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The Conflict Between Armenians And Azerbaijanis Was "Staged" In San

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  • The Conflict Between Armenians And Azerbaijanis Was "Staged" In San

    THE CONFLICT BETWEEN ARMENIANS AND AZERBAIJANIS WAS "STAGED" IN SAN FRANCISCO

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    27.02.2009 22:19 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ A play about the conflict between Armenians and
    Azerbaijanis is getting its West Coast premiere at Thick House in San
    Francisco, presented by Golden Thread, a company that specializes
    in contemporary plays telling Middle Eastern stories. The play is
    representing a story of a New York high fashion model, who returns home
    to war-torn Armenia after a 15-year absence. She finds herself arguing
    politics and feminist culture with her gun-toting guerilla mother,
    and falls in love with a boy from the wrong side of the tracks in
    an ethnically polarized war zone. All this happens in "A Girl's War"
    by Stanford alumna Joyce Van Dyke, Palo Alto Daily News reports.

    Playwright Van Dyke grew up in Orinda, with maternal grandparents of
    Armenian descent. To date she has written five plays that have been
    produced, of which "A Girl's War" is the second.

    As it is mentioned in the article, some of what's interesting about
    "A Girl's War" is putting two survivor women, a mother (Bella Warda)
    and daughter (Ana Bayat), at the center of a story about war, in which
    the fighting continues to rage. One woman is militant. The other
    is apathetic. As individuals, neither is in a position to exercise
    much self-determination in this world of violence and chaos. Both,
    however, are faced with moral choices. The play poses the question,
    to what extent is are such moral choices important in a war zone?

    In director Torange Yehiazarian's production, the actors struggle to
    translate that data and information into believable and sympathetic
    relationships. The production feels disconnected.

    The conflict between Armenians and Azerbaijanis covered in this play
    is a complex political story.

    "A Girl's War" was first staged in Boston in 2001, where it won an
    award from the Boston Globe as one of the year's 10 best plays.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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