- Armen Ohanian
Infobox actor
name = Armen Ohanian
Արմեն Օհանյան
Armen Ohanian ( _hy. Արմեն Օհանյան), born Sophia Pirboudaghian (1887 – 1976) was an
Armenia ndancer , actress, writer, and translator.Biography
Armen Ohanian was born in
Shamakha , then part of theRussian Empire (now inAzerbaijan ) to an upper-class Armenian family. A devastating earthquake caused her family to move toBaku , where she attended a Russian school. She graduated in 1905, the same year the anti-Armenian pogroms, which she witnessed, caused the death of her father, Emanuel. She was hurriedly married to an Armenian Iranian doctor, Haik Ohanian, but the marriage did not go well and ended within a year. She kept her married name but changed her first name to "Armenuhi" (later "Armen") when she began her acting career at the Armenian Dramatic Theatre of Baku in 1907. She later moved toMoscow and studied plastic arts at the Nelidova School, while performing her first dances at the Maly Theatre.After a short stint at the Tbilisi Opera in 1909, Ohanian returned to
Iran , where she appeared on stage as a dancer and actress during the last period of theIranian Constitutional Revolution . She founded the Union of Iranian Theater-Lovers inTehran . In April 1910 she organized a musical and literary gala in cooperation with the Iranian Women Benevolent Association. For the first time, Iranian women were able to play on the stage and watch a film. In May 1910 she produced and directedNikolai Gogol ’s "The Revisor" in Persian, playing the role of Maria Antonovna.While in Iran, she perfected her skills in Oriental dances. After leaving the country and touring
Egypt and theOttoman Empire , she was hired to perform inLondon . From then to the early 1930s she would become quite a sought-after name, as part of the craze for exotic dances that swept the Western cultural scene at the time. By using the methods of “free dance” developed by the famous American dancerIsadora Duncan , she created her own choreographies based on Armenian and Iranian music. Many of her dances, such as “Salome,” “At the Temple of Anahit,” “Treason,” “The Matchmaker,” “Haschich,” “The Great Khan of Shamakha,” and others, fascinated theEurope an public. She performed extensively in London,Paris ,Brussels ,Milan ,Sofia ,Madrid , and other European cities, as well as in theUnited States andMexico . Her performances were widely covered in the press and met the approval of writers such asMaurice Maeterlinck , Rene Ghil, Claude Anet, and others.After settling in
Paris in 1912, Ohanian made her first forays into literature, her poems and autobiographical sketches eventually found their way in the press. Her first book, "The Dancer of Shamakha", was published in 1918 in in French, and prefaced byAnatole France . The book was translated into English, Spanish, German, Swedish, and Finnish. She later published other memoirs, such as "In the Paws of Civilization" in 1921, "The Laughs of A Snake Enchanter", an account of her 1926-1927 sojourn in theSoviet Union , in 1931, "In the Sixth Part of the World" ("Journey into Russia") in 1928; and a novel, "The Soloist of His Majesty" in 1929.Her love life in the twilight of the
Belle Epoque was no less eventful than her artistic career. Abisexual , she had relationships with various people such as painterEmile Bernard , writer and politicianMaurice Barres , writer Andre Germain, and a short-lived affair with famous American writerNathalie Barney .citation |title=Wild Heart: A Life: Natalie Clifford Barney and the Decadence of Literary Paris |first=Suzanne |last=Rodriguez |publisher=HarperCollins |year=2003 |isbn=0060937807 |page=228] She finally married the Mexican economist and diplomat Makedonio Garza in 1921, and after living in Paris, Moscow, andMadrid , the couple settled in Mexico in 1934.The decline of her dance career did not deter Ohanian from pursuing cultural and political interests. Having become interested in the native dances of Mexico during a brief trip in the 1920s, she founded a school of dance in
Mexico City in 1936. Committed tocommunism since the mid-1920s, Ohanian was an active member of theMexican Communist Party . In collaboration with her husband, Ohanian translated many books from Russian into Spanish, but also became a prolific author in her own right with books on Russian/Soviet and Mexican literature. In 1946 she published "Happy Armenia", a book onSoviet Armenia in Spanish, which marked a renewal of interest in her Armenian ancestry. Among her literary output, however, her work of choice was a poem, “My Dream as an Exile,” written in Armenian and published in 1953 in Paris.Ohanian made a comeback in the Mexican dance scene in 1948 and appeared on the stage in Paris in 1949 and 1953, when she was well into her sixties. During a second visit to the Soviet Union in 1958 with her husband, they traveled briefly to
Yerevan , Armenia, where she offered part of her private files to the Museum of Literature and Arts. After returning to Mexico, she continued to write, translate, and publish until 1969, when she came out with a first volume of memoirs in Spanish.Books
* La danseuse de Shamakha, Grasset, Paris, 1918.
* Dans les griffes de la civilisation, Grasset, Paris, 1921.
* Dans la sixième partie du monde (voyage en Russie), Grasset, Paris, 1928.
* Le soliste de Sa Majesté, B. Grasset, Paris, 1929.
* Les rires d’une charmeuse de serpents, Les Revues, Paris, 1931.
* Leon Tolstoi (1828-1910). Su vida, su época, su obra, Editorial Cimientos, Madrid, 1934.
* La ruta de Máximo Gorki es la nuestra, Editorial Cimientos, México, 1935.
* Un análisis marxista de la literatura española, Ediciones de la Liga de Escritores y Artistas Revolucionarios, México, 1937.
* Las guerras campesinas en Rusia y Tolstoi, Editorial Cimientos, México, 1939.
* Clásicos mexicanos. Ruiz de Alarcón. Juana de Asbaje. Lizardi, Editorial Cimientos, México, 1939.
* El sentido clasista del romanticismo y Alejandro Pushkin, Editorial Popular, México, 1938.
* Armenia feliz, Editorial Cimientos, México, 1946.
* Literatura española medieval y clásicos mexicanos, Editorial Cimientos, México, 1956.
* México en la cultura, Editorial Cimientos, México, 1967.
* Recuerdos del Cáucaso pre-revolucionario y de mis andanzas por el mundo, primer tomo, México, Editorial Cimientos, 1969.References
*Bakhchinyan, Artsvi, and Matiossian, Vartan. «Շամախեցի պարուհին» ("The Dancer of Shamakha"),
Yerevan , 2007.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.