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AGBU Antranig Dance Ensemble Performs in Boston

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  • AGBU Antranig Dance Ensemble Performs in Boston

    AGBU Press Office
    55 East 59th Street
    New York, NY 10022-1112
    Phone: 212.319.6383, x118
    Fax: 212.319.6507
    Email: [email protected]
    Website: www.agbu.org

    PRESS RELEASE

    Wednesday, May 14, 2008

    AGBU Antranig Dance Ensemble Performs in Boston

    AGBU's Antranig Dance Ensemble performed at Boston University as part of
    the Boston University's Armenian Students Association's (ASA) cultural
    event on Sunday afternoon, March 30, 2008.

    Two hundred guests were in attendance at Boston University's Tsai
    Performance Center to watch the New Jersey-based AGBU Antranig Ensemble
    perform under the artistic direction of Joyce Tamesian-Shenloogian.
    Antranig, which consists of thirty members, performed fourteen dances
    >From various regions in Armenia, including "Hayastan," "Haghtanak," and
    "Hemshen," in traditional Armenian costumes.

    "There were ethnographic dances, along with a mix of traditional,
    contemporary, and lyrical dancing," said Tamesian-Shenloogian, director
    of Antranig for the past 22 years. "The performance was to celebrate and
    preserve the Armenian culture."

    The Junior Choir of the Sts. Sahag and Mesrob Armenian Church of
    Providence, Rhode Island also performed under the direction of Maestro
    Konstantin Petrossian. Over 20 choir members sang twelve songs, and
    authentic Armenian instruments, including the duduk (a double-reed
    instrument) and dhol (a double-sided barrel drum), were used during the
    choral performance.

    "The cultural songs were augmented with English explanations of what the
    songs meant and where they came from," said Jacques Minoyan, Treasurer
    of Boston University's ASA.

    Two ASA members, Cailyne Ghazarian and Jacques Minoyan, participated in
    the cultural event as well, performing in the choir and dance ensemble,
    respectively. In an attempt to bring Armenians together, the ASA hosts
    both social and educational events, which attract Armenian students from
    other universities in Boston, including Babson, Berklee, Boston College,
    Harvard, MIT, Northeastern, Suffolk and Tufts.

    The event, which was open to the entire school, attracted non-Armenians
    to the cultural performance. "Non-Armenians were amazed as to how
    distinct our culture is from the songs, dances and cultural clothing,"
    said Minoyan. "It was a new experience for them."

    AGBU Antranig Dance Ensemble, which started in 1969, is gearing up for
    its 40th-anniversary performance slated for sometime next year. Gagik
    Karapetian, Antranig's director from Armenia, will help
    Tamesian-Shenloogian prepare for the show.

    Antranig's next performance will be at Columbia University on October 4,
    2008 for a Columbia Armenian Club cultural event.

    Established in 1906, AGBU (www.agbu.org) is the world's largest
    non-profit Armenian organization. Headquartered in New York City with an
    annual budget of $34 million, AGBU preserves and promotes the Armenian
    identity and heritage through educational, cultural and humanitarian
    programs, annually serving some 400,000 Armenians on six continents.
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