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ERMENI To Confront Armenian Genocide Aftermath At The Yale Rep

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  • ERMENI To Confront Armenian Genocide Aftermath At The Yale Rep

    ERMENI TO CONFRONT ARMENIAN GENOCIDE AFTERMATH AT THE YALE REP

    By MassisPost
    Updated: March 19, 2015

    NEW HEAVEN, CT -- This month, the Yale Dramatic Association will
    present its Spring Ex Production, ERMENI, a play about an Armenian
    American family in the aftermath of the Armenian genocide. Written by
    Yale senior Eric Sirakian, directed by Yale senior Noam Shapiro and
    produced by Yale sophomore Jill Carrera, the play will run at the Yale
    Repertory Theatre March 26th-28th at 8 p.m. and March 28th at 2 p.m.

    Featuring an all-student cast, ERMENI tells the story of Ani -- an
    Armenian American college student -- who brings her Turkish boyfriend
    Taner home to her family in October of 1970. An argument about history
    turns into a family crisis as Ani's grandmother suffers a heart attack
    and must be hospitalized. When Taner visits the hospitalized old woman
    to make peace, their unexpected friendship sparks much more: a journey
    into the past, and the revelation of a longburied family secret.

    "Beyond its beautiful structure, characterization, and language,
    ERMENI transcends a singular call to remember what happened to the
    Armenian people" Shapiro said. "It is a call to our conscience. ERMENI
    straddles past and the present as it speaks of distant actions that
    still reverberate in our lives today."

    With the 100th anniversary of the Armenian genocide on April 24th,
    Sirakian's ERMENI poses questions about history, identity, and memory
    at a salient moment for Armenian studies and culture. An additional
    panel discussion about the centenary of the Armenian Genocide will
    therefore take place at 5 p.m. on March 28th in the Yale Rep lobby.

    Panelists will include University of Michigan professor of Sociology
    Fatma Gocek and Yale professor of History Jay Winter, who will examine
    the modern-day reverberations of the Armenian Genocide from differing
    historical perspectives. The discussion is hosted by the Genocide
    Studies Program at Yale.

    "As we approach the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide,"
    Shapiro added, "We believe that Eric Sirakian's play will contribute
    to a universal conversation about how to reconcile two narratives --
    those of love and hate, friend and foe, me and you -- and, perhaps,
    find a way to move forward."

    Director Noam Shapiro is a double-major in history and theater
    studies with a focus on 20th Century Europe and cultural memory. His
    productions at Yale include "The Trojan Women," "The Crucible," "Circle
    Mirror Transformation," and "Cabaret." Playwright Eric Sirakian is
    also an actor, writer, and director, and a double-major in English
    and theater studies. He has written "plays and the book for a musical
    that will premiere at Yale in April. His playwriting mentors at Yale
    include Sarah Ruhl and Donald Margulies.

    "The actors and the creative team for ERMENI truly represent Yale at
    its best," Sirakian said. "I feel so honored and blessed to mount
    the first production of my play, which has been developed here at
    Yale for the past year and a half, with their help."

    The Dramat, an organization devoted to teaching students and producing
    fine theatre, is one of the oldest undergraduate theatre organizations
    in the country, and one of only a few that is entirely student-run.

    The Dramat puts on seven productions each year, and over 250 students
    work on these shows each year, learning from and teaching others in
    areas ranging from financial management to production design.

    http://massispost.com/2015/03/ermeni-to-confront-armenian-genocide-aftermath-at-the-yale-rep/

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