Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Theatre Review: Personal horror

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

  • Theatre Review: Personal horror

    Los Angeles Times
    April 26, 2005 Tuesday
    Home Edition

    THEATER REVIEW;
    Personal horror;
    An eyewitness account of the Armenian holocaust is skillfully
    detailed in 'I Ask You' at the Alex Theatre.

    by Philip Brandes, Special to The Times

    The horrors of events like the Armenian holocaust are so vast that
    it's hard to imagine them from a distance as anything other than a
    numbing abstraction. It's primarily through the stories of survivors
    that casualty statistics hit home with the immediacy and intensity of
    personal experience -- qualities vividly evoked in "I Ask You, Ladies
    and Gentlemen" at Glendale's Alex Theatre.

    Author Leon Surmelian's memoir, a harrowing account of the World War
    I-era ethnic cleansing of Turkey's Armenian population, has been
    skillfully adapted for Cornerstone Theatre Company by Yehuda Hyman.
    Created as part of the Cornerstone's youth-focused educational
    program, the piece does not entail the level of community
    participation for which the company is best known, but it's a
    powerful and educational outreach effort nonetheless.

    In staging this narration-heavy chronicle of Surmelian's boyhood
    ordeal -- the brutal murder of his family and his own narrow escape
    -- director Christopher Liam Moore artfully extends the piece beyond
    just storytelling.

    Playing Surmelian as an adult narrator and at various times between
    the ages of 8 and 17, solo actor Ludwig Manukian proves a perfect fit
    for the role. His boyish face and exuberance convincingly evoke
    Leon's shattered innocence and courage as he endures the idyllic,
    multiethnic seaside village of his childhood torn apart by rabid
    Turkish nationalism in 1911.

    Piercing details such as watching his female relatives sewing poison
    tablets into their dresses to save themselves from violation stand
    out starkly against the earlier happy memories included in Hyman's
    adaptation.

    The minimal backdrop -- an illuminated map of Leon's homeland --
    serves as both information resource and backlit screen for Michelle
    Zamora's inventive shadow puppets. Composer John Bilezikjian provides
    near-continuous accompaniment on a variety of string and percussion
    instruments.

    Transcending the specifics of race and history, Surmelian's memoir
    calls out for universal tolerance, longing for a time when, "as
    children we spoke the same true language, although the words were
    different." It's a message that might sound Pollyannaish from less
    authentic voices, but Surmelian earned the right to every syllable.

    *

    `I Ask You, Ladies and Gentlemen'

    Where: Alex Theatre, 216 N. Brand Blvd., Glendale

    When: 8 p.m. today and Wednesday

    Ends: Wednesday

    Price: $10

    Contact: (818) 243-2539 or www.alextheatre.org

    Running time: 1 hour, 5 minutes
Working...
X