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  • Armenian Couple Find Healing After the Killings

    Armenian Couple Find Healing After the Killings

    THEATER REVIEW | 'BEAST ON THE MOON'

    The New York Times
    April 28, 2005

    By CHARLES ISHERWOOD

    all it meeting cute, the old-school way. Aram Tomasian, a new American
    living in Milwaukee in 1921, orders his bride from the old-country
    catalog after taking a shine to her photograph. The girl arrives, but
    hold on: she doesn't quite match the picture. Sure enough, they
    shipped the wrong merchandise.

    Love will ultimately prevail in "Beast on the Moon," the sincere but
    musty romantic drama by Richard Kalinoski that opened last night at
    the Century Center for the Performing Arts. But the path to marital
    contentment runs through some rough emotional terrain, even after Aram
    has made his peace with the bait-and-switch trick.

    Both Aram (Omar Metwally) and his 15-year-old wife, Seta (Lena
    Georgas), are Armenians, survivors of the killings and mass
    deportations that took place in the Ottoman Empire while World War I
    raged in Europe. They bear scars that must be healed, or at least
    acknowledged, before true union can be achieved. Indeed, it's the
    unhappy confluence of Aram's psychic wounds and Seta's physical trauma
    that causes the conflict at the heart of the play.

    Minutes after Seta has set down her worn tapestry bag and taken an
    awed, grateful look around her strange new habitat, Aram tries to drag
    her off to the bedroom. He is on a desperate mission to replace the
    family he lost in the killings, and wants to begin procreating,
    pronto. Sadly, Seta's years of malnourishment make this difficult, and
    as Aram's frustration grows, he expends his anger on his increasingly
    despondent and isolated bride.

    "Beast on the Moon" was produced at the Humana Festival at the Actors
    Theater of Louisville in 1995, and has racked up a lot of
    frequent-flier miles in the ensuing years. Its prize-winning career on
    international stages includes productions in 17 countries and 12
    languages, according to the show's publicist. In 2001, the play won
    five Molière awards. (That's French for Tony.)

    The reasons for its popularity are not hard to discern. The play is
    forthright in performing tasks that clearly have wide international
    applications: consciousness-raising and the promotion of tear-duct
    health.

    A narrator, played by the nicely avuncular Louis Zorich, is on hand to
    provide history lessons about the plight of the Armenians that do not
    fit neatly into the framework of the play. And with the help of a
    third character, a surrogate son named Vincent (Matthew Borish), a few
    life lessons will be learned, too, when the cowed Seta and the stern
    Aram clash at last in the cathartic confrontation that provides the
    play with its emotional climax.

    The production at the Century Center, the play's New York premiere, is
    respectable and effectively acted. A little too effectively,
    actually. It's easy enough to guess the secondary career of the
    production's director, Larry Moss. Only a dedicated acting coach could
    elicit performances this relentless.

    Mr. Metwally, seen on Broadway in last season's short-lived "Sixteen
    Wounded," brings a dark intensity to the domineering Aram, and
    Ms. Georgas's bright, timorous smile can be affecting. But one of
    Mr. Moss's mottoes, at least on the evidence of this production, seems
    to be that to stop moving is to stop acting. Both performances are
    exhaustingly busy, plastered in surface filigree that is more
    distracting than illuminating.

    The virus also infects the work of young Mr. Borish, a precociously
    professional 13-year-old. His performance as the prickly but
    good-hearted young tough is so polished and persuasive that it seems
    churlish to note that it is also mechanical. He, too, seems to have
    matriculated at the Energizer Bunny Academy of Dramatic Arts.

    Beast on the Moon

    By Richard Kalinoski; directed by Larry Moss; sets by Neil Patel;
    costumes by Anita Yavich; lighting by David Lander; sound by Peter
    Fitzgerald; production stage manager, Fredric H. Orner; production
    management, Showman Fabricators Inc.; fight consultant, Rick Sordelet;
    general manager, Roy Gabay; associate producers, Stephanie Bast,
    Anahid Shahrik and Linda Shirvanian.

    Presented by David Grillo and Matt Salinger.

    At Century Center for the Performing Arts, 115 East 15th Street,
    Manhattan; (212) 239-6200. Running time: 2 hours 5 minutes.

    WITH: Louis Zorich (Gentleman), Omar Metwally (Aram), Lena Georgas
    (Seta) and Matthew Borish (Vincent).


    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/28/theater/reviews/28moon.html
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