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AGBU Antranig Dance Ensemble Debuts "Reflections" in New York

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  • AGBU Antranig Dance Ensemble Debuts "Reflections" in New York

    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

    Thursday, March 18, 2010

    AGBU Antranig Dance Ensemble Debuts "Reflections" in New York

    The AGBU Antranig Dance Ensemble commemorated its 40th anniversary in
    2009, crowned by a glorious performance at New York's Lincoln Center for
    the Performing Arts on Saturday, November 28. The ensemble's rich
    reputation precedes it whenever and wherever they dance, but it's always
    a breath-taking experience to watch one of its complete two-hour
    performances. And the debut of the new production titled "Reflections"
    was no different.

    The event took on an aura of its own, just by taking place at the
    prestigious Alice Tully Hall of Lincoln Center. Completely remodeled and
    rebuilt this year, the sophisticated theater on New York's Upper West
    Side prepared everyone for a night of special surprises. Among its
    myriad of Manhattan shows, the Ensemble has already performed seven
    times at Alice Tully Hall, in addition to twice at Avery Fisher Hall
    (also in Lincoln Center) and eight times at Carnegie Hall.

    The program was sub-titled "Performance and Celebration," but it wasn't
    until the show began that everyone realized it would be so much more
    than they had come to expect from Antranig. With four decades of
    accomplishments, the dance ensemble couldn't let its past go unnoticed,
    and through unique integrations was able to tie its several hundred
    performances and over 300 alumni dancers into the evening's
    presentation. In fact, this anniversary event was the Ensemble's 100th
    full-length program.

    Archival videos of the group on and off stage, photos from dozens of
    road performances, recognition of past founders and artistic directors,
    and video congratulations from all corners of the arts world turned an
    evening of Armenian dance into a crescendo of 40 years of successes. In
    all the special effects and presentations, let it not be forgotten that
    the Antranig Dance Ensemble of today, comprised of 40 young men and
    women, put on a dance performance to surpass everything that had come
    before. The choreography of Gagik Karapetian, former Director and
    Choreographer of the State Dance Ensemble of Armenia, was enough to
    amaze even the most knowledgeable attendees. The energy and precision of
    the Antranig dancers was so intense as to surprise even the 100-plus
    former performers who were in the audience. "This was developed as a
    professional-level show. There are very few amateur groups in the world
    that could have performed this as well," Karapetian said.

    The variety of the program, as in so many Antranig productions, offered
    something for all tastes. Still true to its roots, the Ensemble
    presented traditional ethnographic dances, though completely updated for
    today's audiences. There was new choreography added to many styles of
    contemporary Armenian music, never before danced by any group. And there
    were all-new stories-in-dance that are so familiar to Antranig
    audiences. Artistic Director Joyce Tamesian-Shenloogian credits her
    twenty-year partner, Karapetian, with building and developing the
    Antranig Dance Ensemble to its current level. "With each generation of
    dancers, he raises the bar for Armenian dance even further. His
    creations are complex and challenging, but always in the best of taste
    and always aimed at entertaining his audience," she said.

    The reputation of the Ensemble as one of the foremost Armenian dance
    groups in the world has been upheld admirably in this all-new show. In
    the coming year, the show will travel to a number of cities nationwide,
    to showcase the current level of beauty and energy of Armenian dance. As
    company manager Robert Doramajian said, "I'm not ready to know what else
    could possibly be planned for future years." Also notable in the
    Antranig story is that the Ensemble now boasts several "second
    generation" dancers - children of former dancers, who count themselves
    as part of the greater AGBU Antranig Dance Ensemble family. One of the
    evening's emcees, Ashod Spendjian, said in the opening remarks, "AGBU
    created Antranig in 1969 as a way to ensure that our Armenian culture
    would continue to thrive here in this country. It was a way to engage
    the youth ... and it worked. It flourished ... and for the past 40 years
    the Antranig Dance Ensemble has given our young adults a place to
    experience their culture and a way to deliver it to communities around
    the world."

    Established in 1906, AGBU (www.agbu.org) is the world's largest
    non-profit Armenian organization. Headquartered in New York City, AGBU
    preserves and promotes the Armenian identity and heritage through
    educational, cultural and humanitarian program, annually touching the
    lives of some 400,000 Armenians around the world.

    For more information about AGBU and its worldwide programs, please visit
    www.agbu.org.
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