Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenian Reporter - 4/21/2007 - arts and culture section

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

  • Armenian Reporter - 4/21/2007 - arts and culture section

    ARMENIAN REPORTER
    PO Box 129
    Paramus, New Jersey 07652
    Tel: 1-201-226-1995
    Fax: 1-201-226-1660
    Web: http://www.reporter.am
    Email: [email protected]

    April 21, 2007 -- From the Arts & Culture section

    All of the articles that appear below are special to the Armenian Reporter.
    For photographs, visit www.reporter.am

    Briefly
    1. Ani Maldjian brings Anne Frank back to life
    2. Eddie Mekka is definitely not "Stuck in the Past"
    3. "Aram's Choice" nominated for children's book of the year
    4. Reminder: Arpa International Film Festival call for entries
    5. Complete online guide to Armenian Genocide commemorations and
    cultural events
    6. God Bless You, Kurt Vonnegut

    7. Fresno's most popular anchorwoman marks her 25th anniversary
    * Stefani Booroojian is the face of stability, perseverance, and hard work

    8. Music: Gor delivers what he promises (by Tamar Salibian)
    * Acoustic folklore release concert draws hundreds of fans

    9. Music: Singing to honor the memory of the Armenian Genocide (by
    Betty Panossian-Ter Sargssian)
    * A concert by the Armenian acoustic rock band the Beautified Project

    10. Film: The inside story of the Karabakh war (by Betty Panossian-Ter
    Sargssian)

    11. Animators are ready to bring the epic David of Sassoon to movie
    screens (by Paul Chaderjian)
    * Harut, a popular online cartoon, empowers a pitch for a multimillion
    dollar project

    12. Anything but silenced: Students mobilize against genocide (by Arin
    Mikailian)
    * So Cal Armenian Students' Associations commemorate the Armenian Genocide

    13. Essay: The Pink House (by Armen D. Bacon)

    ****************************************** *********************************

    Briefly

    1. Ani Maldjian brings Anne Frank back to life

    Soprano Ani Maldjian made her Long Beach Opera debut this week in the
    role of teenager Anne Frank. The 24-year-old was the first place
    winner of the 2005-2006 Western Region Metropolitan Opera National
    Council auditions, and she is currently a resident artist with the
    Seattle Opera Young Artist Program.

    In the opera, "The Diary of Anne Frank," Ani recreates Anne's life
    from the ages of 13 to 15, when the teenager and her family hid from
    the Nazis in the attic of an Amsterdam office building.

    "I'm Armenian, and I have the same history as the Jewish people,"
    says Ani. "I understand from the point of view of my ancestors. I know
    what they went though. Of course, we can't ever really understand. Yet
    I feel I know Anne Frank, that I understand the sadness and hope in
    her heart."

    "The Diary of Anne Frank" is a monodrama, written for one soprano
    and a chamber orchestra. It was composed in 1969 by Grigori Frid and
    premiered in Moscow in 1972. The opera was first seen in the U.S. in
    1978, and its Long Beach presentation was its West Coast premiere.

    The last performance of "The Diary of Anne Frank" in Southern
    California will take place on Saturday, April 21. In May, Ani will
    perform in Kona, Hawaii. She stars in "La Cenerentola" at the Cowell
    Theater at Fort Mason Center San Francisco in July. Then in October,
    Ani will make her Seattle Opera main stage debut as Priestess in
    Christoph Willibald Gluck's "Iphigénie en Tauride."

    connect:
    www.longbeachopera.org
    ww w.seattleopera.org
    myspace.com/sopranoanimaldjian

    * * *

    2. Eddie Mekka is definitely not "Stuck in the Past"

    Laverne & Shirley star Eddie Mekka was on location in Carnegie (near
    Pittsburgh), Pennsylvania, in March, filming his latest movie project
    titled "Stuck in the Past." The movie about an aging Broadway star
    remembering his impoverished childhood is being directed by Greg
    Robbins, who is known as Pastor Greg on the Trinity Broadcasting
    Network situation comedy Pastor Greg.

    Mekka was born in Worcester, Massachusetts. He changed his name from
    Edward Mekjian when he headed to New York City to sing and dance. He
    landed parts on Broadway and was even nominated for a Tony Award.
    Eddie moved to Los Angeles in 1975 to star in the hit ABC sitcom that
    made him famous. Laverne & Shirley was constantly one of the
    most-watched shows from 1976 to 1983. Episodes are still on television
    in the U.S. (Nick-at-Nite) and around the world.

    In addition to his role as Carmen "the Big Ragoo" Ragusa, Mekka also
    has acting credits in movies like A League of Their Own and more the
    recent Dream Girls. He has also been featured in television shows like
    24 and Crossing Jordan, and spent one season on the daytime soap opera
    Guiding Light.

    connect:
    www.eddiemekka.com

    * * *

    3. "Aram's Choice" nominated for children's book of the year

    The Canadian Library Association's award recognizing outstanding
    stories for children under 12 has named Aram's Choice as one of its
    top ten titles of the year. The 2007 Book of the Year for Children
    Award will be presented next month by the Canadian Association of
    Children's Librarians, which is part of the Canadian Association of
    Public Libraries.

    Aram's Choice is the third book of a series called "New Beginnings."
    The book shares with its young readers the story of the Armenian
    Genocide in detail, but through the comprehensible voice of a
    12-year-old immigrant.

    Aram's Choice is about how Canadians helped more than a thousand
    Armenian refugees who escaped the genocide. Among the 1,300 refugees
    were 110 boys who were taken to Georgetown, Ontario. These boys would
    eventually known as the Georgetown Boys. A stage production of this
    story will also premiere in New Jersey on June 2.

    connect:
    www.amazon.com; www.bn.com

    * * *

    4. Reminder: Arpa International Film Festival call for entries

    The 10th Annual Arpa International Film Festival will be held November
    2-4 at the Egyptian Theater in Hollywood. The festival is inviting
    Armenian filmmakers to submit their feature-length, short,
    documentary, animation, and music video projects for consideration.
    The deadline for submissions is June 30.

    connect:
    www.AFFMA.org
    www.WithoutABox.com

    * * *

    5. Complete online guide to Armenian Genocide commemorations and
    cultural events

    For the past few years, Armenians looking for Genocide commemorations
    and cultural events to attend have been using one web site -
    www.GenocideEvents.com - for a thorough listing of events worldwide.

    Webmaster Armen Vartanian created the site in 2003 to give Armenians
    in the greater Los Angeles area a complete list of the dozens of
    commemoration events taking place in Southern California.

    Vartanian is a recent graduate of the Mt. Sierra College of
    multimedia arts and design. He says following the site's inaugural
    year, Armenians began submitting their events from all corners of the
    world. In 2006, Vartanian says, more than 40 thousand people used the
    site at least once.

    This year, GenocideEvents.com is offering user-friendly drop-down
    menus for each geographic region. The menus then lead to secondary
    listings by country and city. Among the listings this year are more
    than 200 events ranging from protests to rallies, from concerts to
    film screenings, and from prayer vigils to church services. The events
    listed are taking place throughout the month of April and in various
    locations including Australia, Europe, the Middle East, North America,
    and South America.

    If your event is not listed this year, join the site's mailing list
    and plan on adding your 2008 commemoration for the world to see.

    connect:
    www.GenocideEvents.com

    * * *

    6. God Bless You, Kurt Vonnegut

    For decades, rumors circulated that one of the America's most prolific
    writers, Kurt Vonnegut, was Armenian. This month, Vonnegut - a
    third-generation German, who created Armenian characters and
    references to things Armenian in his literature - died at the age of
    84.

    One of Vonnegut's most noted Armenian characters was Rabo Karabekian
    in the novel Bluebeard. Rabo was a World War II veteran and an
    abstract expressionist painter. Bluebeard is said to have been a
    fictional autobiography with the Genocide being an important
    storyline. Vonnegut's other books include Player Piano (1952), Cat's
    Cradle (1963), a collection of short stories titled Welcome to the
    Monkey House (1968), the classic Slaughterhouse-Five (1969), and
    Breakfast of Champions (1973).

    In 1999, Vonnegut also published a collection of pieces written for
    National Public Radio titled, God Bless You, Dr. Kevorkian. In the
    book Vonnegut talks to an eclectic group of people including
    Shakespeare and Hitler. How Dr. Kevorkian is involved is that Vonnegut
    employs the good doctor to create near-death experiences, so that
    Vonnegut can talk to his dead interviewees.

    connect:
    www.vonnegut.com

    ******** ************************************************** *****************

    7. Fresno's most popular anchorwoman marks her 25th anniversary

    Stefani Booroojian is the face of stability, perseverance, and hard work

    FRESNO, Calif. - In 1982 Stefani Booroojian began her career as a
    broadcast journalist at Fresno's channel 24, KSEE TV. Twenty-five
    years later she's still going strong, bringing the evening news into
    the homes of millions of Central San Joaquin Valley residents. This
    month marks the start of Stefani's second quarter-century at channel
    24 and in television news.

    "I realize 25 years is quite a milestone," says Stefani with great
    modesty, "but I sort of just kept coming to work, and the years just
    kept piling on. My colleagues did throw a wonderful celebration. I
    was flabbergasted!"

    The petite anchorwoman started at channel 24 as an intern, never
    anticipating she would become a household name in the valley, perhaps
    the best-known personality in the region. Thousands tune in to her
    broadcasts on weeknights to find out what is happening in their world.

    After graduating from Fresno High School in 1976, Stefani enrolled
    at Fresno State and majored in journalism. "I was drawn to radio and
    television in college when I started taking courses and realized I may
    have some potential," she says. "I particularly liked providing a
    public service as well as the performance aspect."

    Stefani learned the workings of the news business like so many
    others trying to get started, scoring an internship at channel 24.
    "When I was in college, one of my professors suggested I change my
    name," says Stefani. "He didn't feel Booroojian would work well on the
    air. He said it was 'too ethnic and too hard to say and spell.' I
    decided to go with it anyway, and figured an Armenian name would be
    accepted just fine in the San Joaquin Valley. It was!"

    Once she earned her degree, Stefani started working at a local radio
    station, where Greg Lefevre heard her and asked her to audition at
    channel 24.

    "I hired Stefani in 1982 when I was news director at KSEE," says
    Lefevre. "It was the easiest and smartest decision you could make. I
    had listened to Stefani on the radio in those days, more than holding
    her own with the morning deejays."

    Lefevre, who went on to be a CNN bureau chief in San Francisco,
    recalls that Stefani's manner was clear and convincing, even early in
    her career. "She knew news, and her journalism instincts showed
    through," says Lefevre, who is now a media trainer and consultant.

    "When I invited Stefani in for an audition," he says, "she lit the
    place up. Here was a bright, capable communicator who cared deeply
    about her profession and about the community she served."

    The audition and job offer were the beginnings of a long television
    career, spanning two and half decades and earning her countless awards
    and accolades, including two Emmys, an award from Fresno State, and
    the title of the valley's favorite news anchor.

    Former channel 24 anchor Brent DeMonte says Stefani made an
    impression right off the bat. "She walked in as a pretty little
    dark-haired gal," he says, "very friendly to everyone when she came
    in."

    Over the years, Stefani has never shied away from volunteering for
    local organizations, running the San Francisco marathon to help the
    Leukemia and Lymphoma Society, hosting fundraisers for the Armenian
    Community School of Fresno, appearing at special events, and talking
    to students in high school and college.

    "The Armenian community has been very supportive of me and my
    career," says Stefani. "I'm proud to represent such an important
    segment of the central valley population."

    Whenever the local Armenian community has approached Stefani to
    participate, she has always been ready to help out. Stefani hosted
    local Armenia Fund relief telethons when the community came together
    to help the homeland after the 1988 earthquake and to raise funds to
    buy fuel in the early 90s. Stefani also hosted local segments for the
    valley broadcasts of the Armenian National Committee's Horizon TV
    program.

    Fifteen years ago, Stefani spearheaded a program that many now know
    as Buddy Check 24. The program promotes breast self exams and early
    detection. On the 24th of each month, Stefani hosts special broadcasts
    to educate and encourage women to partner up and remind their partners
    to conduct self exams.

    "The Buddy Check stories have all been memorable to me, because the
    program does save lives," says Stefani. "Meeting women who have been
    touched by the program is extremely gratifying to me."

    Breast cancer survivors who say early detection made the difference
    between life and death can't thank Stefani enough. "When no one else
    believed in us, she was there," said Sandy Flint, a cancer survivor
    and former president of the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation.

    In addition to Buddy Check, Stefani says serving as a media witness
    to an execution and covering the fifth anniversary of 9-11 from New
    York have also been monumental moments in her career.

    Important stories, fame, success, and accolades have not changed
    Stefani. "She's remained sweet, very even-tempered, and a very nice
    person," says fellow anchorman Jack Noldon. "That makes her one of the
    tops in my book."

    Talent, credibility, the skill of being one of the most capable
    wordsmiths in the business, perseverance, and personality have allowed
    Stefani to survive through several different owners at 24, perhaps a
    dozen station managers, news directors, co-anchors, and hundreds of
    reports, producers, and writers.

    For those who want to follow in her footsteps, Stefani has a few
    words of sound advice. "Don't give up," she says. "Be willing to work
    hard and possibly for little pay at first. The rewards will come
    later."

    While many personalities have appeared and disappeared from the
    airwaves in the central valley, some moving on to a bigger television
    market and chasing dollars and more fame, Stefani has remained
    satisfied with serving her community and her hometown.

    Anchorman Bud Elliott, who was Stef's other half on the news desk
    for fifteen years says you just can't beat what she's got going for
    her. "Stefani brings an inside view and sensitivity that only a native
    can have," he says.

    Fresno's top cop, Police Chief Jerry Dyer says Stefani is simply a
    great person. "Stefani always had the interest of Fresno at heart
    first," he says.

    Chief Dyer, like many other city officials, politicians, community
    leaders, and newsmakers know that Stefani is not only trustworthy but
    has the perspective of a veteran journalist.

    Stefani says she takes each news day in stride, not at all surprised
    by the copy that may come up on her prompter during live newscasts.
    "You learn to read through anything," she says, explaining how anchors
    have to stay on their toes and speak without scripts during breaking
    news situations or simply when shows are produced badly and fall apart
    on the air.

    "I'm only a year away from tying a record for sitting next to a
    co-anchor," says Stefani's current co-anchor Rich Rodriguez. "I've
    told her many times that she can't leave or retire before I do because
    she's such a joy to work with at 6, 10, and 11."

    Rich says that over the past six years he and Stefani have
    co-anchored, they have never had a quarrel. "I think because we have
    so many things in common, it helps us click on the air. So often we're
    comparing notes about our kids and the crazy things that they do."

    Stefani's infectious laugh, says Rich, is something that can keep
    him snickering for an entire newscast. Rich says Stefani's laugh is
    one thing that people don't know about her.

    "When it comes to her craft," he says, "she is one of the finest
    delivering news. She reads with great emotion and interpretation and
    that's something journalism profs can't teach because it is a gift."

    Those who have worked with or simply know Stefani Booroojian all
    seem to say the same thing: she's beyond compare, a gem whose
    brilliance shines through the lens and into the hearts of so many.

    Several generations of young Armenians who have grown up in Fresno
    and have aspired to follow in her footsteps have also been empowered
    by the idea that an Armenian can be on the air, be successful and
    maintain her identity.

    "The real winners, of course are viewers across Central California,"
    says Lefevre." Congratulations, Stef, on 25 great years!"

    ************************************ ***************************************

    8. Music: Gor delivers what he promises

    * Acoustic folklore release concert draws hundreds of fans

    by Tamar Salibian

    Known throughout Armenia as the lead guitarist for the popular rock
    band Lav Eli since 1996, Gor Mkhitarian has emerged as a solid world
    music act since his solo launch in 2001. "My music is for an Armenian
    audience from age 5 to age 60" Gor explains. "I call it 'modern
    traditional' music." On April 7, Gor enchanted the audience with his
    unique style in an acoustic set at the Barnsdall Gallery Theater. It
    was a promotional event for his new CD, "Acoustic Folklore," but Gor
    assembled with a group of talented musicians to perform many of his
    older songs as well as a number of songs from the new CD.

    Soft-spoken and slightly bashful, Gor emerged on stage to begin the
    show with guitarist and banjo player Aaron Stayman. Stayman, who had
    flown in from Boston expressly for the concert, blended witty banter
    and muted charm which went well with Gor's brief introductions to each
    song. Gor and his group were relaxed with each other and communicated
    well with the audience. Speaking to the Armenian Reporter before the
    show, Gor described his group as "fantastic musicians." The Barnsdall
    Gallery Theater was a prime location for such an intimate event, as
    the performers kept the audience laughing at many jokes, impressed
    with the precise musicianship, and applauding joyfully after each
    song.

    Gor and Stayman began the night's performance with the song
    "Gladiator." The duo harmonized well and Stayman pronounced the
    Armenian song lyrics clearly. Gor and Stayman performed a number of
    songs together before Gor slowly invited more of the musicians onto
    the stage to join the group. Accordionist Ara Dabanjian, nylon
    guitarist Jay Dean, and bass player Varoujan Hovakimyan helped Gor and
    Stayman on stage to create a lush, complete sound. Many of the
    performed pieces were love songs, which made guitarist Jay Dean
    jokingly complain, "another love song?" to much laughter from the
    audience. "I call these songs short and sweet," explained Gor. "Short
    for sure and sweet for me for sure," he joked. "They're little bit
    cheesy, yes," he added, "but it all comes from the heart."

    The inclusion of Aaron Stayman's banjo and Ara Dabanjian's accordion
    in the arrangements was evidence of Gor's mission to create "modern
    traditional" music. Stayman's fiery banjo performance created a
    distinctive sound. Gor's respect for each musician was evident as he
    repeatedly noted each individual's performance throughout the night.

    Rounding out the group's cohesion was the inclusion of keyboardist
    Erwin Khachikian and percussionists Narek Ovsepyan and Mher Vahakn.
    Vahakn's boyish glee while performing was evident throughout the
    entire set and paired well with Ovsepyan's focused demeanor. The
    camaraderie during the show presented a back-and-forth communication
    between guitarists Jay Dean and Aaron Stayman, percussionists Mher
    Vahakn and Narek Ovsepyan, and between accordionist Ara Dabanjian and
    keyboardist Erwin Khachikian. On "Stigma," each instrument stood its
    own while blending well to create a sweet and unified sound. The unity
    on stage paired well with the blend of genres from Gomidas Armenian
    folk music to punk rock.

    Gor's final invitation was to duduk player Jivan Gasparyan, Jr. The
    inclusion of the duduk, a traditional Armenian instrument, further
    propelled the band's fusion of old and new and of modern and
    traditional. The evening came to an end with what Gor described as
    "Armenian reggae" in the song "Vad or" (Bad Day). The evening ended
    with many audience members rushing to the stage to congratulate Gor
    and his bandmates on a successful night and a solid set of songs from
    his new CD, "Acoustic Folklore."

    Gor's music is available on iTunes and at cdrama.com.

    ************************************* **************************************

    9. Music: Singing to honor the memory of the Armenian Genocide

    * A concert by the Armenian acoustic rock band the Beautified Project

    by Betty Panossian-Ter Sargssian

    Or by the five A's, as the lead singer-songwriter André Simonian likes
    to put it. They are André, Armen, Arlene, Areg, and Arne.

    André has a sense of humor, one verging on the black. And,
    accordingly, his songs are an ode to the dark side of life.

    The theme of the Beautified Project's upcoming concert, to be held
    on April 22 at the Avant-Garde Folk Music Club in Yerevan, is not a
    celebratory one at all. "It is more like coming together and focusing
    on the dark side of our reality," André says. The band will perform in
    memory of the Armenian Genocide.

    André Simonian started playing the guitar when he was a teenager in
    Iran. At 19 he moved to England to study media and music. Meanwhile,
    he played in different rock bands, such as the Blue People Society and
    Persia, which sang in Farsi.

    "I was 22 when I started writing my own songs and the first time I
    got the chance to really work on my songs was when I was 26." It was
    then that André founded the Beautified Project, an acoustic rock band
    "dealing with issues like loss, death, and more real-life situations,
    rather than love songs or how beautiful girlfriends are! We, Armenians
    like to drink dark, black, and bitter Armenian coffee, and that is
    very much what life is, what our reality has been: dark, black, and
    bitter. That's the real taste of life," says the artist. He adds that
    writing about the negative aspects of life fills him with positive
    energy.

    The band's debut album, Serenades for Insanity, was out in the UK in
    June 2006. The band had worked almost two years on it, with André
    writing all the music and lyrics.

    Then André decided to move to Armenia. After much planning he
    arrived in Yerevan almost eight months ago, regrouping the Beautified
    Project. He says he has a mission here in Armenia. "Basically, in
    Armenia rock is associated with the 80s, black leather, and
    three-minute guitar solos, but I want to prove that rock music can
    associate with our history and present." He is definitely not
    referring to the use of Armenian traditional music instruments. "Our
    music hasn't got any of the Armenian elements, but (I'm hoping) it has
    the Armenian soul."

    He dreams of contributing to the rock scene in Yerevan. Back in
    London, the Beautified was one of a thousand good rock bands, but in
    the Armenia it aspires to be a leading phenomenon.

    The music of the Beautified is acoustic-based rock, and musicians
    like James Blunt have influenced it. "A lot of people tell me that,
    although I do not sound like a girl." But regular comparisons to Pink
    Floyd leave the artist surprised, "because I do not own any Pink Floyd
    records."

    The album hasn't got a single guitar solo, but instead has a
    melancholic character with many mellow piano solos. "It's rock,
    because it's still angry, the lyrics are dark and there is raging
    energy."

    In the UK André and The Beautified Project got recognized because of
    their first single, All Alone, released in late 2005. It was inspired
    by the life and death of the Armenian painter Arshile Gorky, and a
    little bit by Atom Egoyan's Ararat. That film "portrayed Gorky in the
    best way possible, showing that although he escaped from the Genocide,
    had a life in a safe country; he couldn't cope with his past and at
    the end became a victim of Genocide," says André.

    Between the lines, All Alone narrates the Armenian feelings of being
    betrayed and of living with a Genocide still not recognized.

    To André, even today the Armenian diaspora are victims of the
    Armenian Genocide, and the latest example of it is Hrant Dink.
    "Armenian rock bands have to use their powers to bring these issues
    up. During our upcoming concert dedicated to the Armenian Genocide we
    want to dedicate All Alone to the memory of Hrant Dink."

    The band aspires to achieve wide recognition first in Armenia, and
    then to conquer the whole world.

    The Beautified Project's first-ever Armenian concert in December
    2006 opened to a full house. It was the first time André Simonian was
    performing live in Armenia. It was a great success for a band at that
    time unknown to the Armenian public. Almost five months later, this
    second concert will regroup around the band its first-ever core of all
    Armenian fans.

    connect:
    www.thebeautified.com

    * * *

    Lyrics

    * All alone

    Watching the mirror stare at me
    Watching the future spit on me
    Watching me going down
    It was hard watching you walk away

    Sitting here all alone
    Comes tomorrow I'll be gone
    Even my neighbor Jerry the nun
    Hasn't got a clue what's going on

    Getting high all alone
    All our lives pretending clones
    What is wrong with a bit of shame?
    When you know you're the one to blame

    Whispers will turn to louder screams
    My life will fall like an autumn leaf
    Shadows of the past haunting our dreams
    Tonight is the night and I'm so pleased

    Sitting here all alone
    Resting on the table a little gun
    Even my neighbour Jerry the nun
    Hasn't got a clue what's going on

    ********************************************** *****************************

    10. Film: The inside story of the Karabakh war

    by Betty Panossian-Ter Sargssian

    One day an eight-year-old boy poked his nose into his father's closet
    and, finding an army uniform, asked, "Dad have you ever been a
    soldier?"

    "I suddenly felt the whole weight of that question," remembers
    Vardan Hovhannisyan. "How should I answer him? Within ten years he'll
    be joining the army, too."

    At one end of the answer lay the past of the father, and on the
    other end was the son's future. "I may not sound too original, as all
    parents encounter such feelings at some point of their lives. But I
    felt that the day to settle scores with my past had came," Vardan
    recalls.

    To find the right answer, he opened another closet, the one holding
    his archival footage of the Karabakh war in the early 1990s.

    The result of that backward voyage is a story of people in war and
    peace, an internationally produced and released documentary depicting
    the inside story of the war.

    Does the film answer the boy's question? Perhaps. But it raises more
    universal questions: Are people the same in war and peace? Does peace
    always offer happier endings than war does? Is there truly peace in
    peacetime?

    Back in 1990s Vardan was a 21-year-old college dropout who had
    found himself a well-paid job as a freelance war correspondent. He
    sold his battle footage to various news agencies. But at some point he
    realized that the material he was producing didn't end up serving the
    truth. "I didn't want to be manipulated. I refused to let my material
    be twisted." So he boycotted the news agencies and stayed in the
    trenches as a war volunteer, using his camera as his weapon.

    He filmed the war for four years. He filmed the fear in the air, the
    victorious smiles of the soldiers, the messages that fathers sent to
    their children, born or unborn, the army nurse who vowed to send her
    son to battle as soon as he was old enough to hold a machine gun. He
    also filmed the frozen tears for a friend who was killed, the smell of
    blood, dirt, and sweat, the dampness of the trenches, and the choking
    smoke of the fires.

    Vardan Hovhannisian was not a film director and never dreamed of
    becoming one. His lengthy archival footage of the war was his personal
    documentation of an important part of recent Armenian history, an
    important part of his life.

    Produced by the Bars Media Documentary Film Studio in Yerevan, A
    Story of People in War and Peace depicts the universal themes of war:
    killing, fear, boredom, and long hours of waiting in damp and cold
    trenches. These things never change and cross borders of nationality,
    ethnicity, religion, and even time.

    A 70-minute version was coproduced for broadcast on BBC Storyville;
    90-minute versions are being coproduced for broadcast on Germany's WDR
    and Finland's YLE, and a 52-minute version is being coproduced for
    broadcast on the French-German ARTE channel.

    What began as a personal project is now being related to thousands
    of people in different countries. The interest of people from various
    European countries in this film comes as a big surprise to the
    filmmaker. The secret may be that this film gives its viewers a
    first-hand account of what war really is. "Over years people have been
    exposed to journalistic accounts of the bombshells, the bangs, and the
    explosions, but seldom have they gone into the trenches, listened to
    the conversations of the soldiers, or experienced the real fear, the
    blood, and the sweat," says Vardan. A viewer from Belgium once told
    Vardan that the film had evoked memories of his late grandfather, who
    had fought in World War II.

    * Visiting the past to see the future

    Stories of the survivors and the fallen had to be remembered to create
    a very close and intimate portrait of the characters in war, and who
    they had become in peace.

    The making of this film brought to the surface feelings and
    sensations long forgotten. In the Armenian version of the film there
    is a scene where, by mistake, a hand comes into the frame: the very
    dirty, frostbitten, ruptured hand of an old man. "I asked myself whose
    hand this could be," says Vardan. It took him a while to realize that
    it was his own. "Now, 13 years later, my hands look younger. I had
    simply forgotten that for years after the war I always kept my hands
    in my pockets to warm them. This film threw me back into such
    forgotten sensations," says the filmmaker.

    Besides being a return to the war, the film is a window to the
    future. "It is something very important: not to be stuck in the war.
    It could be so dangerous. Take the example of Djoud. He had big
    problems and until now he encounters social problems," says Vardan.

    In the war footage Djoud was a lively, bold, wild young man with a
    hint of aggression in all of his actions. A hero of the trenches, he
    is a killing machine at the same time. And peace didn't bring much
    peace to this character. Twelve years later Vardan visited him in
    prison, where he was serving the last months of a sentence for drug
    dealing.

    The back-and-forth journey of the film accentuates the harsh
    realities of peace. The five characters of the film have to fight in
    peaceful battlefields. "There are no social programs to engage these
    war veterans, to give them the means to secure a decent living. They
    are deprived of the weapons to defend themselves in peace, because
    they spent their best years at the battlefield, while crooks stayed
    home and gathered wealth. Criminals have credit histories in Armenia,
    but war veterans don't."

    Vardan is resentful and tells that many of the veterans do not even
    possess a document showing that they spent years in the battlefield.
    Another character in the documentary, Felo, was only recently able to
    get such a document, and only after long bureaucratic chaos.

    * Four years compressed into five days

    What is presented in the war footage of A Story of People in War and
    Peace is only five days in 1994, out of four years' worth of film. The
    filmmaker explains his choice: "I chose those five days and those
    people in particular because they presented a group of people who were
    strangers to me before the war and with whom I have had no connection
    since." The trajectories of their lives were unknown to the filmmaker,
    which made the whole filmmaking process a sort of lottery game with
    unknown results and surprises.

    The archival footage is shot during a close-range battle, where many
    were wounded or killed.

    The five characters are all very sensitive people. Each copes with
    peace in his own way.

    The filmmaker's friendships forged in fire were one of the drivers
    of this film. Those friends now live in the shadows and he felt the
    urge to find who they had become. "At war we knew who we were. We were
    soldiers fighting for our land. But we had lost our identity in
    peace."

    "There exists a different type of bond between friends in battle.
    You become brothers, and that means more than life itself. And it sort
    of warms us. When we gather together, we feel that warmth, we can
    relate to each other without words, like those guys sitting under the
    tree at the end of the film," says Vardan.

    * Film therapy

    After the war was over, the footage was locked away in a drawer.
    Vardan was tired of those images. Like many of his friends, he wanted
    to live his life. He got married and formed a happy family, but life
    kept reminding him that the war had changed his way of perceiving
    life. "War failed to victimize me. I felt proud that I was out of war
    with my dignity preserved; I hadn't turned into a criminal, into an
    animal. I had survived that meat grinder."

    As the years passed, however, Vardan began to realize that peace had
    been breaking his wings. "Now I see that we were victorious in war but
    are being defeated in peace on all levels."

    Opening the closet helped heal the wounds he had gotten in
    peacetime. "This film revealed the good in me; it erased my
    aggressiveness," says the filmmaker.

    The filming of the peace scenes took a year and half to complete.

    The filming of the Armenian version is still going on, and will be
    completed by the end of May. The Armenian version will be longer and
    more in depth than the version to be shown at the Tribeca film
    Festival. The film will have a different rhythm, "more true to the
    Armenian nature." The ending will be different, and one more character
    will join the group of veterans in war and peace. But no one should
    expect a happier ending.

    * Lessons from the trenches: Time is not money

    "I always think about what I'll be doing next," Vardan says. "One of
    the things war has taught me is that time is not money. You cannot buy
    your life back. If you spend it, it's gone! It taught me the value of
    time, especially when I was held hostage for six months. Any moment
    the door could open and that could be the end of my life, so I had to
    reevaluate what time really meant."

    A story of people in war and peace has been shown in film festivals
    all over the world, winning numerous awards. During the upcoming
    months the Armenian version will be shown for Armenians in the United
    States and in other countries with large Armenian communities.

    connect:
    www.warandpeacefilm.com
    www .tribecafilmfestival.org

    ************************ ************************************************** *

    11. Animators are ready to bring the epic David of Sassoon to movie screens

    * Harut, a popular online cartoon, empowers a pitch for a multimillion
    dollar project

    by Paul Chaderjian

    GLENDALE, Calif. - A vision. Inspiration. A dream. These are a few of
    the ethereal "somethings" that young Hollywoodians need to realize
    daunting ventures like making a motion picture. They are also what the
    filmmakers in this story have, in addition to the epic of David of
    Sassoon - a story passed on to modern Armenians through dozens of
    generation of their ancestors.

    Hayk Manukyan, 24, and Henri Hovhanesian, 29, and a team of their
    animator friends have set out to make a full-length three-dimensional,
    computer-generated animated motion picture, much like the titles from
    Disney-Pixar Studios like Toy Story, Cars, and Finding Nemo.

    "If you ask any Armenian what's the most popular story, they'll say
    David of Sassoon," says Henri, who will be producing the film.
    "There's a sense of pride when you see that statue, somebody so
    legendary that represents our people. It's something that we've always
    wanted to see animated and told in an animated movie."

    The statue Henri is referring to is the Ervand Kochar's depiction of
    the thousand-year-old epic about a hero who is known as the liberator
    of his people from those who tried to enslave the Armenians of
    yesteryear. The story, which originated somewhere between the 9th and
    10th centuries, is about the battles of Sasuntsi Davit, who fought
    Arab and Persian invaders with his lightening rod of a sword and his
    magical horse, Kourkik Jelali.

    "The country is at its weakest point," says Hayk. "They have lost
    their leader and are being controlled by the Egyptian empire. All
    their hope is on this one man, David, who happens to be the king's
    son, but he doesn't know it. The main villain in this story is his
    brother, half-brother. Basically, it's a story about David finding out
    who he is, and stepping up and taking the role of his father."

    "The quickest way people would relate to it," Henri chimes in, "is
    that it's Lion King that would look like Lord of the Rings and feel
    like Gladiator. It's a young kid who is lost. Through his knowledge of
    his history, he realizes that we are bigger and stronger than what
    they say, and he says, 'I'm going to take it back.'"

    * David and Harut

    Poet Hovhannes Toumanian is sometimes credited with being the first to
    put the oral poems about the legend of David of Sassoon on paper.
    However, a search on Google will provide academic sources that say
    Bishop Karekin Srvantzdiants and a philologist named Manoug Abeghian
    transcribed and gathered the various versions of the tale and
    published them in the late 1800s.

    Enter the computer era and a generation growing up text-messaging
    and e-mailing one another, and you have Henri and Hayk, who learned
    how to create cartoons by using Flash and Maya programming. Their
    interest in illustrations and animation first gave birth to the 21st
    century epic of Harut, the immigrant from Armenia who terrorizes the
    freeways of Southern California and tells Aparantsi jokes.

    "The first story that featured the Harut character was one Armenian
    boxer named Vartan," explains Hayk. "Vartan is fighting the two-ton
    terror for a million dollars. And the million dollars is if he
    survives. It's not even if he wins it. It's just if he survives."
    Harut appears in this cartoon as the ringside announcer but becomes
    the object of Internet hype.

    Hayk created the Harut Internet phenomenon. Thousands of fans have
    hit various websites like YouTube to watch Harut come to life. The
    cartoon, which may be found by searching for Hayasa on YouTube, has
    also been featured on Hayk's HayasaPictures.com website and on local
    cable television programs in Southern California.

    "Vartan was supposed to be the main character," says Hayk, "but
    everybody's response was aimed at Harut. Harut this and Harut that.
    And they were repeating his words, and his phrase 'aloh?' became
    popular. So in a way, he became the popular character, and Vartan
    faded out after the first short." Harut, speaking English with a heavy
    Armenian accent, his balding head and prominent nose, became an
    overnight hit with young Armenians surfing the Internet.

    In the two years that followed the first Harut appearance on the
    'net, Hayk created another dozen cartoons featuring Harut the taxi
    driver, Harut the ninja fighter (pronounced neeen-ja), and Harut, the
    stereotypical Aparantsi learning the ways of the New World.

    In one sketch, Harut is speeding down the 'van oh van' or State
    Highway 101 at 100 miles per hour. "It says van oh van," says Harut
    when the California Highway Patrol officer pulls him over and asks if
    he realizes he's driving at 100 MPH. "You can't be serious," says the
    cop. That's the number of the freeway, not the speed limit. "Oh crap,
    Vartan," says Harut to the cop. "What's a Vartan," asks the cop. "My
    cousin," says Harut. "What about your him," asks the cop, and Hayk
    changes the shot to a trail of smoke and fumes whizzing down Freeway
    405 while a donut-eating officer watches in disbelief.

    "There was really no script," says Hayk about his Harut series.
    "There were story boards and just kind of coming up with the script on
    the spot, animating and recording it." The average length of these
    cartoons, which still live on the Internet is about five minutes, and
    Hayk has been producing one new episode every two months."

    Hayk's current employers at Six Point Harness Studios liked Harut
    the Ninja so much that they have signed a deal with Hayk to handle the
    production of the series when a third party shows interest in funding
    the project. Hayk says his "neenja" can be an animated series for
    television, a full-length feature, sketches for web sites, or an
    animated cell-phone graphic.

    * Gettin' into animation

    Hayk's love for making cartoons began early in life. "When I was ten,"
    he says, "I was shooting movies at home." He was enrolled in the
    Sevada Art Studio until he was 14, then wrote a letter to Disney
    Animation asking for a job. He received a response with a list of
    schools he should consider. One of them was Pasadena's Art Center
    College of Design, which offered high school students the opportunity
    to attend Saturday class on campus.

    "For the next four years, when I was in high school," says Hayk,
    "every weekend, I would go to Art Center. I was getting life drawing
    and painting and improving my artistic skills." After graduating
    Glendale High School, the Yerevan native began working professionally
    for small animation companies.

    "The first project I worked on was in 2001," says Hayk. "I was hired
    by Cornerstone Animation, which was a group of animators who separated
    from Disney and started their own animation company. And over there, I
    was working on everything from Lion King 1.5 to their other sequels,
    storyboarding sequels. And I did a Mickey Mouse animation for one of
    the Disney rides. That's where I got most of my experience in
    animation and knowledge."

    Hayk's dream at 14 to work for Disney had come true much as Henri's
    dream of being part of the film industry. The 29-year-old Etchmiadzin
    native says art is in his veins, and both his parents have always
    dabbled in fine arts. "It was always that thing that you're never
    going to make a living from the arts." Henri says he at one time
    considered becoming a doctor but dropped the notion after volunteering
    at a hospital.

    While attending Glendale College, Henri landed an internship on the
    first animated feature Warner Brothers was producing, Quest for
    Camelot. The internship led to a paid production-assistant position,
    and he spent several years working his way up the ranks. "I learned
    how to manage and what it takes to meet the deadlines," he says.
    "After that I went to Sony for a small TV show, called Sammy. It was a
    David Spade project."

    Henri continued his career at DreamWorks and Universal Studios,
    where he worked on films like Curious George. Preparing for his
    journey in Hollywood were private lessons, animation classes at
    California State University, Northridge, and four years at San Jose
    State University. Many of those involved with "David of Sassoon" are
    also students and graduates of San Jose State.

    "I met Hayk through his website, Hayasa Pictures," says Henri. "We
    met because of Stepan Partamian's TV show, and we decided to work
    together. We did a couple of the animations together, and then I got
    more involved." While Henri is working on the producing and business
    aspect of "David of Sassoon," Hayk is leading the creative team and
    developing the artwork and the look of the feature.

    * The new David

    "I based David on the statue," says Hayk, referring to the Kochar's
    sculpture across the train terminal in Yerevan. "It's something you
    grow up knowing, and when you picture David in your head, you picture
    the statue by Kochar."

    Hayk says he found photographs of Armenian athletes and people he
    thought looked like the statue. The process of creating David is
    taking place on the web, says Hayk. He and the other animators on the
    project share a private blog, where they upload illustrations and
    critique one another.

    "I go over the artwork and give them notes," says Hayk. "Everyone is
    not sitting there working in one place. We worked through the web. Two
    of the animators are working on set design and environment. Three
    others are working on the character design and the look of the
    people."

    * The Oscar speech

    "There are so many great Armenian characters, Armenian stories that
    the world has yet to get to know," adds Henri from across the table.
    "We have a lot of heroes. We are small country, and we are always
    getting to be known as being beaten down and controlled by other
    countries. But in our history we've had so many heroes and we want to
    bring them to life."

    Henri says he is determined to introduce the world to Armenian
    stories. For him, he says, it's not enough to hear Jivan Gasparyan's
    duduk in various motion pictures or look for Armenian surnames in the
    credits. "Let's make a movie," he says, "where every single name is
    going to be Armenian, the characters are going to be Armenian, the
    music is going to be composed by Armenians. I think it's time, and
    it's been ready to happen."

    *********************************** ****************************************

    12. Anything but silenced: Students mobilize against genocide

    * So Cal Armenian Students' Associations commemorate the Armenian Genocide

    by Arin Mikailian

    The voices of Armenian musicians and distinguished speakers were
    anything but "silenced" on Sunday night, April 15, as the All-Armenian
    Students' Association presented Silenced Cries: A Benefit Concert for
    Humanity.

    The concert, held at the University of Southern California's Bovard
    Auditorium, was the work of students serving on the Genocide
    recognition committees of ASA chapters across southern California.

    This year's event sought not only to pay respect to those lost in
    the Armenian Genocide, but also to spread awareness of genocide
    underway today.

    In previous years, the All-ASA has organized candlelight vigils and
    rallies to protest the Turkish government, but this was the group's
    first attempt to produce a live show. Bands and musicians on hand
    included One Side Zero, Jacob Armen, R-Mean, and Aviatic. Raffi
    Kassabian, a graduate student at UCLA and former president of its ASA
    chapter, said the genocide in Darfur inspired the ASA to take a
    different path.

    "I wouldn't call this an event for mourning or remembrance," he
    said. "This is more of an event to get our youth active because
    they're in a unique position. We have a ready set audience willing to
    listen."

    Kassabian also said the use of music would not just reach out to the
    Armenian audience, but all those who want to bring an end to genocide
    in their lifetime.

    The evening of music and speech began with a set of songs performed
    by One Side Zero, followed by a speech given by Rabbi Jonathan Klein,
    director of USC's Hillel Jewish Center.

    As Sunday marked Yom HaShoah, the Jewish holiday to remember those
    lost in the Holocaust, Rabbi Klein said genocide survivors should not
    be segregated by race or ethnicity. He said genocide survivors must
    come together and stop future atrocities from occurring - including
    Darfur.

    "There's no question," he said. "As descendants of Armenians we
    gather here to demand an end to cruel and unspeakable crimes. We must
    take action."

    After the speech, Armenian drum prodigy Jacob Armen performed. Armen
    treated the audience to a song played on the santour. He said he
    decided to play the traditional santour to demonstrate the endurance
    of the Armenian people and their culture.

    "Music touches souls," he said. "Souls are what stay with us
    forever. For us to survive and maintain our identity and culture is
    not just a big accomplishment, it's a huge statement to the world."

    The final speaker of the night was the Rev. Vazgen Movsessian, who
    shared his experiences from a trip to Rwanda last year.

    Movsessian said the most emotional moment of the trip was what he
    came across at the country's genocide museum. After reading the tales
    and hearing the stories of countless victims being raped and murdered,
    Movsessian said he became emotional because this was a tale all too
    familiar to him.

    "I was reading my story," he said. "I was reading the story my
    grandparents told me. I was looking at these pictures in a museum on
    the other side of the earth and I'm looking at these pictures and I'm
    sitting there crying."

    As Movsessian brought his speech to a close, he said the survival of
    Armenians is not by accident and it would parallel their reputation of
    survival to bring an end to the genocide in Darfur.

    "This is the first time we're talking about genocide and there's a
    comma," he said. "You talk about the Armenian Genocide, there's a
    period, and the Holocaust there's a period. It's not an accident why
    we're here. All the musicians here tonight are touching your souls
    with music. We all have to start touching souls; today we have the
    most wonderful opportunity."

    The concert winded down to an end with performances by Armenian
    rapper R-Mean and the rock band Aviatic.

    Some students were touched by the blend of music and speakers to
    spread awareness.

    "It was very informational as well as entertaining," said Erik
    Yesayan, a senior at USC. "Adding the speakers made the performances
    much more meaningful."

    The revenue from ticket sales will go to a charity supporting the
    Darfur cause, said Levon Matti, culture chair of the ASA. More
    important than the money, he said is the participation of students.
    "We are spreading the message to them," he said. "The idea is to
    educate the young so they can educate their young."

    The concert was also sponsored by USC's International Student
    Assembly and Graduate and Professional Student Senate.

    ***************************************** **********************************

    13. Essay: The Pink House

    by Armen D. Bacon

    Sometimes it is the strangest of things that can catch your eye when
    you are out and about. Like a flock of birds dancing in unison up in
    the clouds. A ladybug or dragonfly that lands on your windshield. Or a
    pedestrian crossing the street with an interesting rhythm in his step.
    It can all unfold in front of your very eyes, transporting you
    millions of miles away from your daily reality. What you might see is
    far less important than the clarity of vision that can come with any
    such sighting. It can make you stop. Think. Understand. Appreciate.
    Most of us admittedly are too busy to make any sort of genuine
    connection. Our minds are preoccupied with mental "to do" lists. And
    so, more often than not, we sacrifice these precious moments, and find
    ourselves rushing to arrive at the next place. A moment in time, lost
    forever, never again to present itself in exactly the same way.

    I work downtown, and follow a simple, rather mundane route each
    morning: Friant to 41 South, right on 180-West, a quick exit at Van
    Ness/Fulton, where I continue traveling south until I reach my office.
    I can do this quite effortlessly while sipping a cup of French roast
    and singing with Frankie and the boys as the dial rests on my favorite
    radio station. That's the ritual, one that I could probably do in my
    sleep. But a few months ago, something kidnapped my attention, stirred
    my emotions, and has become the highlight of my daily commute ever
    since.

    It was a pink building hidden on the outskirts of downtown Fresno
    that caught my eye and captivated my spirit. It was just a pink
    building that over time became both my fascination and obsession.
    Don't get me wrong. Like you, most days I arrive to work unsure as to
    how my car has maneuvered itself onto the on-ramp and managed to
    safely transport me to my destination. In this writing, however, that
    shall remain a mystery. I am a hopeless daydreamer, especially when at
    the mercy of my steering wheel. I have three tickets to prove it.

    The pink building. It's not really much to look at, honestly. Its
    outer appearance, its subdued façade and faded color is faint and
    unimpressive. The walls are long and narrow, quiet, understated, and
    unassuming. Battered and ignored in appearance, yes, but with an
    old-world charm and art deco features that beg respect. I have no idea
    what or who resides inside. The building may even be condemned. But
    that hardly matters. It appears to be a vacant shell - just waiting to
    be discovered. I have created an entire scenario around that building
    - I am a bohemian artist; it is my quiet hideaway; it is there that I
    create written works of art and find both solitude and serenity. It is
    my inspirational landmark, anonymously tucked away from the chaos and
    hectic- ness of (my) normal everyday life. It has become my sanctuary.

    There is one slight complication. I've never been inside. For now,
    it is a complete figment of my imagination. But I can see it perfectly
    in my mind's eye. The interior is simple. No closets (no clutter). No
    television (no reality television). No cell phone (no text messaging).
    Only the very basics. A bag of local produce from the nearby farmer's
    market. A bouquet of fresh flowers. Space to think. Soft classical
    music whispering from the walls. There is little room for storing
    history, knickknacks, or personal mementos. Everything is present
    tense and in the moment. There is a simple table, maybe a small sofa
    or loveseat, concrete floors, a Middle Eastern area rug, and a wall of
    bookshelves to the ceiling. It's a virtual paradise, and in my fantasy
    world - it's all mine.

    Everyone needs a home away from home. Mine is not a five star hotel,
    a sandy beach house in Mexico, or a condo in Hawaii. It's an obscure,
    pink building that I have transformed into "my space," only I needn't
    log on to get there. It's all in a morning's drive. For some people,
    the drive to work drives them crazy. Not me. I drive, I dream, and let
    the imagery of my pink building ignite the passion that fuels my
    personal journey. After all, the day is young, and there is so much
    yet to see.

    ******************************************** *******************************

    Please send your news to [email protected] and your letters to
    [email protected]

    (c) 2007 CS Media Enterprises LLC. All Rights Reserved

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X