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  • Acting start takes ambition

    Acting start takes ambition

    Metro Toronto, Canada
    May 3 2005

    photo: Eric Woolfe is starring in The Strange And Eerie Memoirs Of
    Billy Wuthergloom.

    photo: Hrant Alianak is currently co-producing The Strange And Eerie
    Memoirs Of Billy Wuthergloom.

    With over a hundred acting credits in television series, made-for-TV
    movies and films under his belt, Hrant Alianak can be partly credited
    with Canada's entertainment industry being dubbed "Hollywood North."

    "I started in 1980," says Alianak about his illustrious acting
    career. "The first movie I did was Best Revenge with John Hurt and
    Alberta Watson. I shot for a month in Spain. It was a great start to
    the business."

    Among his television series credits are Robocop, More Tears, La Femme
    Nikita and Nero Woolfe. He received a Gemini Award in the supporting
    actor category for his role in the television movie, Family Viewing.
    Alianak also appeared in the 1995 film, Billy Madison, starring Adam
    Sandler and the 2004 HBO bio-pic, Going Down: The Rise And Fall Of
    Heidi Fleiss.

    So how did Alianak, who was born in Sudan to Armenian parents,
    but came to Canada in 1967, get his foot in the door of such a
    competitive industry?

    "There was a wonderful teacher named Eli Rill who used to teach at the
    Actors Studio in New York and he had his own acting school here (the
    Eli Rill Acting School) where I went for several years," he explains.

    But Alianak was not satisfied with bringing someone else's vision
    to life. He mounted his first play, Tantrums, in 1992 at the Theatre
    Passe Muraille in Toronto, under his then-newly formed company Alianak
    Theatre Productions.

    Now, in addition to writing plays, he also directs and produces them.
    Alianak was never schooled in the craft of directing ~W he literally
    learned on the job.

    "I didn't have that experience because someone else directed my first
    play," he says. "For a year, Paul Thompson, the artistic director
    of the Theatre Passe Muraille, let me do these short plays that I
    was writing so that I could learn how to direct. I did five or six
    of them and then Paul let me direct my first full-length play. I
    eventually started directing other people's work."

    Other plays Alianak has written and directed include The Blues, Lucky
    Strike and The Big Hit. He also produced the play Duse last year,
    starring Nick Mancuso who also directed the play. In 2002 his play, The
    Walls Of Africa was nominated for eight Dora Awards, which recognizes
    achievements in theatre, dance and opera, of which it won three:
    Best Actress (Tedde Moore), Best Production and Best Sound Design.

    Currently Alianak is co-producing The Strange And Eerie Memoirs Of
    Billy Wuthergloom written and performed by Eric Woolfe. The play is
    a suburban-gothic horror melodrama about puberty and the supernatural.

    Alianak Theatre Productions is in the business of spotlighting creative
    minds who enjoy working on a small scale.

    "I try to help people who are not being done by the major theatres,"
    he says. "I give them a good production that is high profile, and
    with proper advertising."

    The Strange And Eerie Memoirs Of Billy Wuthergloom runs till May 8
    at the Cameron House. Call 416-703-1725 for more.

    Terri-Lynne Waldron/for Metro Toronto

    http://www.metronews.ca/worksmart_news.asp?id=8009
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