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Boston: Barbara Bejoian, at 49; playwright, Red Sox fan

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  • Boston: Barbara Bejoian, at 49; playwright, Red Sox fan

    Barbara Bejoian, at 49; playwright, Red Sox fan*

    The Boston Globe
    4/14/2004

    By Gloria Negri

    The last play Barbara Bejoian wrote was about an elderly man who is
    taken from his nursing home to attend what he knows will be his last Red
    Sox game.

    Like him, Ms. Bejoian, an accomplished playwright whose works have been
    performed in the United States, Britain, and Armenia, was a lifelong Red
    Sox fan.

    Like him, she was also looking forward to what she sensed might be her
    last Red Sox game, this Sunday, against the Yankees.

    Ms. Bejoian, 49, formerly of Watertown, died Saturday at her home in
    Barrington, R.I., after a long battle with metastatic rectal cancer.

    A fleece Red Sox blanket given to her by a godchild kept her warm during
    her final illness, her husband, Newell Thomas, said yesterday. It will
    be buried with her.

    Ms. Bejoian, winner of 10 National Endowment for the Arts awards, was a
    professor of playwriting, English, and creative writing. Her students
    ranged from children whose second language was English to undergraduates
    and graduate students at Brown University, New York University, Rhode
    Island School of Design, and Rhode Island College. One of her plays will
    appear in a future anthology of Armenian writers, to be published by
    Columbia University Press.

    No matter what Ms. Bejoian undertook, friends said, she did it with a
    zest for life, and always succeeded. "Barb was gorgeous inside and out,"
    said Majorie Hatten of Medfield, a friend since both were 12. "She would
    decide she was going to achieve something and, then, reach to the top
    ring before figuring out how she was going to get there." (One time Ms.
    Bejoian was determined to meet playwright Neil Simon, and she did.)

    She would always go the extra mile for a friend, Hatten said. "Barb
    always brought out the best in people," she said. "If she told you that
    you were beautiful and talented, you believed it because she did."

    Ms. Bejoian was born and raised in Watertown. Her brother, Robert, still
    of Watertown, said their mother made her take ballet lessons as a child,
    "because with three brothers, mother didn't want her to become a
    tomboy." Ballet is what got her started in a career in the arts, he said.

    A cheerleader for the Watertown High School football team, Ms. Bejoian
    was the school's homecoming queen in 1972 and graduated a year later.
    She was chosen as one of two women in the state to attend the Girl's
    Nation Assembly in Washington, D.C.

    She was also an award-winning speaker at Voice of Democracy contests --
    writing her speeches and then reciting them from memory. In the early
    1970s, she played lead roles in Boston Children's Theatre productions.

    She graduated from Wheaton College in 1977 with a degree in English. She
    held a variety of jobs in publishing and in television as an advertising
    executive. During one period, she worked for the BBC in London while
    researching a play about Virginia Woolf. Her works were later performed
    at the New End Theatre.

    Her "true love was always playwriting," her brother said, and she
    enrolled in courses at Radcliffe College. When she decided to get a
    master's degree in fine arts, Ms. Bejoian moved from Boston to
    Providence and received her degree from Brown University in 1984.

    She won many awards for her plays, including several artist-in-residence
    posts, the Brown University Creative Writing Fellowship, a Rockefeller
    grant, and the Critics Choice Award at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe.

    She won a Fulbright Scholarship in 1995 to teach creative writing at the
    American University in Yerevan, Armenia, where she was accompanied by
    her husband and their two sons. Her plays were performed at Yerevan
    State University and at the American Embassy in Armenia.

    While there, the US Embassy asked Ms. Bejoian, who was fluent in
    Armenian, to travel to the remote towns of Gumri and Vanadzor, which had
    been devastated by an earthquake in the mid-1980s, to teach children
    about democracy and other classroom subjects.

    Before her illness was diagnosed in 2002, Ms. Bejoian traveled to New
    York several days a week from Providence to teach at New York
    University; she was an adjunct professor there at the time of her death.
    The family moved to Barrington last year.

    She wrote her Red Sox play three years before her diagnosis, ending it
    with the old man's words to the young man who had brought him to the
    game. "Don't worry, Tom," the older man said. "Nobody can live forever.
    We just have to make the most of every moment on earth."
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