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Actors plumb emotions in plays about genocide

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  • Actors plumb emotions in plays about genocide

    Sacramento Bee
    April 11, 2005, Monday METRO FINAL EDITION

    Actors plumb emotions in plays about genocide

    by Marcus Crowder Bee Theater Critic


    The Armenian genocide of 1915 has left lasting scars affecting
    generations of people, much like slavery in here in America, the
    Jewish Holocaust in Europe, mass killings in Cambodia and the
    inter-tribal massacres in Rwanda. Physical brutality and atrocities
    eventually yield to sustained emotional trauma for survivors and
    descendents of survivors.

    Writer and director Aram Kouyoumdjian has created two short and
    affecting one-person plays dealing with the Armenian genocide by the
    Turkish government, and they opened Friday at California Stage.

    The curtain-raiser, "Protest," performed by J.D. Rudometkin, tells of
    a young protester's hallucinatory out-of-body experience while being
    jailed for blocking the entrance to the Turkish Embassy in Los
    Angeles. The second, longer piece, "The Delicate Lines," performed by
    Jan Ahders, is a dour memoir of a childhood lost and adulthood
    shadowed by the genocide.

    Rudometkin is a quiet, often muted actor who gives one of his more
    expansive and satisfying performances in "Protest," which the author
    originally performed himself three years ago. Kouyoumdjian moves
    Rudometkin around the intimate California Stage space, producing an
    accessible energy that activates the play's symbolic dreamscape.

    As Rudometkin's character is hauled away from a nonviolent protest of
    Turkish denials of the genocide, he envisions himself in the Syrian
    desert. The Armenians were marched into that desert when driven out
    of Turkey, and it's the place where so many died. Kouyoumdjian gets
    an effective poetic irony in the situation and a convincing
    performance from Rudometkin.

    In "The Delicate Lines," Jan Ahders relates an epic that follows her
    character over 35 years from Armenia to France and the United States
    in recounting the effects of the genocide.

    The woman, Isabel, is taken as a child to a French orphanage, and her
    brother Vahe and their best friend, Garo, are sent to another one
    nearby. Though they escape Turkey with their lives, the emotional
    devastation leaves them broken and unable to really connect with one
    another.

    Ahders is a remarkable, nearly hypnotic performer at times, and she
    carries her character's burden gracefully here. The dialogue is often
    arch, formal and weighted, but Ahders gives an emotional authenticity
    to a story that feels somewhat removed.

    The Delicate Lines and protest

    * * * 1/2

    WHEN: Continues at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday and 2 p.m. Sunday (last
    show)

    WHERE: California Stage, 1723 25th St.

    TIME: 65 minutes with no intermission
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