Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Atom Egoyan's very big year

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Atom Egoyan's very big year

    OurWindsor.ca
    April 18 2015

    Atom Egoyan's very big year


    Director to receive Governor-General's lifetime achievement award, TSO
    salutes Ararat and his new film, Remember, debuts in the fall

    By Martin Knelman


    "This is a little discombobulating," remarked Atom Egoyan, squirming
    in a swivel chair, staring at the screen, not quite believing what we
    were seeing and what we were not seeing.

    A laugh-inducing technical glitch was threatening to undercut a great
    and serious moment for Egoyan. But he, more than anyone, with
    characteristic modesty and good humour, savoured the irony and humour
    of the situation.

    The good news: Egoyan is about to be celebrated as one of Canada's
    cultural treasures, winning a hugely prestigious Governor-General's
    Performing Arts Awards for lifetime achievement. And the announcement
    was being made just days before a Toronto Symphony Orchestra concert
    marking the 100th anniversary of the Armenian genocide -- the event
    that has loomed over both the work and the life of Egoyan for decades.

    He is famous for many reasons, but one of them is his near-obsessive
    interest in many of his movies with the use of technology and how it
    can sometimes distance people. And for a few minutes, botched
    technology turned the news of a milestone award for Egoyan into what
    seemed like a satiric scene from one of his own movies.

    Egoyan was in a meeting room on the fourth floor of the TIFF Bell
    Lightbox, joined by a few witnesses to watch the live streaming of the
    announcement of the winners of the 2015 Governor-General's Performing
    Arts Awards, to be presented at a glitzy gala at the National Arts
    Centre in Ottawa on May 31.

    Once the moment passed and we could move beyond technology, what
    loomed large was how in the spring of 2015 pieces of the Egoyan
    phenomenon are reaching a crescendo at once.

    The Armenian genocide became world news when the Pope deliberately
    used the G word -- prompting a rift between the Vatican and the Turkish
    government, which has always refused to acknowledge there was a
    genocide in the final years of the Ottoman Empire.

    Egoyan tackled the subject of the genocide in his 2002 movie Ararat,
    which was met by threats and complaints from pro-Turkish protesters.
    Since then Canada has officially acknowledged the genocide, but the
    U.S. still has not.

    Ararat will get a big cultural salute in Toronto on Wednesday, when
    the anniversary of the genocide will be marked with a special concert
    showcasing the music of Armenia. One high point will be the premiere
    of a 20-minute piece called "Ararat," by the distinguished composer
    Mychael Danna, commissioned by the TSO based on the score Danna wrote
    for Egoyan's movie.

    "The Pope's comments have had a huge impact," Egoyan explained the
    other day, "but even before that we were very aware this anniversary
    is a great opportunity to celebrate our heritage."

    Egoyan grew up in Victoria in one of the only Armenian families on
    Canada's West Coast. Both his parents are painters, who met at art
    school in Egypt. And his sister, Eve, is a noted musician.

    Virginia Thompson, who is producing the May 31 gala, plans to focus
    not just on Egoyan's films but his astonishing cultural range, which
    includes directing opera, plays and visual art installations.

    "I still get nourishment from theatre and opera," Egoyan said, citing
    as high points his recent revival of Die Walkure for the Canadian
    Opera Company, and directing Michael Gambon in memorable half-hour
    Samuel Beckett play called Eh Joe. That production drew huge acclaim
    in Dublin, London and New York, but I wish we could see it in Toronto,
    Stratford or Niagara-on-the-Lake.

    This year looms as the culmination of Egoyan's amazing career, with
    Die Walkure and the TSO's salute to Ararat segueing into the Ottawa
    honour in May. Egoyan has won countless awards over the years in
    Toronto, Ottawa, Cannes, Hollywood and elsewhere, but the circle of
    GGPA winners is a very small and special club.

    After a summer break, Egoyan's 2015 reaches a peak with the world
    premiere in the fall of his latest movie, Remember. Once again,
    genocide is the subject.

    Produced by Robert Lantos, who also partnered with Egoyan on Ararat
    and many other movies, Remember is a road movie, Holocaust memorial
    and thriller combined. It stars Christopher Plummer as a survivor
    hunting down the Nazi who wiped out his family.

    "I loved working with Chris and I think this is a crowning role for
    him," says Egoyan.

    Although Egoyan has had a hugely successful run at the Cannes Film
    Festival, Remember will bypass the Riviera because last year, Egoyan's
    movie The Captive was booed at the press screening.

    "It was a brutal morning," Egoyan recalls. "There seemed to be a gang
    mentality. It was so intense, it seems like yesterday."

    So when it came to returning to Cannes, Egoyan says, "I felt this was
    way too soon."

    That said, the world premiere of Remember will take place at one of
    the fall film festivals. I'd bet on TIFF or Venice.

    And I feel confident that if Remember premieres in Toronto (as I
    hope), the projection will go off without a hitch.

    Ararat composer seeks reconciliation

    "I was astounded by the richness I found in Armenian music, from the
    early church chant, the court music and the folk music," says
    Winnipeg-born composer Mychael Danna, who wrote the music for many of
    Egoyan's films and won an Oscar for The Life of Pi.

    At the TSO's Wednesday concert, "These haunting melodies will be
    played by Armenian folk instrument musicians, along with the TSO and
    the incomparable soprano Isabel Bayrakdarian," the composer says.

    "On the 100th anniversary of what is in fact continuing violence,
    through the official denials of this historical event, I offer up this
    work to the memory of those who suffered and continue to suffer, in
    hopes of reconciliation, forgiveness and the brotherhood of all men."


    Toronto Star
    http://www.ourwindsor.ca/opinion-story/5564610-atom-egoyan-s-very-big-year/

Working...
X