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Armenian Culture Returns to Shakespeare's Globe

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  • Armenian Culture Returns to Shakespeare's Globe

    Armenian Culture Returns to Shakespeare's Globe

    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2014/01/03/armenian-culture-returns-to-shakespeares-globe/
    By Contributor // January 3, 2014


    LONDON - Beginning in January 2014, a series of productions - including
    `Armania: A journey through Armenian folksong, dance and poetry' - will
    mark the inaugural season at the Sam Wanamaker Playhouse. Founded by
    the American actor and director, Sam Wanamake, Shakespeare's Globe in
    London is a faithful reconstruction of the open-air playhouse built in
    1599, where many of Shakespeare's plays were first performed. January
    2014 will see the opening of the Globe's new indoor Jacobean theatre,
    the Wanamaker Playhouse.

    The Dudukner Ensemble from Armenia

    `Armania' will be performed in this groundbreaking theater on April
    13-14, 2014, and will feature the Dudukner Ensemble and the
    Chilingiran Quartet. Below, the performance curator and director, Seta
    White, tells us how this opportunity came about.

    * * *

    Some months ago Bill Barclay, music director at Shakespeare's Globe,
    contacted me to come up with an idea to bring Armenian music to this
    Jacobean stage. I'd met Bill through his involvement in `Salon
    Mashup,' a production I had conceived and directed in the winter of
    2013 for the Armenian Institute in London, an organization dedicated
    to making Armenian history and culture a living experience.

    `Salon Mashup' had brought together more than 40 artists to
    collaborate on works around the themes of displacement and
    regeneration, focusing on the Armenian experience of loss and
    resettlement. Over 3 evenings, 13 performances took place in our
    labyrinth venue of basement tunnels at London's Shoreditch Town Hall.
    One of these was an excerpt from `Deported / a dream play' by
    Boston-based playwright Joyce Van Dyke, and directed by Bill Barclay.
    The response to `Salon Mashup' was overwhelming, and performance
    evenings filled the venue to capacity.

    Levon Chilingirian visiting the Sam Wanamaker Playhouse

    Bill had also had contact with Armenians in the UK when the Globe
    brought Armenia's Sundukyan National Academic Theatre to London to
    perform `King John' in May 2012 as part of the Globe to Globe World
    Shakespeare Festival. Bill wanted to tap into this energy and
    excitement for Armenian culture again.

    The Sam Wanamaker Playhouse, named after its founder, was part of
    Wanamaker's vision and extended beyond the now familiar and iconic
    `wooden-O', the Globe itself. Some years after the original Globe had
    been built, Shakespeare's acting troupe also leased a smaller indoor
    playhouse that served as their winter house. So Wanamaker incorporated
    an indoor Jacobean theatre into his blueprint of the theatre complex.
    When Shakespeare's Globe opened in 1997, the indoor theatre was left
    as a shell. Now, 17 years later, it will at last fulfill its purpose.

    The Playhouse is based on a set of drawings discovered in the late
    1960's in Worcester College, Oxford. Dated 1660, they are the earliest
    known and most comprehensive designs for an indoor Jacobean theatre in
    existence. They have been attributed to the English architect and
    scholar, John Webb, protégé of the renowned architect Indigo Jones.

    Candlelit and timber-framed, the theatre has pit seating and a
    musicians' gallery above the stage. This beautiful interior will be
    the setting for plays, operas, and concerts. Being an indoor theatre,
    it will also enable productions to play at the Globe throughout the
    year.

    `Armania,' playing in April, will celebrate the work of great Armenian
    poets and composers from medieval times to the present day. My vision
    is to ground Armenian music and performance in the genre of Jacobean
    theatre and, through the poetry, explore the powerful influence of
    Shakespeare in Armenian literature.

    Instruments have been chosen to reflect the Jacobean period, and
    costume, poetry, and song will all play an important part in
    delivering this style of theatre. Musicians and artists from both the
    UK and Armenia will be brought together to collaborate for the
    concert. The Dudukner Ensemble, including some members that played
    with `King John,' will be joining us from Armenia.

    Levon Chilingirian, a violinist and the founder of the Chilingiran
    Quartet, is Armania's music director and has put together a rich and
    varied repertoire. Levon himself will be playing, alongside
    prize-winning cellist Alexander Chaushian, harpist and singer Cevanne
    Horrocks-Hopayian (who is currently composer in residence at Handel
    House), and soprano Tereza Gevorgyan (the acclaimed star of the recent
    London Armenian Opera's production of `Anoush').

    Over the last few years in my work, I have focused very much on
    exploring Armenian arts and culture on a professional platform in the
    UK and abroad. This began with a project where I undertook research
    and development in Armenia to bring into contemporary theater the
    well-known Armenian play `Namus' by Alexander Shirvanzade. I directed
    the first UK performance of `Anoush' with London Armenian Opera, and
    am currently directing the Armenian comic opera, `Garineh.' I am also
    working on an exciting project with the British Council Armenia and
    Candoco Dance Company to establish Armenia's first inclusive (disabled
    and non-disabled) dance company.

    I am, therefore, truly delighted to have this platform to bring
    Armenian music and culture to Shakespeare's Globe, and thrilled that
    it will be a part of this wonderful season in this incredible new
    theatre.

    `Armania: A journey through Armenian folksong, dance, and poetry' will
    be on at the Sam Wanamaker Playhouse, in association with the Armenian
    Institute, on April 13 and 14, 2014. To book, visit
    www.shakespearesglobe.com/theatre/whats-on/sam-wanamaker-playhouse/armania.
    To learn more about the Armenian Institute, visit
    www.armenianinstitute.org.uk.

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