Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenian Studies Program hosts Sojourn at Ararat performance

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Armenian Studies Program hosts Sojourn at Ararat performance

    PRESS RELEASE
    Armenian Studies Program
    Ingrid Peterson, Administrator
    University of Michigan
    1080 S. University, Suite 3633
    Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1106
    Phone: 734.763.0622; Fax: 734.763.4918
    email: [email protected]
    http://ii.umich.edu/asp


    SOJOURN AT ARARAT
    A play about the Armenian homeland, love, identity, and the horrors of
    war
    based on 2,000 years of Armenian literature in English

    ANN ARBOR, MI, January 19, 2010 - The University of Michigan (UofM)
    Armenian Studies Program (ASP) and the Center for World Performance
    Studies (CWPS) present "Sojourn at Ararat," a play created and
    performed by Nora Armani and Gerald Papasian. The performance combines
    humorous and dramatic portrayals of the Armenian people and homeland
    through the use of narrative text, poetry, songs and music of several
    renowned Armenian artists. The piece has been performed
    internationally and received eight Drama Logue Critics' Awards and
    multiple awards in Armenia.

    The performance will be held in the D. Dan and Betty Kahn Auditorium,
    Biomedical Research Building, 109 Zena Pitcher, Ann Arbor, Michigan,
    on Thursday, January 28, 2010 at 7:00 p.m. It is free and open to the
    public. For additional information please contact ASP (734) 763-0622
    or CWPS (734) 936-2777.

    "Sojourn" is a play with underlying themes, beginning with a love
    story that draws upon the text of romantic era poems. It is also a
    humorous depiction of war and human conflict using the central theme
    of an epic piece, "One Drop of Honey," by renowned Armenian poet and
    writer Hovhannes Toumanyan, when one drop of honey becomes the cause
    of universal war and massacre. Further, it reflects the horrors of the
    1915 Genocide, narrated through an eyewitness account of the dance of
    20 innocent virgins who were doused in kerosene and torched to
    death. It incorporates music by composers Jean-Jacques Lemetre of
    Theatre de Soleil of Paris as well as Armenian composers Gomidas and
    Sayat Nova.

    Nora Armani is a film and theater actress who was born in Egypt to
    Armenian parents. She was trained at RADA, UCLA and Ariane
    Mnouchkine's Theatre de Soleil. She has a BA in Directing from the
    American University in Cairo and an M.Sc. from the University of
    London (LSE).

    Gerald Papasian was born in Egypt to Armenian parents. He holds an MFA
    in Directing from the Yerevan State Institute of Art and Theatre of
    the Stanislavski School, and he studied at thee Lee Strasberg
    Institute in Los Angeles.

    The University of Michigan's Armenian Studies Program promotes the
    study of Armenian history, culture, and society. A member of the
    University of Michigan International Institute, the program organizes
    educational opportunities for students, faculty and the community.
    For more information, contact the Armenian Studies Program at (734)
    763-0622 or visit www.umich.edu/~iinet/asp/.

    The University of Michigan International Institute houses 18 centers
    and programs focused on world regions and global themes. The institute
    develops and supports international teaching, research, and public
    affairs programs to promote global understanding across the campus and
    to build connections with intellectuals and institutions
    worldwide. For more information, visit www.ii.umich.edu.
Working...
X