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From family stories of the Armenian genocide, a play emerges

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  • From family stories of the Armenian genocide, a play emerges

    >From family stories of the Armenian genocide, a play emerges

    By Joel Brown | Globe Correspondent March 03, 2012
    The Boston Globe

    Playwright Joyce Van Dyke and dentist H. Martin Deranian, whose family
    histories inspired Van Dyke's play, `Deported.''

    LinkedIn Save Nearly a century ago, on the other side of the world,
    two women were each other's strength through horror: the Armenian
    genocide perpetrated by the Ottoman Turks. Next week, the story of
    their survival comes to the stage, thanks in part to one man's
    struggle to keep history alive.

    `My mother, who went through all of this, died when I was not even 7
    years of age,'' says H. Martin Deranian, an 89-year-old Shrewsbury
    dentist, `so what I've done for the rest of my life . . . is tried to
    devote myself to seeking the truth as to what happened to her and all
    these heroic women who went through this horrific genocide.''

    `Deported / a dream play,'' by Elliot Norton Award-winning Newton
    playwright Joyce Van Dyke, is based on the friendship between her
    maternal grandmother, Elmas Sarajian, and Deranian's mother, Varter
    Nazarian. The women came to America and started a new life after
    losing everything, including their husbands and children. More than 1
    million Armenians were slaughtered in the genocide, beginning in 1915.
    Many others were expelled from the Ottoman Empire - `deported'' - in
    forced marches.


    Larger map / directions
    DEPORTED / A DREAM PLAY
    525 Washington St., Boston MA 866-811-4111.

    Presenting organizations: Boston Playwrights' Theatre
    Date of first performance: March 8
    Date closing: April 1
    Ticket price: $40
    Company website: http://www.bostonplaywrights.org
    As a girl, Van Dyke sometimes asked her grandmother what had happened
    to her back then.

    `She would start to say, `We were deported,' and then she would stop
    there, and she could never go on,'' says Van Dyke, whose play will
    have its first full production at Boston Playwrights' Theatre,
    beginning Thursday. `So that word just hung there in the air and kind
    of haunted me my whole growing-up time. I only knew shadowy bits and
    pieces of that story, because [the family] never talked about it.''

    Elmas and Varter were `deported'' with their children from the city of
    Mezireh and sent on foot across the harsh desert, amid much violence
    and cruelty. Elmas had three children, Varter seven. All were dead or
    lost to them by the time the two women eventually reached safety in
    Aleppo, now part of Syria.

    In 1920, the two women sailed together for the United States, where
    each married an Armenian man and had one more child. Varter, who lived
    in Worcester, had various health problems, which her son attributes to
    the events of 1915, and died in 1929 at age 44. Elmas, who lived in
    Providence and later in Fresno, Calif., died in her sleep in 1977 at
    92, without having told her granddaughter any more of her story.

    `I didn't ask that often, because you could tell it was very
    painful,'' Van Dyke says. `If I had known I was going to become a
    playwright, I probably would have tried a lot harder to ask her about
    it. Of course, when you're young, you think you have all the time in
    the world to ask these things.''

    Flash-forward to 2003, and a performance at New Repertory Theatre of
    Van Dyke's play `A Girl's War,'' a contemporary Armenian story. An
    older gentleman came up to her in the lobby and introduced himself:
    Deranian, Varter's son. They had heard of each other, but never met.

    `He said, `You know, your grandmother and my mother were very close
    friends, and they had been deported together . . . and I think you
    should write a play about them,''' Van Dyke recalls.

    `I had always said I'm not going to write a play about the genocide,
    it is too hard, it is too difficult, it is too painful,'' she says. `I
    put him off when he said I should do it. But he is a very, very, very
    persistent and very, very, very sweet man, and he just kept calling me
    up and sending me things in the mail. And after a while I guess I
    couldn't resist any longer.''

    That dialogue played out over `several years in which I shared with
    her what I had, and we bonded,'' says Deranian. `I went to the play
    hoping that I could open a door with her and share what I had.''

    What he had was her grandmother's story. He had gotten Elmas to talk -
    or, rather, his emissary had. A clergyman who knew the women back in
    Armenia had settled in California, and in the 1960s went to Fresno at
    Deranian's behest to see Elmas and ask her about Varter. And for once,
    she talked. The clergyman sent Deranian a written account of her
    story, along with a short `biography'' of Varter that she'd written
    for him. Deranian passed copies along to Van Dyke.

    `My grandmother, who would never tell her own story . . . told the
    story of what happened to Varter, and because she was there at the
    time, she ended up inadvertently telling things that happened to her
    also,'' Van Dyke says. `When Martin gave me this, I suddenly had a
    story about what happened to my grandmother. . . . I had this amazing
    story about these two women and what they'd gone through.''

    In 2007, Van Dyke finally began to assemble the play in collaboration
    with director Judy Braha, who is directing the Boston Playwrights'
    Theatre production. The script skips through space and time and
    memory, summoning the past sometimes with no more than a scrap of lace
    drifting down through the spotlights.

    `Writing the play is a way for me of carrying on that conversation
    with [Elmas], about things I was never able to ask in real life,''
    says Van Dyke.

    `My goal was to share this terrible, terrible story and bring it to
    attention, so that it wouldn't happen again,'' Deranian says. `We who
    are the children of the survivors, it's difficult for us to do this,
    but it's a moral imperative for me to see that I do address these
    issues as long as I am alive, in a constructive manner.''

    Deranian, who still practices dentistry in his Worcester office, has
    published several books, including a history of Worcester's Armenian
    community that ends with a chapter on his mother. He has attended
    readings and workshop productions of `Deported,'' and will be there on
    opening night.

    `Can you imagine what it was like for me to sit in an audience and see
    an actress portray my mother?'' Deranian says. `Who would have ever
    thought that this would come to fruition? Joyce and I think that her
    grandmother and my mother are up there, pulling strings.''

    Strindberg and Swellegance

    The Harvard Strindberg Symposium we told you about recently happens
    today and tomorrow with staged readings, workshops, lectures, and
    screenings. Events take place primarily in Barker Center, 12 Quincy
    St., Cambridge, on the Harvard campus. All are free and open to the
    public. A complete schedule is at
    www.scandinavianstudiesharvard.com/site/Strindberg.html.

    Also of note: Tickets are on sale for the 2012 Swellegance Gala
    Benefit with Tony Award winner Chita Rivera performing her concert,
    `Chita Rivera: My Broadway,'' at the Citi Performing Arts Center
    Shubert Theatre on May 4 at 8 p.m. All proceeds go to Boston Youth
    Moves, a nonprofit, after-school arts education program. Tickets,
    $45-$250 (the latter including a VIP party), are available at
    866-348-9738, www.citicenter.org, and the box office.

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