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  • Chance Meeting Leads To Script Project

    CHANCE MEETING LEADS TO SCRIPT PROJECT

    Petaluma Argus Courier
    Aug 8 2013

    CJ Newton is helping tell the true story of Sofia, who escaped the
    Armenian genocide in Turkey

    By Yovanna Bieberich ARGUS-COURIER STAFF

    It was definitely fate that brought Petaluma screenwriter CJ Newton
    and fashion designer Caroline Hallak together at the Petaluma Visitors
    Center last year.

    Newton describes their chance meeting as being like a scene out of
    a Hollywood movie, with the opening featuring a glamourous brunette
    stepping out of a shiny, red sportscar and introducing herself as a
    fashion designer from Beverly Hills.

    "She pulled up to the visitors center in her Maserati, and I was there
    in my boring Toyota," laughed Newton, author of the screenplay "Batting
    Second." "It was an ordinary Tuesday for me, and I stopped in to the
    center to buy a button for the Butter & Egg Days Parade. That's when
    she walked in, looking glamorous, and speaking with a French accent."

    Newton happens to speak French, and the two struck up a conversation.

    He mentioned that he was a screenwriter, and then learned that she was
    an Armenian from Montreal, Canada. She was now living in Los Angeles
    and working in fashion design. Hallak was visiting Petaluma in hopes
    of finding shops in the area to sell the wine bags she makes from
    leftover Academy Awards dresses.

    "She came up to wine country hoping to sell designer wine bags," said
    Newton. "She thought they would be a hit with people who want to gift
    an expensive wine in something a little nicer than a paper bag."

    Newton provided Hallak with some suggestions for wine shop owners
    in town for her to talk to, they exchanged business cards and went
    their separate ways. A year later, Newton got a phone call from Hallak.

    "She asked if I remembered her, and reminded me that she was Armenian,"
    said Newton. "Then she asked if I would help her tell the story of her
    grandmother, who escaped the Armenian genocide of World War I. It's
    an amazing story, and it's true. I had the time and agreed to write
    the script."

    In 1915, the Ottomon Empire of modern day Turkey decided it wanted to
    remove the Armenian population from the country and ordered them all
    to leave. According to ArmenianGenocide.org, the forced deportations
    were disguised as a resettlement program. The brutal treatment of
    the deportees, most of whom were made to walk to their destinations,
    made it apparent that the deportations were mainly intended as death
    marches. An estimated 1.5 million Armenians perished in the genocide.

    "It's a big issue in Europe, and it's the main reason Turkey hasn't
    been allowed full membership into the European Union," said Newton.

    "Turkey has not apologized for what happened."

    Newton said that Hallak's grandmother, Sofia, witnessed the murders
    of her husband, parents, and one brother and a sister during the
    genocide. Sofia was spared because she had children. Her younger
    brother, Jean, escaped with Greek fisherman to France and emigrated
    to Canada in 1925.

    Sofia fled Turkey by donkey, hiding her children in saddle bags and
    drugging them to keep them quiet. Tragically, she accidently overdosed
    one of her children, killing the child. Sofia eventually made it to
    Aleppo, Syria with her remaining children.

    Newton is busily writing the script for the story, which he and Hallak
    plan to turn into a film. The project is very timely with the 100th
    anniversary of the Armenian genocide coming up in 2015.

    "I work fast and will be finishing the script this month," said
    Newton. "We plan to start raising funds in September. There's a large,
    affluent community of Armenians in Southern California that we plan
    to approach to help finance the film. We want to enter the completed
    movie in festivals, such as Sundance. Hallak also hopes to one day
    build a monument in Glendale in honor of the Aremenians who were killed
    in the genocide. There is a large Armenian community in Glendale."

    Newton said that he doesn't want to depress the American audience
    with another "Schindler's List," but that this is a historical event
    and a story about a "forgotten Holacuast" that needs to be told.

    "It's a sideline to World War I that not a lot of people know about,"
    said Newton. "It's an unpleasant period in history."

    Though the story sheds light on a dark period of Turkish history,
    Newton plans to balance it with what's going on today in that part
    of the world.

    "I have some modern history that I'm putting in the end notes of the
    film," he said. "Turkey is now a member of the North Atlantic Treaty
    Organization (NATO) and is now sheltering more than 135,000 Syrian
    refugees who are escaping a new genocide happening right now in Syria."

    To learn more about Hallak, visit www.carolinehallak.com. To learn
    more about Newton, visit www.battingsecond.wordpress.com.

    http://www.petaluma360.com/article/20130808/COMMUNITY/130809597/1374/COMMUNITY0301?p=3&tc=pg



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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