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  • From Russia With Music

    USC News
    University of Southern California
    May 15 2009

    From Russia With Music

    By Eddie North-Hager
    May 15, 2009 3:24 PM


    Photo: Angela Cholakyan
    Photo/Dietmar Quistorf

    A lifetime of dedication and perseverance finally paid off when Angela
    Cholakyan earned her doctorate in musical arts from the USC Thornton
    School of Music.

    For Cholakyan, her destination had been mapped out ever since she
    first experimented with a piano when she was 9 months old.

    Yet for nearly two decades her dreams were deferred after escaping
    communism in search of the American Dream.

    Her course was no longer set.

    `It was like being in the middle of an ocean,' Cholakyan said.

    Born in the Soviet Union, Cholakyan's schooling focused on music from
    the time she was 6. She continued her education at the famed Moscow
    State Tchaikovsky Conservatory. Yet even as she benefited from the
    communist system, that very system also created insurmountable
    roadblocks.

    She couldn't go far because of discrimination, as her parents were
    born in Jerusalem. And the economy was in shambles. In 1988, after
    bribing some officials to obtain visas, she left with her parents and
    sister to reunite with her uncle in Los Angeles.

    `I was ready to leave, but of course it was painful,' said Cholakyan,
    who was fresh out of school at the time. `There was no future. It was
    like rats running from a sinking ship.'

    Once in the United States, Cholakyan for a time put away her piano to
    become a mom and work odd jobs to make ends meet.

    `We were happy because for the first time in our lives, we could make
    decisions on our own and survive on our own,' Cholakyan said.

    USC Thornton School of Music professor Norman Krieger discovered
    Cholakyan in 1993 at the Florida International Competition. It took 10
    years, but Krieger eventually inspired her to go back to school `and
    get back on track,' Cholakyan said.

    `Better late then never,' Cholakyan said matter of factly. `There are
    so many people who helped me get to where I am.'

    In addition to winning piano competitions and becoming a sought-after
    instructor while at USC, Cholakyan also had her conducting debut in
    November. In February, she was accepted into USC's artist diploma
    program, which emphasizes performance, and she should graduate in
    2011.

    `After 21 years in America, I can say with confidence that I love this
    country and that I am American more than I am anything else,'
    Cholakyan said. `However, there is another side to my identity: I am
    Armenian born and raised in Russian culture, and I cannot erase or
    forge that. I think the best I am playing so far is Russian
    music. It's in my blood.'


    Read about other 2009 USC graduates, including father and son Michael
    and David Gibson, chemistry student Eric Zuniga and four exceptional
    graduates from USC College.
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