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Couple Find Hope Following Armenian Genocide in Beast on the Moon

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  • Couple Find Hope Following Armenian Genocide in Beast on the Moon

    Playbill.com, NY
    April 27 2005

    Couple Find Hope Following Armenian Genocide in Beast on the Moon,
    Getting NYC Premiere April 27
    By Kenneth Jones


    Beast on the Moon, Richard Kalinoski's warm, sad and hopeful play
    about Armenian immigrants emerging from the shadow of genocide, opens
    Off-Broadway April 27 following previews and a wide life in theatres
    around the world.

    The American-penned play, set in Milwaukee, has been a hit in
    theatres around the country and internationally since its early
    production at the Humana Festival of New American Plays at Actors
    Theatre of Louisville.

    The New York premiere opens during a week that commemorates the 90th
    anniversary of the Armenian genocide at the hands of the Turks of the
    Ottoman Empire.

    According to a program note in the Playbill, "On April 24, 1915,
    under the cover of World War I, the Young Turk government of the
    Ottoman Empire began a systematic genocide of its Armenian citizens,
    an unarmed Christian minority population. More than a million
    Armenians were exterminated through direct killings, starvation,
    torture and forced death marches. Another million fled to permanent
    exile. Thus an ancient civilization was expunged from its homeland of
    2,500 years."

    Tony Award nominees Louis Zorich and Omar Metwally star. Larry Moss
    (The Syringa Tree) directs the new production. Metwally (Sixteen
    Wounded) plays a young Armenian named Aram, who comes to Milwaukee
    for a better life; Lena Georgas plays his wife; Zorich (45 Minutes
    >From Broadway, She Loves Me) is a Gentleman, a character important in
    the couple's life; and Matthew Borish is a young boy they take in.

    The play is set between 1921-33. Audiences and critics have noted
    that despite the dark-sounding title, the play is filled with humor
    and hope as Aram and Seta settle into a life beyond the darkness of
    the past.

    Producers were aiming the play for either Off-Broadway or Broadway in
    the last year, but announced Feb. 23 that its nest would be
    Off-Broadway's Century Center for the Performing Arts, off Union
    Square. David Grillo and Matthew Salinger produce.

    Designers are Neil Patel (scenic), Anita Yavich (costume) and David
    Lander (lighting).

    Over the last 12 years, Beast on the Moon has been seen around the
    world with productions in 17 different countries, translated into 12
    different languages, having received more than 40 significant awards.

    According to production notes, Kalinoski's interest in the subject
    was spurred by his seven-year marriage to an Armenian woman. "This
    play tells a story that the Turkish government has spent the last 90
    years trying to erase from the world's consciousness," Kalinoski said
    in press notes. "But this is a story that the world needs to know.
    The story is universal. Healing is universal. The denial has got to
    stop so that healing can begin."

    The playwright's most recent work, A Crooked Man, was seen at Future
    Fest in Dayton, OH, in July 2004. Kalinoski teaches playwriting and
    theatre at the University of Wisconsin Oshkosh.

    Century Center for the Performing Arts is at 111 E. 15th Street, off
    Union Square. Performances are Tuesday-Saturday at 8 PM and Sunday at
    7:30 PM with matinees Saturday and Sunday at 3 PM.

    Tickets are $65. For ticket information, contact Telecharge.com,
    (212) 239-6200.

    Visit the official website at www.beastonthemoon.com.

    *

    Turkish officials have been criticized for many years for not
    admitting responsibility for the crimes, and for downplaying the
    number of dead Armenians (thought to be as high as 1.5 million).

    In the April 23 New York Times, Tuluy Tanc, minister counselor for
    the Turkish Embassy in Washington, said calling the deaths a part of
    genocide was "unfair and untrue" ? a manipulation to gain
    reparations.

    "We don't see what happened as genocide, quote-unquote," Tanc told
    the Times. "Unfortunate and tragic events took place during World War
    I and bad things happened to Armenians, and Muslims and Turks
    also?the number killed is much less than they say ? it's more like
    300,000 Armenians who lost their lives." He reportedly said that
    Turkish leaders recently asked Armenia to set up a commission to
    study the killings.
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