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Arts & Entertainment: Theater Review: Golden Thread Premieres Night

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  • Arts & Entertainment: Theater Review: Golden Thread Premieres Night

    THEATER REVIEW: GOLDEN THREAD PREMIERES NIGHT OVER ERZINGA
    By Ken Bullock

    Berkeley Daily Planet
    Sept 21 2011
    CA

    Golden Thread Productions is one of the important Bay Area theater
    companies that has a very specific mission--to explore the culture
    and identity, or identities, of Middle Easterners and Middle Eastern
    Americans. For the past decade and a half, since Torange Yeghiazarian
    founded the troupe, Golden Thread's brought plays from and about the
    Middle East in all its diversity to stages throughout the Bay Area,
    including its annual ReOrient festival of short plays, as well as
    storytelling shows to schoolchildren.

    Night Over Erzinga, the premiere of a new play at the South Side
    Theatre (Magic Theatre, Fort Mason) in San Francisco by Adriana Sevahn
    Nichols about refugees from the Armenian genocide coming to America
    and what they and their descendants face, by both remembering and
    forgetting the past, is the first event in a collaborative National
    New Plays Initiative between Golden Thread, Silk Road Theatre Project
    (Chicago) and the Lark Play Development Center (New York), Middle
    East America.

    An excellent cast--Natalie Ammanian, Neva Marie Hutchinson, Terry Lamb,
    Sarita Ocon, Lawrence Radecker, Juliet Tanner and Brian Trybom--with
    the unusually clarity of Hafiz Karmali's direction has brought life to
    a mixed perspective of immigrants trying to escape the past, to find
    themselves ... assisted by Penka Kouneva's unusual original music,
    by designers Mikiko Uesugi (scenery), Jim Cave (lighting), Michelle
    Mulholland (costumes) and Mitchell Greenhill (sound).

    This is in many ways an exemplary production, bringing out the best
    in an ambitious, sometimes problematic script. The first part deals
    with refugees trying to bury the past in an effort to create a future
    for themselves, a dream on the terms of the society they've fled to,
    and the emotional price, the cultural emptiness their self-repression
    begets. The second part follows--at first in a way almost like a
    satiric burlesque of the first part--the American-born daughter
    of the Armenian couple who met in Massachusetts in the first part,
    who's fled the last vestige of her family and cultural identity to
    perform as a dancer, marrying a Latino, another refugee coming from
    a more traditional, family-oriented culture. The action is never
    quite chronological, following instead the logic of dreams, memory,
    simple association from time to time.

    There's deft role-switching by all the actors, Trybom and Tanner in
    particular, to portray three generations and more of uprootedness
    and striving for a new life, a new identity. The story touches on
    hardship and the atrocities of the past mainly through stories that
    finally get told and the evidence of emotional and mental turmoil,
    from unexamined habits that determine a life and its attitudes to
    the delusions of mental collapse.

    The play ends with a dreamlike scene around a wishing tree--a good
    alternate title!--its branches tied with cloths signifying wishes. On
    opening night, Yeghiazarian unveiled a commissioned Tree Of Life,
    to honor ancestors and future generations, by Bay Area artist Thomas
    Sepe that will remain in the lobby through the run of the show,
    to which audiences may tie their wishes.

    The production is one of the most lucid I've seen recently on a Bay
    Area stage. Karmali--himself a muslim of the Aga Khan's sect--and his
    players of various backgrounds illuminate the refugees' experience,
    show their inner lives and point to both the difference of cultural
    origins and the improvisatory experiment of American assimilation,
    revealing good and bad in the roots and in the results ... A triumph
    of live theater in bringing out inner strengths and transforming
    occasional awkwardnesses in the play, creating unforgettable
    dramatic--and, yes, comic--images of immigrant heritage, of our
    common heritage.

    http://www.berkeleydailyplanet.com/issue/2011-09-21/article/38427?headline=Theater-Review-Golden-Thread-Premieres-Night-Over-Erzinga




    From: A. Papazian
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