimated 1.5 million
    Armenians died.

    "Many Armenian families whose ancestors survived the death march
    ended up in those countries of the Middle East," Kouyoumdjian said.
    "They were mostly sent on these death marches along the desert, which
    reached into Syria. The men were killed, and others simply died of
    exhaustion and starvation from the conditions. Countries like Syria
    and Lebanon took in the survivors."

    Kouyoumdjian's relatives settled in Lebanon, where he was born and
    lived for 10 years before the family immigrated to Los Angeles.

    "It's a major issue in the Armenian community," Kouyoumdjian said of
    the events, "a historical and psychological issue that people of
    later generations have had to deal with. This piece is simply an
    artistic response to it."

    Kouyoumdjian came to Sacramento to attend law school and then stayed
    here and practiced law with the firm of Poswall, White and Cutler.

    "The Delicate Lines," which will receives its world premiere tonight,
    will be performed by Kouyoumdjian's longtime associate, Jan Ahders,
    who worked with the Vista Players from their inception.

    "The piece for Jan is historical, with the speaker speaking in 1950,
    tracing her life story as a survivor of the genocide, along with her
    brother and his best friend," Kouyoumdjian said.

    "I wanted to tell the story of three people through the perspective
    of one person. It's a story of how these people affected and changed
    her life, her opinions and reactions to historical events."

    Kouyoumdjian wrote the piece with Ahders in mind, and he's been
    flying up from Los Angeles to work on it with her at her Carmichael
    home.

    "It's an honor when someone writes something for you or has you in
    mind when they compose something," Adhers said.

    Their long artistic collaboration allowed her the confidence to make
    a few suggestions to Kouyoumdjian about certain parts of the script.

    "I think in terms of rhythm, and once he had what he considered his
    final draft, I suggested some things based on how it felt speaking
    the words," Ahders said.

    Although learning the 15 pages of single-spaced dialogue was fairly
    difficult for Ahders, learning the traditional song that her
    character sings at the end was particularly tricky.

    "Learning the song was hard because everyone sings it a little
    differently," Ahders said, "but once I was able to write it out on
    notepaper, it was OK."

    The second one-act, "Protest," which Kouyoumdjian first performed
    himself at the Sacramento Solo Festival in 2001, is based on his
    experience being arrested while protesting Turkish denials of the
    genocide. JD Rudometkin, who also worked with Kouyoumdjian here but
    now lives in Los Angeles, will perform "Protest."

    The plays also will be performed in San Francisco at the C.A.F.E./Off
    Broadway on April 21-22 and then on April 23 in Los Angeles at the El
    Portal Forum Theatre.
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