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Arsinee Khanjian plays title role in Sabah, a Single Muslim Woman

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  • Arsinee Khanjian plays title role in Sabah, a Single Muslim Woman

    CJAD, Canada
    May 25 2005

    Arsinee Khanjian plays title role in Sabah, about single Muslim woman
    in love

    Canadian Press


    TORONTO (CP) - Though the title role was written for her, Toronto
    actress Arsinee Khanjian wasn't sure she was right for Sabah, the
    feature directorial debut of Canadian filmmaker Ruba Nedda.

    The story centres on a 40-year-old single Muslim-Arab woman who lives
    with her widowed mother in a Toronto home. Dedicated to living a
    traditional Muslim lifestyle, one day Sabah defies familial duties
    and goes swimming in a public pool where she meets and eventually
    falls in love with Stephen (Shawn Doyle), a Christian man who is also
    divorced.

    "Although I'm completely familiar with the environment, I wasn't sure
    I could play Sabah," said Khanjian, 46, in Toronto recently.

    "I come from the Middle East, I grew up in the Middle East. I was 17
    when I left, so I had enough conscious understanding of what Arabic
    culture is about. However . . . I am from Armenian background,
    therefore Christian, (and) we were dealing with a family with Muslim
    values. I felt that maybe I wasn't the right person to play the part
    given the climate of today in terms of how the West is trying to
    figure out what Islam is about. But she (Nedda) was incredibly at
    ease about it saying that 'What you read in this script is my intense
    relationship with my own culture and I think you're a good voice for
    it.' "

    Khanjian, who is married to filmmaker Atom Egoyan, admits that the
    hardest part about playing Sabah was learning how to belly dance.

    "I had a very shy disposition for it," she laughs. "I think it comes
    from my upbringing. Belly dancing was not for proper women. So I had
    to release that taboo out of my system. It's also a very hard dance
    form. It needs a very clear sense of separating each part of the
    body. It's a beautiful dance."

    Sabah will be released in theatres on May 27.
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