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Arts & Entertainment: 'Night Over Erzinga' Is An Armenian Experience

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  • Arts & Entertainment: 'Night Over Erzinga' Is An Armenian Experience

    'NIGHT OVER ERZINGA' IS AN ARMENIAN EXPERIENCE BROUGHT TO LIFE ON STAGE
    Leslie Katz

    San Francisco Examiner
    Sept 22 2011
    CA

    Adriana Sevahn Nichols subtly and poetically draws from her own life
    in a "Night Over Erzinga," a heartfelt world premiere presented by
    Golden Thread Productions.

    The Bay Area troupe, whose mission is to give voice to Middle Eastern
    artists, commissioned the play with New York's Lark Play Development
    Center and Chicago's Silk Road Theatre Project.

    In its first outing, the groups' Middle East America new plays
    initiative proves a success.

    Deftly mixing history with personal stories, "Night Over Erzinga"
    follows several generations of an Armenian-American family (based on
    the writer's ancestors) with the main focus on one couple, Ardavazdt
    and Alice Oghidanian.

    In 1913, young Ardavazdt comes to the U.S. after his family in Armenia
    is visited by a brutal Turk on a quest to enlist men of age. He meets
    Alice, also Armenian, and they work hard in their new homeland to
    raise their young daughter Aghavni.

    Flash forward to 1960s New York, where the grown-up Aghavni, who calls
    herself Ava, falls in love with Bienvenido, a charismatic singer from
    the Dominican Republic - but their life together bears deep scars
    from the past, that go back as far as the Armenian genocide after
    World War I.

    Nichols' clever script (in which the actors portray multiple roles)
    mixes chronological and flashback action as it moves the story along
    in an appealing, straightforward manner.

    Director Hafiz Karmali keeps the versatile group - headed by Brian
    Trybom as young Ardavazdt and romantic Benny, and Juliet Tanner as
    young Alice and Ava - on track.

    Neva Marie Hutchinson whose primary role is the older Alice, who loses
    her mind, and Terry Lamb as the older Ardavazdt, also are excellent.

    They vividly bring to light the struggles of immigrants lives' and how
    their choices resonate for their first-generation American children.

    Original music by Penka Kouneva enriches the show's detailed attention
    to Armenian traditions. ("Erzinga" refers to the name of a region in
    Western Armenia).

    On the other hand, a clunky set design of a moving wall and doors,
    and basic table-and-chair interior, add little to the proceedings.

    Still, it's the heart of the human experience that drives "Night
    Over Erzinga," a story familiar not just to Armenians, but to so many
    foreigners who journeyed to America in search of a better life.

    http://www.sfexaminer.com/entertainment/2011/09/night-over-erzinga-armenian-experience-brought-life-stage

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