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Tumanyan's Tale, Avedikian's Headache: "Anush" in crosshairs of trad

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  • Tumanyan's Tale, Avedikian's Headache: "Anush" in crosshairs of trad

    Tumanyan's Tale, Avedikian's Headache: "Anush" in crosshairs of
    traditionalists and contemporary director
    ARTS AND CULTURE | 15.05.13 | 15:19


    Photolure

    By GAYANE MKRTCHYAN
    ArmeniaNow reporter

    After its Yerevan premier, French-Armenian actor, director and
    producer Serge Avedikian's re-staged "Anush" opera has become "this
    spring's most outstanding and much talked-about cultural event", just
    as the authors had promised.

    Enlarge Photo


    The famous opera based on prominent Armenian writer Hovannes
    Tumanyan's "Anush" poem, a simple village girl's tragic love story,
    was first staged in Alexandrapol (modern day Gyumri) in 1912; the
    music and libretto were authored by a talented musician Armen
    Tigranyan between 1908 and 1912. Avedikian's modernized version of
    "Anush" has been severely criticized by the local intelligentsia who
    addressed an open letter to President Serzh Sargsyan, demanding to ban
    the performance outside Armenia, because it might be damaging for
    Armenia's international image.

    "Watching the 100-minute performance you get an impression that for
    the director Hovhannes Tumanyan authored an ordinary libretto, and
    Armen Tigranyan wrote a simplistic poor musical . . ." the group of
    intellectuals say in their letter.

    Earlier the chief rehearsal of the opera at Sundukyan theatre turned
    into a major failure, when at the end some people called out from
    among the applauding audience: "Disgrace! Avedikian has buried Anush...
    what are you applauding to, people?"

    A number of locally prominent representatives of Armenian
    intelligentsia do not like the remake of the classic, regarding it as
    "Á poorest libretto".

    Their letter to the president, however, reminds many of Stalin
    repressions, when Bolshevik-intellectuals were asking Joseph Stalin to
    ban this or that author's book, play, performance, musical composition
    or painting.

    Popular actor Stepan Danielyan says: "This is the 21st century. Why,
    does Anush absolutely have to be wearing brogues and smell like
    manure? That's good, but there are also other approaches. But no. We
    have to have two poplars, one taller than the other, and Mount Ararat
    in the background. They remind me of my grandpa - when we had no
    running water, he used to threaten he would write a complaint to
    Pravda [communist newspaper]. We have to finally realize that the
    times to write to Pravda, or Central Committee, etc, are gone."

    Media expert Mesrop Harutyunyan shares the opinion that long are gone
    the times for censure, demands to ban, to punish. If they can do
    better, let them stage a better one, resist competition, and let
    audience decide the fate of their and the Academy's performances. They
    can manipulate the audience with their articles, criticism and censure
    or praise.

    "Can you imagine if, say, American intellectuals wrote a letter to
    [Barack] Obama for some performance on Broadway? How do the authors of
    that letter see 'punishing' - should Avedikian be dismembered or,
    maybe, beheaded? Or, he should be proclaimed 'public enemy' and exiled
    >From Armenia?" the expert told www.media.am. Before the storm of
    criticism started, the director had said in his interview to
    ArmenPress, that he was not afraid of true criticism.

    "One can judge or dislike the work; I am ready to answer all critics'
    questions. And if they do not have questions and categorically say 'it
    won't work this way', I have no answer to give to that because that's
    not a due approach. I have to have my space for freedom, they can have
    theirs, as audience and as critics," said Avedikian.




    From: A. Papazian
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