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Emeritus Prof celebrates Saroyan centennial on world scale

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  • Emeritus Prof celebrates Saroyan centennial on world scale

    Targeted News Service
    October 22, 2008 Wednesday 7:32 AM EST



    EMERITUS PROF CELEBRATES SAROYAN CENTENNIAL ON WORLD SCALE

    FRESNO, Calif.


    California State University Fresno issued the following press release:

    One of the William Saroyan centennial's busiest celebrants is
    Dr. Dickran Kouymjian, the Haig & Isabel Berberian Professor of
    Armenian Studies, Emeritus, at California State University, Fresno,
    who has traveled extensively marking the renowned author's life and
    works.

    Saroyan was born 100 years ago in Fresno and died there in 1981. In a
    career that included writing short stories, books, plays, even song
    lyrics, Saroyan won an Academy Award and a Pulitzer Prize (which he
    refused). He was also an artist and filmmaker.

    Often his stories and characters grew out of his early years in
    Fresno's Armenian community, but they also were shaped by visits and
    living in Europe, San Francisco, Hollywood and New York.

    In sharing his expertise on the author, Kouymjian, whose home is in
    Paris, has experienced something of Saroyan's peripatetic life. And
    his travels won't end until spring. His "Year of Saroyan" began in
    April, when he participated in and helped Fresno State professor
    Barlow Der Mugrdechian organize an international symposium, "William
    Saroyan at 100," at Fresno State.

    In July, Kouymjian traveled to Yerevan, Armenia, for the Golden
    Apricot Armenian International Film Festival to screen Saroyan's film,
    "The Good Job," subtitled in Armenian, and the Oscar-winning "The
    Human Comedy." He also presented a workshop on Saroyan and cinema.

    In September, Kouymjian discussed Saroyan's literary work during
    Armenian Culture Days at the Vigd?s Finnboggad?ttir Institute of
    Foreign Languages at the University of Iceland in Reykjav?k. He
    returned to Paris to present a paper, "Saroyan as Painter," at a
    conference of the Association Internationale des Etudes Arméniennes at
    the Sorbonne.

    Oct. 8-10, Kouymjian lectured and also chaired two roundtable
    discussions at an international Saroyan conference he helped organize
    in Yerevan, Armenia. Four of the five participants in the Saroyan
    symposium at Fresno State joined him in Yerevan.

    Attendance by Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan, the newly appointed
    American ambassador, Mary Jovanovich, and Hasmik Pogosyan, Armenia's
    minister of Culture, indicate Saroyan's stature in his ancestral land.

    In Yerevan, Kouymjian also instructed young theater directors on how
    to direct and stage Saroyan's later plays. Fresno State director Ed
    EmmanuEl staged one such a work, "Slaughter of the Innocents," at the
    same time Kouymjian was lecturing in Armenia.

    Another Kouymjian project is "Saroyan in Paris," a tribute to be held
    on Dec. 1 at the Musée de la Vie romantique. The museum is in the 9th
    Arrondisement (called Opéra district) near the apartment where Saroyan
    spent part of nearly each year from 1960 until just before his death.

    Scheduled are a dramatic reading by Reine Bart?ve of Saroyan's, "The
    Armenian Mouse," a piano concert of his music by Vahan Mardirossian,
    who played in the Philip Lorenz Keyboard Concerts series at Fresno
    State in 2005, and a screening of the Saroyan film, "The Good Job."
    Kouymjian will present an illustrated talk about Saroyan's time in
    Paris.

    Also on Kouymjian's Saroyan schedule is a photographic exhibit in
    Istanbul, Turkey, late this year, a March tribute in Amsterdam and
    writing an introduction to the publication of Saroyan's early novel,
    "Follow," by the Press at California State University, Fresno and The
    Fresno Bee

    Kouymjian retired last year from director of the Armenian Studies
    Program at Fresno State, which he established in 1977. The campus also
    is home to the Center for Armenian Studies, which offers an
    opportunity for students and faculty to interact.

    For more information, call 559.278.2669.
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