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  • FRESNO: I remember SAROYAN: The best part of life was fun

    Fresno Bee (California)
    May 4, 2008 Sunday
    FINAL EDITION



    I remember SAROYAN;
    The best part of life was fun

    by Bruce J. Janigian


    The stage lights go up this year to honor the centennial of America's
    daring young man and Fresno's favorite son, William Saroyan. Playwright,
    novelist, short story and song writer, the life of Saroyan captured
    the American dream and heart nearly as much as his writing. From the
    child of Armenian immigrants growing up in an orphanage to the toast
    of New York's literary elite, Saroyan's unbowed brashness lifted the
    spirits of the nation through the Great Depression and, after the
    World War II, inspired a new generation in search of significance.

    With cocked fedora and unrepentant self-confidence, Saroyan wrote for
    every man about the intrinsic and overriding beauty of humanity and
    individual honesty overcoming all adversity.

    The world absorbed his simple truths and fresh delivery, even as its
    leaders prepared to sacrifice their populations for dominance and
    wealth. From a race destroyed in a world gone mad, Saroyan answered
    the fundamental question of all time: How should a man live? "In the
    time of your life, live ... so that in that good time you do not add
    to the sorrow and misery of the world... but shall smile to the
    infinite delight and mystery of it."

    Growing up in San Francisco with William Saroyan in our family circle
    was memorable, as was later representing this cousin in publishing
    deals in New York and being able to sit back and reflect with him
    about the human condition. Boyhood memories include him at our Sunday
    dinner table one week and the following week watching him on
    television's Omnibus Theater, as he introduced a new play.

    But Willie wasn't the only interesting member of the family. My
    mother, uncles and other cousins who grew up with him in Fresno all
    shared the same temperament and incredible sense of humor and
    fun. And, of course, we all looked to our marvelously self-important
    Uncle Aram as the greatest target for impersonations, joke-telling and
    general merriment. In fact Aram, who was a formidable figure in his
    day and who inspired a good many of Willie's stories, was probably
    most valued in the family as the catalyst for the greatest laughter
    any of us can recall.

    You didn't have to tell a joke to turn the atmosphere festive. All you
    had to do was a quick impersonation of chest-thumping Aram, and the
    rest followed like a nuclear reaction. Just saying his name was
    usually sufficient.

    Willie lived close by us with his older sister Cossette. He also kept
    two adjoining tract homes in Fresno, made up identically, and a walk
    up apartment in Paris. Many leisurely visits were also in Palo Alto
    with my poet and painter uncle, Archie Minasian, who was very close to
    Bill and beloved for his warmth and wit. (My cousin was nicknamed both
    Willie and Bill. Within the family, we preferred Willie; and in his
    professional life, he went by Bill).

    They shared a love of life, horse racing and an innocent
    playfulness. They would shed their clothes and swim in an irrigation
    ditch if the spirit moved them, just as they had done as children,
    even as men in their 60s. It was at Archie's that Bill drove up in a
    huge, old gangster limousine once owned by Frank Nitti, a notorious
    mobster. Willie bought it for the laughs, see? We all had fun racing
    around and imagining what action it saw in Chicago.

    It was about this time that Bill told us that John F. Kennedy was
    having an affair with Marilyn Monroe. When we asked how he knew this,
    he said he was also having an affair with her, and she told him so.

    Other cousins were also having a good run in those days. Ross
    Bagdasarian had earlier written the music to Willie's lyrics for the
    million-seller song, "Come On-a My House," which launched the career
    of Rosemary Clooney. He was now on "The Ed Sullivan Show" and creating
    the successful Chipmunks, including an "Alvin for President" campaign.

    Willie's advice to my brothers and me? Never join
    anything. Organizations tend to corrupt the pure sense of
    yourself. Don't worry about getting good grades; it's more important
    to have fun. While other grownups would ask about achievements, Willie
    wanted to make sure you were focused on enjoying your life. Yet there
    was also a very serious side, "If you don't make it by 25, you never
    will."

    Several years later, after I became an attorney and Bill had a falling
    out with his Paris lawyer, Aram Kevorkian, I worked to untangle
    various relationships and rebuild burned bridges. Bill had a low
    tolerance for the rich and powerful, and, like my entire family,
    abhorred pretension. The fact that these characteristics described
    some of his best publishers made for fireworks.

    We had a week together in Washington, D.C., where I was then
    living. He joined me for a visit to the White House, which he
    remembered from Franklin D. Roosevelt days, and to the Library of
    Congress, where he, for the first time, saw the extent of his work and
    its many translations in the library's voluminous card catalogues.

    Bill absorbed everything he saw on the streets and followed the
    conversations even of the children passing by. He was alert to so many
    more details than I could even begin to notice -- architectural
    designs, leaf patterns and coloring, accents and speech, clothing, the
    feelings people projected and so many other things simultaneously.
    This was, indeed, the man to appreciate and capture the human comedy.

    I took Bill to the Dulles Airport, where we awaited his flight to
    Paris, never realizing it would be the last time to see him. I'm still
    holding the packages of items he collected on our strolls. Reports
    about his declining health followed from Archie's visits and from his
    own writings, which continued very close to the end. In one of his
    last passages, Bill describes being absorbed in his writing, but
    briefly catching a reflection in the mirror -- not his own, but of all
    people who had ever lived.

    He died as a common person in the Veterans Hospital in Fresno and
    would not entertain anything else.

    Some years later, I watched a very pretentious senior public official
    lick a stamp with Bill's picture on it and then look closely at his
    image while sticking it to an envelope. I stood silently smiling for
    Bill, who not only had the loudest and best laugh, but also the last
    laugh.

    Bruce J. Janigian is an attorney with offices in Sacramento and San
    Francisco, and formerly represented his cousin, William Saroyan.

    INFOBOX

    See and hear more from these writers

    Bruce J. Janigian will be on a panel on the life and writings of
    William Saroyan Nov. 19 at the William Saroyan Theatre as part of the
    San Joaquin Valley Town Hall Lecture Series. Joining Janigian on the
    panel will be Richard Rodriguez, journalist and author, and Annette
    Keogh, curator of the William Saroyan Collection at Stanford
    University. Jon Whitmore, president of Texas Tech University, will
    moderate.

    Listen to Armen D. Bacon tell Bee Associate Editor Gail Marshall about
    the joy of growing up in her Armenian neighborhood on a podcast,
    available at fresnobee.com http://www.fblinks.com/whi.

    If you have a personal story about Saroyan to tell or would like to
    comment on the columns by Bacon or Janigian, send a letter to
    [email protected] The length limit is 200 words.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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