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"Beast on the Moon" Target of Turkish Censorship

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  • "Beast on the Moon" Target of Turkish Censorship

    PRESS RELEASE

    Stillwater Productions
    410 West 53rd Street, #712
    New York, NY 10019
    Contact: David Grillo
    212-541-4502 (home/office)
    [email protected]


    PETER BALAKIAN, AUTHOR OF NEW YORK TIMES BEST-SELLER THE BURNING TIGRIS,
    CRITICIZES TURKISH GOVERNMENT FOR COERCING GERMANS INTO CANCELING
    PERFORMANCES OF PLAY ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    Praises BEAST ON THE MOON and castigates Turkey for repressing artistic
    expression and refusing to own up to its past

    Peter Balakian, who in 1998 led a discussion with the audience
    following the premiere performance in Boston of Richard Kalinoski's
    BEAST ON THE MOON ,noted, "it is a superb play about the traumatic
    impact of the Armenian Genocide on a married couple living in the
    American Midwest in the 1920s."

    The play, which has been produced in major cities across the United
    States and Canada and in fifteen other countries has received thirty
    awards to date, among them, five Molieres from France and five Ace
    awards from Argentina--awards comparable to America's Tonys.

    Performances of BEAST were scheduled to be part of Karlsruhe,
    Germany's European Culture Days festival, a major biennial event
    that in April of this year celebrated the city of Istanbul. Then,
    Karlsruhe's Turkish consul general, stating that he was acting on
    orders from Ankara, threatened to enjoin the large Turkish population
    of that region of Germany to boycott the festival unless the play
    were pulled from the schedule. The consul's argument, according to
    Knut Weber, the director of the Badisches Staatstheater in Karlsruhe,
    was that the occurrences of 1915-16 were "historically debatable and
    under-worked-through by historians." The consul told Weber that the
    official Turkish stance was, they would understand the inclusion of
    the play in the festival schedule as an insult to Turkey. The Festival
    managers agreed to cancel the production.

    Commenting on the consul's statements, Weber referred to Hitler's
    response to the concerns of his top generals, days before Germany
    invaded Poland in 1939: "Who today, after all, speaks of the
    annihilation of the Armenians?" "That's what made me want to present
    the play," he said. Turkey's policy ignores this history, although
    they want to be a part of the European community."

    On learning the details of BEAST's removal from the Karlsruhe Festival
    schedule, Peter Balakian remarked that, in addition, due to Turkey's
    continuing denial of the Armenian Genocide of 1915, movie theaters
    in Turkey have been prohibited from showing ARARAT, Atom Egoyan's
    recent film dealing with the subject.

    The Armenian Genocide was of such horrific proportions that
    it coalesced an American international human rights movement and
    produced 145 New York Times articles in 1915 alone. It is recognized
    by the International Association of Genocide Scholars, along with
    the European Union, many of the world's countries, and thirty-three
    states of the United States.

    THE BURNING TIGRIS, which will be published in paperback this fall,
    is a landmark book--the first trade book on the Armenian Genocide to
    be published by a major publisher. It is meticulously documented,
    drawing on a wide range of sources, including the official Ottoman
    archives. Balakian's work leaves no doubt about Turkey's culpability
    for the planned extermination of 1.5 million Armenians on their
    ancestral lands. Yet the Turkish government continues to use
    intimidation to try to repress creative works that deal with the
    historical reality.

    Knut Weber knew the facts. He moved Beast to another theater.
    Tickets sold out. Little else about the Istanbul Festival was covered
    by the press. "Mr. Kalinoski's play is not only about Armenians but
    about exile and about healing," Weber said. The Festival was "not
    just a tourist attraction, but also to ask serious questions about
    the history and culture of Turkey."

    Playwright Richard Kalinoski recently teamed up with New York producer
    David Grillo to mount the first New York City production of BEAST ON
    THE MOON in spring 2005.

    For more information on these events or on the New York Production
    of Beast on the Moon: [email protected]
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