Ravishing
a nearly forgotten genocide
The program
for "Let the Rocks Speak" notes that Adolf Hitler cited
the world's short memory about the killing of Armenians as carte
blanche for his own murder of Poles. Today, still fewer people remember
the 1.5 million Armenians killed in 1915-16 by the Young Turk government,
which ruled the remnants of the Ottoman Empire.
Playwright Lilly
Thomassian wants to change that by educating the audiences who show
up for this ShapeShifter Productions presentation at the Fountain
Theatre.
Thomassian was
inspired by a survivor whose remembrances were recalled by the Glendale-based
Genocide Project and presented, along with other documentary material,
in a 1999 issue of the Los Angeles Times Magazine.
The story unfolds
in a living room that in D.V. Caitlyn's set design, has been literally
ripped apart at the seams. This is the
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residence, in
1925, of a father and two daughters who survived the genocide and
moved to America. The younger daughter, Gayaneh (Anais Thomassian,
no relation to the playwright) is celebrating her 16th birthday.
Just 6 at the time of her family's death march into the desert,
she remembers little of what happened. Her father (Jimmie F. Skaggs)
and 22 year-old sister, Anoosh (Anna Der Nersesian), however, can't
forget, because a ghostly chorus (Magda Harout, Stephanie Satie
and Amanda Troop) keeps drifting into the apartment to whisper the
stories anew.
Director Anita
Khanzadian establishes buoyant mood in the sisters' playful interactions,
which makes the descent into darkness - after Gayaneh begins asking
questions -- all the more harrowing.
The brutality
is painful to learn about, but conscientious citizens of the world
will attend for the same reasons they showed up for "Schindler's
List," or "Shoah."
"Let the Rocks Speak," Fountain
Theatre, 5060 Fountain Ave., Hollywood. Fridays, 8 p.m.; Saturdays,
2 and 8 p.m.; Sundays, 2 p.m. Ends April 27. $25. (323) 663-1525/
Running time: 2 hours, 10 minutes.
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