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On the world stage, drama seeks to open a dialogue

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  • On the world stage, drama seeks to open a dialogue

    On the world stage, drama seeks to open a dialogue
    By ROBERT DOMINGUEZ

    The New York Daily News
    May 6 2005

    DAILY NEWS FEATURE WRITER


    Inviting the prime minister of Turkey to a play about the Armenian
    genocide of 1915-23 could be touchy.

    The Turkish government has denied that a state-sponsored elimination
    of up to 1.5 million Armenians living in the Ottoman Empire ever
    took place.

    But that didn't stop theater producer David Grillo from inviting
    Turkish leader Recep Tayyip Erdogan to last week's opening of "Beast
    on the Moon."

    Richard Kalinoski's drama, which made its New York debut at Century
    Center for the Performing Arts, deals with Armenian survivors in
    1920s Milwaukee.

    By sending the invitation to Erdogan, Grillo says, he wanted
    "Beast" to help "open a dialogue" on the issue - and involve the
    Armenian-American community.

    "I didn't begin this as a political crusade," says Grillo. "I love
    this play because it's a masterful piece of writing about humanity
    and survival, and love as a healing tool.

    "But the more I dug into the history of the Armenian genocide, the
    more I recognized a great historical omission," he adds. "The play
    is a good place to begin a discussion."

    The Turkish government has not responded to Grillo's overtures, and
    he knows the chances are slim - especially since "Beast" has been a
    burden to Turkey in the past.

    The play has been produced in 17 countries and 12 languages over the
    last 12 years, and has won dozens of international theater awards.

    But Turkey has twice forced the cancellation of productions,
    including last year's European Culture Days Festival in Germany.
    "Beast" was pulled from the schedule after government pressure,
    according to Kalinoski.

    While Grillo insists his motives aren't political, he has generated
    plenty of publicity for the play by inviting Armenian-American
    audiences, and timing the production to coincide with the 90th
    anniversary of the start of the tragedy. Turkey has long claimed that
    the Armenian rebels' siding with Russian forces resulted in the death
    of half a million Armenians, not 1.5 million - and that just as many
    Turks died in the bloodshed.

    But the government's stance seems to be softening. Omer Onhon,
    the Turkish consul general in New York, tells the Daily News that
    Erdogan reached out to Armenian President Robert Kocharian last month
    "to propose a joint commission of Turkish and Armenian historians to
    look into the issue."

    Diplomatic overtures have nothing to do with "Beast," he adds. "To
    find a connection would be misleading," says Onhon. "I can't say
    anything about the play itself, except that of course we totally
    disagree with the story surrounding it."
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