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  • Director Of '1915' On Growing Up With Armenian Genocide As Family Hi

    DIRECTOR OF '1915' ON GROWING UP WITH ARMENIAN GENOCIDE AS FAMILY HISTORY

    89.3 KPCC
    April 15 2015

    by John Rabe

    Turkey was on the defensive Wednesday, lashing out at both Pope Francis
    and the European Union's legislature for their descriptions of the
    Ottoman-era killing of Armenians as genocide. Turkey's prime minister
    Ahmet Davutoglu said that the pontiff has joined "an evil front"
    plotting against Turkey... Later Wednesday, the European Parliament
    triggered more Turkish ire by passing a non-binding resolution to
    commemorate "the centenary of the Armenian genocide." In a quick
    response, the Turkish Foreign Ministry said the resolution was an
    attempt to rewrite history and threatens to harm bilateral relations
    between the EU and Turkey. -- Associated Press, April 15, 2015

    This month, most of the world commemorates the 100th anniversary of
    the Armenian genocide, in which the Turks killed an estimated 1.5
    million Armenians. This weekend marks the opening of a new movie that
    tells the story again, but through a production of a play staged at
    the historic Los Angeles Theatre in downtown LA.

    Alec Mouhibian and Garin Hovannisian's "1915" opens this weekend in
    Southern California and next weekend in New York, and Hovannisian
    came to the Off-Ramp studio to talk with host John Rabe about the film.

    (Filmmaker Garin Hovannisian at the Mohn Broadcast Center. Credit:
    John Rabe)

    How did you first learn of the genocide?

    "I came from a very special family that was connected directly with the
    Armenian genocide. My grandfather, Richard Hovannisian, who has taught
    history at UCLA for the past 50 years, and who is one of the founding
    scholars of Armenian studies in the United States, made it no option
    for me not to know. The way he came to discover it from his own father,
    who was a survivor, was very different. His father survived, escaped,
    moved to the San Joaquin Valley, and the instinct of many people of
    his generation was to forget, to overcome the past. But many nights,
    Kaspar, my great-grandfather, could be heard screaming in his sleep."

    How did they describe the genocide to a child?

    "There was this mythic land called Armenia, with a wonderful mountain
    called Ararat, where the Bible says Noah's arc landed, a land where
    Christianity first proclaimed. But for some reason, that land didn't
    exist, that land was destroyed, it was a land of ruined churches,
    it was a ghost land. And so the stories that my father would tell me
    deep into the night always began with 'there was this land called
    Armenia.' To me, it was the place of my dreams. It was the place
    that, having been born in Los Angeles, growing up in Los Angeles,
    we would return to."

    Tell us about "1915," your movie.

    "This movie follows a mysterious, intense theater director, who on
    one day, April 24, 2015, which happens to be the 100th anniversary
    of the Armenian genocide, believes that if he brings the right cast
    together, and if he stages this play to perfection, he can actually
    bring the ghosts of the Armenian genocide back to life. So in an age
    when nobody believes in the theater anymore, this one theater director
    is on the mission of his life."

    For much more from our interview with Garin Hovannisian, listen to
    the audio interview near the top of the screen.

    "1915" opens Friday in Hollywood, Glendale, Beverly Hills, Encino,
    Pasadena, Santa Ana, Anaheim, Rancho Palos Verdes, and Whittier;
    and April 25 at the Moscow Cinema in Yerevan, Armenia.

    http://www.scpr.org/programs/offramp/2015/04/15/42406/director-of-1915-on-growing-up-with-armenian-genoc/

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