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A Trip to the Moon

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  • A Trip to the Moon

    A Trip to the Moon
    by Omar Metwally

    Broadway.com, NY
    April 21 2005

    About the author:

    For Tony-nominated actor Omar Metwally (Sixteen Wounded), performing as
    Aram in off-Broadway's Beast on the Moon has been an amazing learning
    experience. Born in Queens to parents who immigrated to America,
    Metwally has come to appreciate their struggle for a new life in a
    new world. Richard Kalinoski's Beast on the Moon, which is currently
    playing at the Century Center for the Performing Arts, tells the
    tale of a married couple's efforts to start a family and a new life
    in America, but they are at a standstill when dealing with emotional
    scars from unforgettable torture and loss of family during the tragic
    Armenian genocide. Besides his Tony-nominated turn in Sixteen Wounded,
    Metwally's other stage credits include Homebody/Kabul, A History
    of God, Quartett, The Bacchae 2.1, Company, The Winter's Tale, and
    Summertime. Here, Metwally shares what he has learned in order to
    play the heartfelt Aram, and what is making him work so hard to send
    out the overall message of Beast on the Moon.

    The first time I read Richard Kalinoski's play Beast on the Moon,
    I was deeply moved and excited by it. I thought it one of the most
    complex, heightened and beautiful scripts I had read in ages, full of
    humor and pain. It is a story about survival, about slaughter, about
    love. Beast on the Moon follows two young survivors of the Armenian
    genocide, Aram and Seta, a boy and a girl. The two have each lost
    their families in the tragedy and have eventually made their way to
    Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The play begins the day Seta arrives from an
    orphanage in Istanbul as a mail-order bride for her new husband Aram,
    who had come to America three years before. Beast deals intimately
    and intensely with the tragedies that befell these people in their
    native land, and with how their losses affect the relationship they
    try to build with each other. So the first thing I had to do was learn
    as much as I could about this tragic event that had shaped Aram's life.

    Prior to my reading Beast on the Moon, I had only a vague awareness
    of the Armenian genocide of 1915-23. But as soon as I read the play,
    I rushed to the library to find out more. I was shocked to learn
    that between 1915 and 1923 the Young Turk government of the Ottoman
    Empire carried out an organized campaign to slaughter its Armenian
    population. This was done primarily through the rounding up and
    murder of the men, and the deportation of women, children and the
    elderly into the desert via forced march. While on these marches,
    the Armenians were subject to robbery, rape, abduction and murder
    by soldiers and roving gangs, and many more perished of starvation,
    exposure and disease. All told, between 1 and 1.5 million Armenians
    lost their lives.

    It was the first genocide of the 20th century, and I couldn't believe
    how little I had heard of this massive tragedy. And then I learned
    that the federal government of Turkey still denies the genocide to
    this day, 90 years later. Such denial not only prevents healing and
    dialogue between the affected communities, but it sends the message
    that crimes of this kind can go unpunished and even unrecognized. As my
    awareness grew, so did my urgent desire to help bring this important
    and powerful play to New York. But the thing about Beast on the Moon
    that I found most inspiring was the way that its central characters,
    in the wake of a horrific tragedy, refuse to abandon the hope and
    struggle for renewal. That's why I think the play is so relevant and
    why audiences seem to respond so strongly to it. In times where the
    value of human life seems to be widely forgotten or willfully ignored,
    a play about two people who find the strength to connect and heal in
    spite of such violence is very timely.

    Beast on the Moon is also a story about America and the joys and
    struggles of being an immigrant in this country. As the child of two
    immigrants, this aspect of the play touched me deeply. The hope and
    excitement of what America meant to people around the world, as well
    as the confusion and pain of trying to make a life here are all a
    part of this play as well. In this regard, working on Aram brought
    me closer to understanding some of the struggles and journeys taken
    by my own parents.

    The other part of my experience with Beast on the Moon has been
    the incredible good fortune to work with the artists who have been
    assembled for this project. My castmates Lena Georgas, Louis Zorich,
    and Matt Borish are all extraordinary actors and I have learned so
    much from each of them. And our director Larry Moss is the perfect
    shepherd for this play. His immense skills as an acting coach and his
    encyclopedic knowledge of the theater are a humbling and inspiring
    combination for any actor. He creates an atmosphere in rehearsal that
    truly encourages risk and exploration. So often these ideas are given
    lip service but not really honored. But Larry creates an environment
    that makes us feel relaxed and yet inspired to work harder than we
    ever have before.
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