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Saroyan Conference Participants. Back row: L. to R.: Stephen Barlie, Hank Saroyan, Micheal Kloster, Dr. Dickran Kouymjian, Aram Kevorkian, Dr. Isabel Kaprielian, Michael Krekorian, Deanna Moosakhanjian-Garbedian. Front row: L. to R.: Barlow Der Mugrdechian, Micah Jendian, Michael Kovacs, Brenda Najimian-Magarity, Ed Hagopian![]()
Left to Right: Aram Kevorkian, Roxie Moradian, Hank Saroyan
By Matthew Maroot
Staff Writer
Writers, scholars and distinguished
community members gathered the weekend of March 19-20, 1999 to honor and
celebrate one of the most magnificent and prolific writers the San Joaquin
Valley and the world have ever known.
His hundreds of short stories, plays, novels and essays entertained
millions and continue to do so today.
His name was William Saroyan.
In celebrating the 90th
anniversary of Saroyan's birth, Dr. Dickran Kouymjian, Haig and Isabel
Berberian Professor of Armenian Studies at Fresno State and Stephen Barile,
president of the William Saroyan Society, organized the event called: Saroyan
at Ninety: A Conference and Celebration.
The desire to hold a conference
did not come solely from the occasion of Saroyan's 90th birthday as Dr.
Kouymjian pointed out. "The idea of celebrating Saroyan is linked
closely with the need to keep his image alive and up-to-date." Dr.
Kouymjian also had a very personal reason for organizing and hosting the
conference. "At the end of his life, those last years, he also entrusted
me with a good deal of responsibility, and I still feel that I have a mission
to carry out in the best way I can," Dr. Kouymjian said.
In organizing the international
weekend conference and celebration, coordinators invited several scholars,
professors and relatives of Saroyan, all of whom spoke of Saroyan not only
in terms of his literary accomplishments, but in terms of his personal
attributes as well.
William Saroyan, the world
renowned author, playwright and humanitarian, was born in Fresno on August
31, 1908, and grew up on the streets of old "Armenian Town." It was
Saroyan's colorful childhood that served as the basis for so many of his
best-loved writings.
Fresno State President,
Dr. John Welty, opened the conference by speaking of Saroyan as a man of
the world whose works have transcended space and time.
The morning session consisted
of two panels, the first of which was chaired by Stephen Barile, president
of the William Saroyan Society. Barile, of Fowler, Calif., has produced
and directed eight William Saroyan plays for stage and radio and is currently
working on a radio production of Saroyan's "The Cave Dwellers," set to
air in May, 1999.
Brenda Najimian-Magarity, a Fresno poet and English teacher at Madera
High School spoke of her experiences getting to know Saroyan in her presentation
titled, "Slow Drive, Sweet Saroyan." Magarity spoke of her journeys
throughout Fresno as Saroyan's driver, a task she performed for three years.
The next speaker of the
first session, Ed Hagopian, was born and raised in Whitinsville, Mass.
Hagopian, who studied at the Sorbonne and has worked with such actors as
Kirk Douglas, Burt Lancaster and Eddie Constantine, wrote a screenplay
with William Saroyan titled, "Merry-Go-Round-the-World" for Darryl Zanuck
in 1960. In his remembrance of Saroyan titled, "Saroyan in Grief,"
Hagopian shared many heartfelt stories of the years he spent with Saroyan
both in Paris and in the United States.
Chair of the second panel
was Dr. Dickran Kouymjian, who like many others, was first touched by Saroyan
through reading his stories in his high school classes in Chicago and in
Racine, Wis. Dr. Kouymjian was a close friend to William Saroyan,
part of the reason why he has chaired and organized several William Saroyan
conferences.
"Though I spoke at a celebration
for Saroyan's 90th birthday in Pasadena last December, I really didn't
think I would be able to once again organize a major event in Fresno.
But thanks to the insistence of Stephen Barile I agreed. No one I
invited turned me down. People love Saroyan," Dr. Kouymjian said.
The first speaker of the
second panel was Aram Kevorkian, a writer and attorney from Paris who met
Saroyan in 1961 and became his lawyer. In his contribution titled,
"Saroyan and Paris," he spoke of Saroyan at a time when he was broke and
saddened by a failed marriage and a career that had drifted out of the
spotlight. Saroyan eventually pulled himself out of this state of
dejection and completed some of his best work.
"Saroyan in Love: Marriage
and Divorce," was the title of the next memoir, given by Roxie Moradian,
a lifelong resident of Fresno and the Valley. Moradian shared her
experiences in entertaining Saroyan in her home with her husband Frank.
She maintained a 40-year relationship with Saroyan through which she closely
experienced a personal side of Saroyan seen only by a few of his closest
companions.
Perhaps the most poignant
memories of time spent with Saroyan came in the recollections offered by
Hank Saroyan, son of William's older brother Henry, in his offering titled,
"Saroyan, the Boy Within the Man at Sixty." Hank Saroyan is an Emmy-award
winning producer and director from Los Angeles. Hank Saroyan shared
several intimate encounters which he had with his uncle while he visited
him in Paris in 1974 and toward the end of his life in Fresno.
In the afternoon conference
session dedicated to "Saroyan the Writer," Professor Barlow Der Mugrdechian
of the Fresno State Armenian Studies Program led a discussion by three
writers, all of whom have studied Saroyan's work extensively.
In "Saroyan, Joyce and ëEveryman,'"
Michael Kloster, a writer with a degree in English Literature from the
University of California, Berkeley, shared his findings on the similarities
between the works of William Saroyan and James Joyce, particularly through
the stream-of-consciousness technique that presents the flow of thoughts
and images through the minds of the main characters, a pattern common in
the work of both writers.
Deanna Garabedian, also
a Berkeley graduate, shared the findings of her Master's thesis titled,
"William Saroyan and the Armenian-American Identity." Garabedian
analyzed the ways through which Saroyan dealt with the topics of language
and religion in his writing. She found that Saroyan created a new
identity in his writing, that of the Armenian-American. She went
on to explain how he also demonstrated the conflict of the old-world and
the new-world values and their effects on this new identity.
Michael Krekorian, poet
and author, shared his interpretations of Saroyan's writing in "American
Trauma and the Summer of the Beautiful White Horse." In his discussion,
Krekorian, who currently teaches Armenian Studies and Armenian literature
at Fresno State, examined Saroyan's short story, "The Summer of the Beautiful
White Horse," through what he called, "The point of intersection between
the fading influence of the old country values and the evolving realization
by the younger immigrant characters that the values of assertiveness, action
and motion must be learned in order to emerge from the overwhelming trauma
of the Armenian Genocide."
In the fourth and final
panel of the conference, chaired by Dr. Isabel Kaprielian, holder of the
Henry S. K. Kazan Professorship of Modern Armenian and Immigration History
at Fresno State, three scholars shared their thoughts on Saroyan's work
and its place in the literary world today.
Micah Jendian, who is currently
completing a Master's Degree in English at San Diego State University,
shared his findings in a session titled, "Having the Time of Your Life."
Jendian who brings a philosophical approach to Saroyan's work offered a
fresh viewpoint on Saroyan's writings based on his thesis titled, "You
Yourself Are Supposed to Do Your Living: William Saroyan and the Culture
Industry."
According to Jendian, "Saroyan
recognized commercial culture as a threat to authentic selfhood because
it offers false notions of reality, projects fantastic personalities and
lifestyles for emulation, and blunts awareness and imagination."
"Hoping to restore man to himself, Saroyan presents characters whose
ëgood performances' of themselves are thwarted by the commercial culture,"
Jendian said. He went on to state that Saroyan's observations anticipated
critiques that emerged in the mid-'40s and are prevalent today.
The second speaker of the
final panel, Michael Kovacs, is teaching literature as a lecturer at the
University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Kovacs, also a Berkeley graduate,
spoke of "Saroyan's Expressionist Quest: An Exploration of His Early Writings."
"Saroyan, like Walt Whitman
before him and Jack Kerouac after, uses literature and language as a vehicle
that freely exercises human passion and imagination in order to develop
a vision and method of composition which liberates human perception, feeling
and most importantly expression, from the straightjacket of contemporary
society," Kovacs said. He went on to add, "He searches behind the
veil of appearances and writes about the inner and spiritual side of man.""
The final speaker of the
afternoon was Dr. Dickran Kouymjian who led a discussion titled, "Who Reads
Saroyan Today?" Dr. Kouymjian has worked extensively to keep the
work of Saroyan alive, organizing a major international conference in 1981
after Saroyan's death as part of a three-week Saroyan Celebration held
on the Fresno State campus, followed by another gathering in 1993 in celebration
of Saroyan's 85th birthday.
Dr. Kouymjian's fascination
with Saroyan began at an early age. "I was lucky enough to get two
of his books dedicated to me when I was a teenager from my California Aunt
and Uncle Varsen and Archie Calusdian who knew Saroyan. After meeting
Saroyan in Beirut in 1972, I was completely taken by his personality
and a sort of relationship developed especially after I came to Fresno
in 1977 and found myself coming and going between Paris and Fresno
like Saroyan," Dr. Kouymjian said.
Dr. Kouymjian noted that
Saroyan's work is not often taught in American classrooms, however, he
believes there is presently a window of opportunity to reassess Saroyanís
true literary achievement. "Recently, evaluations of Saroyan now make clear
that he was a performer too, perhaps as much a performer as he was a passionate
author. Writing became for him a spontaneous act of creation requiring
daily rehearsal," Dr. Kouymjian said. According to Professor Kouymjian,
Saroyan's work must once again enter the mainstream literary world in order
to achieve a revival and once again become fashionable.
"Perhaps in the coming century
we will be able to answer the question, ëWho reads Saroyan?' in the same
way it was answered in the 1930s, '40s and '50s, when everybody read Saroyan,"
Dr. Kouymjian said.
Those who attended the conference
were also treated to a special presentation of Hank Saroyan's film, The
Parsley Garden, based on the William Saroyan story, for which Hank Saroyan
won the Best Director Emmy. Dr. Kouymjian also shared a brilliant
example of William Saroyanís own directorial talents in the 11-minute film,
produced and directed at MGM Studios in 1942, titled, The Good Job.
"He always thought filmmaking
would be a perfect medium for him, but he really never got the chance.
For a while he thought working at the Armenian Hye Film studio in Erevan
would be possible, but he saw that there were hurdles as great in the Soviet
bloc as in Hollywood. He had a good eye, clearly proven directing
talents and a very engaging way with actors," Dr. Kouymjian said.
William Saroyan was truly
a dynamic character. Through his writing and his being, he gave international
recognition not only to the Armenian experience, but to the human experience
as well. In the last book published during his lifetime, Obituaries,
Saroyan wrote, "My work is writing, but my real work is being."
William Saroyan died in
Fresno on May 18, 1981 at the age of 72. "Everybody has got to die,"
Saroyan once said. "But I always believed an exception would be made
in my case."