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  • Tara High School seniors explore Armenian culture in production

    Daily Camera, CO
    Nov 14 2008

    Tara High School seniors explore Armenian culture in final production


    By Mark Collins (Contact)
    Friday, November 14, 2008

    Maura Auster, for the Camera

    Armenian Genocide Commemoration Committee Chairperson Kim
    Christianian, far right, from the Armenians of Colorado, teaches Tara
    Performing Arts High School students Carson Reid, 17, and Rachael
    Surbaugh, 17, and Artistic Director and Co-Founder of the school
    Laurel Fisher how to cook traditional Armenian food in preparation for
    their upcoming play "Nine Armenians."

    "Who likes to cook?" asks Kim Christianian.

    Most of the students crowded into the kitchen at Boulder's Tara School
    for the Performing Arts raise their hands. Each is involved in Tara's
    upcoming production of the play "Nine Armenians."

    Christianian is one of several local Armenian-Americans the Tara cast
    has encountered to learn about different aspects of Armenian
    culture. Today, Christianian is teaching the students how to make
    cheese beoreg, an Armenian cheese turnover made with filo dough,
    butter and various cheeses.

    As the play portrays, much of Armenian culture revolves around food,
    says Hasmik Nikoghosyan, a local Armenian-American woman who coached
    the Tara actors on Armenian dialects used in "Nine Armenians."

    "The celebration starts in the kitchen with the cooking process, and
    goes all the way through the feast," Nikoghosyan says.

    The cooking class is part of the intensive, hands-on learning that
    often takes place through the avenue of theater at Tara, a private
    four-year high school in Boulder. The past several weeks have been a
    crash course in Armenian culture, customs and history.

    "Armenia is right in the middle of the areas we hear of all the time
    -- between Georgia and Russia, and Iraq and Iran, and, of course,
    Turkey," says director Laurel Fisher. "Yet no one knew that Armenia
    was even there."

    Through their own research, the Tara cast members uncovered a range of
    information, like the fact that in 301 Armenia became the first
    Christian nation, and that actress/singer Cher is Armenian-American.

    "Nine Armenians," first staged off-Broadway in 1996, is about three
    generations of an Armenian-American family living in New Jersey. Ani,
    a 21-year-old, begins to wonder what her grandparents' life was like
    in the old country, and what really happened during the Armenian
    Genocide in the early 20th century. She visits Armenia and returns a
    changed woman.

    The genocide, perpetrated by the Ottoman Empire in two periods between
    1915 and 1923, wiped out as many as 1.5 million Armenians. It's
    considered the first modern genocide, as the Turkish government used
    modern technology -- the telegraph -- to orchestrate the slaughter.

    According to papers at the Armenian National Institute, Adolf Hitler
    in part justified his quest to erase the Jews during World War II with
    this sentiment: "Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation of
    the Armenians?"

    After researching the genocide, Tara senior Seth Wenger, 17, wanted to
    play the grandfather, a genocide survivor, in "Nine Armenians."

    "I decided I wanted to play him just because of how personally I felt
    about the genocide," he says.

    "Nine Armenians," though, isn't a brooding tragedy. It's filled with
    laughter and love and food, Armenian-style.

    "There's a real passion and heat in the Armenian culture," says
    Christianian, a chairperson for the Armenian Genocide Commemoration
    Committee in Colorado. "It's this joy of life; of living, of tasting,
    of breathing, of dancing. There's a real revelry."

    And even though their dialect is unique and their recipes may call for
    more lemon than most, Armenians share much with other cultures, it
    turns out.

    "A lot of it is really humorous," says Carson Reid, 17, who plays
    Ani. "It's this big, loud, loving, argumentative family. They're
    always crossing paths and not getting along and loving each other so
    much anyway. That's something that happens in almost any family."

    That includes the family of seniors at Tara. There are nine of them
    this year, and "Nine Armenians" is their final senior production. Each
    is cast in one of the roles in the play.

    Fisher has directed most of the cast through four years at Tara. She
    noticed something when she chose to produce "Nine Armenians" with the
    group of teens.

    "Like the characters in the play," Fisher says, "they have a hard time
    leaving each other, they argue incessantly, but love and care for each
    other at the same time."

    http://www.dailycamera.com/news/2008/ nov/14/family-feel/
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