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Van Dyke: The Making Of 'deported / A Dream Play'

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  • Van Dyke: The Making Of 'deported / A Dream Play'

    VAN DYKE: THE MAKING OF 'DEPORTED / A DREAM PLAY'
    by Joyce Van Dyke

    The Armenian Weekly Magazine
    May 14, 2012

    Joyce Van Dyke's "Deported / a dream play" tells the story of
    two women deported together from Mezireh in 1915: the playwright's
    grandmother, and her best friend, Varter, the mother of Dr. H. Martin
    Deranian. "Deported" just received its first professional production,
    playing to sold-out houses at the Modern Theatre in Boston from March
    8 to April 1, 2012. The play was directed by Judy Braha and produced
    by Boston Playwrights' Theatre in association with Suffolk University.

    How can you make a play about the genocide and its aftermath? How do
    you tell a story that is unspeakable, unimaginable even? And if you do,
    will anybody come see it? Those were questions I started struggling
    with five years ago.

    The playwright's grandparents and mother - Elmas Boyajian (called
    Victoria in the play) with her husband Harry and daughter Rose,
    Providence. All three are characters in the play.

    At the same time, director Judy Braha and a company of actors began
    collaborating with me to explore and shape the material that would
    eventually become Deported / a dream play. The story of two women
    friends, Victoria and Varter, Deported fuses the everyday and the
    surreal. It opens in Providence in 1938, then jumps forward 40 years
    to LA in 1978, and finally moves into a dream world of the future.

    Early on I decided to tell the story of these two women genocide
    survivors as a "dream play." The play would be composed out of dreams.

    When the lights first come up, we see the main character, Victoria,
    lying asleep on a table, dreaming about her friend, Varter. Dreams are
    woven throughout the action, and the entire final Act of the play,
    set in the future beyond 2015, interweaves Victoria's dreams with
    those of other characters.

    Dreams allowed me to crystallize a complicated history in visual
    images onstage. Dreams could accordion a great expanse of time into a
    moment. People and objects could magically appear and disappear. Real
    doors on stage could open into the past or the future. In the twinkling
    of an eye, we could slide from one world to another.

    Making the play out of dreams was exciting and artistically challenging
    for me. It was also an attempt to wrest something beautiful out of
    this dreadful subject matter. That was an imperative I felt from
    the very beginning, for myself and for the audience: that if I was
    to write this play it had to embody a kind of beauty and vitality,
    that it had to represent humor and hope, that it couldn't just reflect
    the genocide but had to reflect life beyond it too. The resurgence
    of life and dreams of the future-these needed to be a part of the play.

    But at a deep level, it felt like a necessity rather than an artistic
    choice to make this a dream play. The form of the play was dictated
    by the need to tell the truth. What these characters had actually
    experienced in their lifetimes was surreal, nightmarish-the swift
    destruction and transformation of a whole world. How could I be
    true to the strangeness of their experience, to the way the genocide
    shattered not only family and culture, but space and time? How could I
    show their dislocation and disorientation? These were people for whom,
    as the main character Victoria says, "too much has happened," like an
    earthquake whose repercussions went on and on, down through the years.

    I could never recreate that story in a realistic play. But I could
    evoke it in dreams.

    Varter and her first husband, Mr. Nazarian, Mezireh. Both are
    characters in the play.

    So, a dream play, but also a documentary play. Half of the play's
    characters are invented, but the others are historical. Much that
    the historical characters say and do in the play was taken from
    life. I used their real names, with just one exception. That, too,
    was a decision made early on. I wanted to save things. I wanted to
    use the literal facts where I could. These remnants felt precious,
    and whenever I could use real details in the play it gave me a special
    satisfaction. So, for example, Varter's artistry in making Armenian
    needle lace; her husband taken away in the middle of the night in his
    pajamas; the house Harry built at 74 Sargent Avenue in Providence;
    Victoria rehearsing a play in the attic of that house for the Armenian
    Euphrates Evangelical Church theatre group; the Turkish sergeant who
    followed Varter from Ourfa to Aleppo after she escaped. All of these
    and many more real-life details became motifs and events in the play.

    In larger matters, too, the play's stories are true, including the
    story of how these two women lost their children on the deportation.

    As I began to work on the play, my original dread of confronting
    the subject matter gave way to a sense of happiness and release that
    took me by surprise. Although the writing process was often painful,
    it greatly deepened my knowledge and love for my grandparents, and
    for my grandmother's best friend, Varter, Martin Deranian's mother,
    whom I never met but came to love. The more I worked on the play,
    the more I felt the living miracle of their strength and heroism.

    I was sustained throughout the creation of the play by the many people
    and Armenian organizations that gave me support: our Deported Advisory
    Board, Armenian International Women's Association (AIWA), Armenian
    Library and Museum of America (ALMA), Knights and Daughters of Vartan,
    National Association for Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR), Project
    SAVE Armenian Photograph Archives, Sayat Nova Dance Company, and the
    many individuals who generously contributed to our special fundraising
    campaign to help support the production. We were thrilled when Boston
    Playwrights' Theatre agreed to produce the play in association with
    Suffolk University at the newly renovated Modern Theatre.

    I would like to mention two particularly wonderful features of this
    production. One was the beautiful photo exhibit in the lobby of
    the Modern Theatre, curated by Ruth Thomasian of Project SAVE. The
    exhibit was specially keyed to the "Deported" story and included
    photos of characters in the play, providing a moving complement to
    the production and drawing the attention of audiences before and
    after the show, many of whom were given a guided tour of the exhibit
    by Thomasian herself. I also cherished the Armenian dancing in the
    play choreographed by Apo Ashjian of Sayat Nova, who taught our whole
    company how to dance. Ashjian's beautiful weaving of those dances
    into the play made them a highlight of the production, communicating
    the joy and vitality that I so hoped the show would convey.

    Bobbie Steinbach as Victoria and Jeanine Kane as Varter, in Deported.

    There are certain people without whom this play would never have come
    to be. I call Martin Deranian the godfather of this play. He inspired
    me to write it and was the source of everything I know about Varter,
    as well as, remarkably, much that I learned from him about my own
    grandmother.1

    My artistic collaborator, director Judy Braha, was my partner in the
    creation of this play from the very start. Braha not only directed
    the beautifully realized Boston Playwrights' Theatre production at
    the Modern, but had worked with me over a five-year period to develop
    the play. Starting before we had any script or even a story, she held
    improvisational workshops with our company of actors, which became the
    laboratory for developing the play. Most of these actors appeared in
    the production at the Modern. Their creative work, as well as public
    readings and an earlier workshop production at Boston University that
    Braha directed, all contributed to the evolution of the script.

    "Deported" is a challenging play to stage. In Braha's words: "The
    play leaps from the intimate to the epic, and it leaps quickly. Dreams
    tumble out of Victoria's imagination in multiple layers and leave as
    fast as they arrived... One of our greatest challenges was arriving
    at a scenic design that could easily, almost magically, shift from
    an attic in 1938 to a garden in LA in 1978 to a dream space in the
    future."2

    An especially evocative and affecting element of the production
    was not my invention at all, but Braha's idea: that the Suffolk
    University students, who were cast as Armenian dancers in the show,
    should double as "Dreamers"-beings who swirled in and out and made the
    magic happen in the play, making lace and chairs appear and disappear,
    and repeatedly transforming the world before our eyes.

    To my enormous gratification, large audiences came to see the show,
    and we even sold out most performances. People wept, and they laughed.

    I was thrilled to see that the audience members were of all ages
    and backgrounds. One night a busload of 40 college students from
    North Carolina came; they'd just seen "Les Miserables" at the Opera
    House next door, and were now taking in "Deported." Parents brought
    their children. Adults brought their elderly parents. A group of half
    a dozen women in headscarves came one night. A teacher brought his
    entire high school class. A lot of Armenians came to see the show, yet
    they made up less than half of the total audience, in my estimation.

    A friend said to me, "Every Armenian's story is different, and they're
    all the same." Many came up to me after the play and said, "That was
    my story," "You told my mother's story," "my grandparents' story"
    "my uncle's," although not all of those people were Armenian. As
    we heard from many audience members-and as we had hoped in creating
    the play-it resonated with those whose families were changed by the
    Holocaust, by more recent genocides, by fighting in World War II,
    and by American slavery.

    As for what comes next: My goal is for "Deported / a dream play"
    to go on to productions in other cities, between now and 2015, and
    beyond. I believe the theatre is uniquely able to convey the visceral
    and emotional reality of this story. But I would also like to say that
    the play ends with hope. In the last scene, set some years beyond
    2015, Turks and Armenians from the past and from the future gather
    together onstage, searching for the words that will allow them to
    speak. I hope this play can contribute to that conversation.

    1. See www.bu.edu/bpt/pdfs/press/deportedpreview.pdf for the story
    told in a March 3 Boston Globe article.

    2. See
    http://artsfuse.org/53505/fuse-theater-interview-deported-a-dream-play-a-tale-of-new-england-with-global-implications/
    for the interview with Braha and Van Dyke.




    From: A. Papazian
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