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  • Crooked Man's message lost in mess of a play

    Toronto Star, Canada
    Feb. 26, 2008


    Crooked Man's message lost in mess of a play

    Feb 26, 2008 04:30 AM
    Richard Ouzounian
    Theatre Critic

    A Crooked Man
    **(out of 4)

    By Richard Kalinoski. Directed by Hrant Alianak. Until March 2 at The
    Theatre Centre, 1087 Queen St. W. 416-504-7529

    The hardest kind of a review for a critic to write is one of a
    production that has the most worthy of intentions but fails to live
    up to them in its execution.

    That's exactly what happens with A Crooked Man, playing until this
    Sunday at the Theatre Centre.

    Richard Kalinoski's script has a lot on its mind - too much, in fact,
    to fit into 90 intermissionless minutes. He wants to make us aware
    once again of the horror of the 1915 genocide, in which up to 1.5
    million Armenians were slaughtered by the Turks. Turkey denies the
    genocide happened.

    But he also wants to pose the moral dilemma of whether a man who
    kills a mass murderer acts out of revenge or righteousness, as well
    as dig deep into the psyche of an 88-year-old survivor of this
    holocaust and make him come to terms with some even more shocking
    events from his past.

    But we're not done yet. There are also narrative threads about
    inter-generational communication, respect for the elderly and the
    importance of family.

    Is it any wonder that A Crooked Man frequently seems less like an
    actual play than the outline for a play that Kalinoski meant to
    write, but never got around to finishing?

    The dialogue is more interested in establishing historical facts and
    making Dr. Phil-like psychological points than sounding like anything
    human beings might actually say.

    And any playwright who decides that his climactic scene has to take
    place on a roof should think twice if he knows it's being done in a
    low-budget production.

    When we should be thinking about the play's message, we're actually
    worrying whether Hrant Alianak (as the 88-year-old Hagop) and Garen
    Boyajian (as his 26-year-old journalist grandson) are going to
    survive on the rickety scaffolding that pretends to be a rooftop.

    Alianak, who excels at playing juicy, melodramatic villains, isn't
    very convincing as a tortured old man and Boyajian has a certain
    sweetness but doesn't really connect to Alianak at any point in their
    lengthy scenes together, which make up most of the show.

    Carlo Essagian and Michael Kazarian are pretty embarrassing as a
    variety of characters, acting in the stiff style that marks the
    lesser ranks of community theatre.

    Only Araxi Arslanian gives her scenes any reality and you sigh with
    relief each time she appears.

    Socially conscious playwrights take heed: it's not enough to have
    something worthwhile to say, you've got to say it in a worthwhile
    manner as well.
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