Micheline
Aharonian Marcom
|
 |
|
Nov.10
(Thurs.) 7:30 pmLevantine's author series presents Micheline Aharonian
Marcom, introduced by José Rivera
One of America's finest young novelists, and winner of this year's PEN
USA Award for Fiction for her her latest novel The Daydreaming Boy,
Micheline Aharonian Marcom comes to Levantine Cultural Center for an evening
of readings and conversation, where she will be introduced by José
Rivera, writer of the hit film "Motrocycle Diaries" (Marcom,
Rivera and Rivera's wife toured Turkey and historical Armenia this summer
while she was doing research).
Micheline
Aharonian Marcom was born in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia in 1968 to an American
father and a Lebanese Armenian mother. She grew up in Los Angeles, but,
as a child in the years before the Lebanese Civil War (1975-1990), she
spent summers in Beirut with her mothers family. Marcoms first
novel, Three Apples Fell From Heaven, was a finalist for the PEN/Hemingway
Foundation for first fiction and received Columbia Universitys Anahid
Literary Award. It was named a Notable Book of the Year by the New York
Times and one of the Best Books of 2001 by the Los Angeles Times and Washington
Post.
Her
new novel, the second in a trilogy, is The Daydreaming Boy, for
which she won the 2005 PEN Fiction Award. Three Apples Fell from Heaven,
depicted the lives shattered by the Turkish government's brutal campaign
that resulted in the deaths of more than a million Armenians. Now The
Daydreaming Boy, carries forward the story of the refugees from the
twentieth century's first genocide. Read
review.
Vahé Tcheubjian is an upstanding, unremarkable member of the Armenian
community of Beirut in the 1960s. He and his wife attend concerts and
dinners, and partake of the sophisticated, continental culture that distinguishes
the Beirut of his time as a cosmopolitan capital on the Mediterranean,
the "Paris of the Middle East." But inside, Vahé is in
turmoil - racked by memories of the escape from the campaign of genocide,
the years spent in a Lebanese orphanage, the brutalities of his fellow
orphans, ferocious and desperate and unloved. He seeks refuge in an outrageous
and graphic fantasy life that flirt dangerously with emotional catastrophe,
just as the Beirut he has come to adopt as his home edges toward a devastating
civil war.
Micheline Aharonian Marcom lives in Northern California where she teaches
creative writing at Mills College.
Author: Micheline Aharonian Marcom. Levantine Cultural Center,
5920 Blackwelder Street, Culver City CA 90232. Tix
$10/$7 members. RSVPs strongly recommended as seating is limited: 310.559.5544.
Or send checks to Levantine Center, 5920 Blackwelder St., Culver City
CA 90232. Or purchase online:

Nov.17
(Thurs.) 8:00 pmMiddle East Comic Relief with Maz Jobrani, Aron
Kader, Peter the Persian and Vincent Ochana
In
times like these we all could use more laughter, and these four young
seasoned pros have plenty to get you hysterical about. Riffing on racism,
immigration, 9/11, cultural malentendus and more, Maz, Aron, Peter and
Vince are guaranteed to put a smile on your face, and you might even fall
off your chair laughing!
Maz
Jobrani has done standup comedy on Comedy Central's "Premium
Blend", CBS's "The Late Late Show", and in London on "The
World Stands Up" for the Paramount 2 Channel. He also performs standup
regularly at the Comedy Store and the Laugh Factory on Sunset in Hollywood.
He also headlines at colleges and clubs all over the country including the
Improvs and many of the top clubs in New York. Maz's standup has been featured
in Newsweek, The Wall Street Journal, NPR, PBS, CNN and the CBS Morning
Show. Maz is best known for his role as "Moly" in Ice Cube's "Friday
After Next". In 2005, he was also a regular on the short lived Fox
sitcom "Life on a Stick". He has guest starred as a"The Sikh"
on the third season finale of "Curb Your Enthusiasm" along with
several other guest starts on "Law & Order", "The West
Wing", "NYPD Blue", "24", "Without a Trace",
"Malcolm in the Middle", and many other shows. Maz played Glenn,
Jennifer Garner's colleague, in the movie "13 Going on 30".
Aron Kader would
like to thank his Palestinian father and Mormon mother for giving him so
many reasons to be a comedian. Raised in the Washington D.C. area Aron (or
Haroun) moved away to Hollywood at nineteen years old to pursue comedy and
acting. Aron spent a year in the legendary sketch theatre "The Groundlings"
Sunday company, and now performs regularly in Hollywood at his home club,
The Comedy Store. He has been featured in the The Wall Street Journal, Newsweek
magazine, and many other national publications. He was a stand out at the
HBO U.S. Comedy Arts Festival in Aspen, and received stellar reviews at
the Edinburgh Fringe Festival last year. Most of the time Kader can be seen
touring all the major clubs and colleges around the country, and likes it
if you Google him.
Born in Yonkers, NY, Vincent
Ochana was already making people laugh by the age of three. The
once scrawny and hyperactive kid, found himself being the center of attention
at all family functions. In school he was always the class comedian and
eventually won several high school talent contests with stand-up comedy
routines and appeared in numerous plays. At the age of 19, he felt the call
of duty and joined the United States Air Force. While in the Air Force,
Vincent received numerous medals for meritorious service and became one
of the top 10 marksman on the USAF Shooting Team. While deployed in Iraq,
Vincent found a way to get on stage and entertain his fellow troops during
USO tours. After his honorable discharge from the Air Force, Vincent moved
to Los Angeles to pursue his dream of being a stand-up comedian. Vincent
has entertained audiences in New York, Connecticut, South Carolina, Montana
and California. Currently, he is living in Burbank, CA and attending the
world famous Groundlings School of Improv.
Peter the Persian
is a Los Angeles native. He is moderately ethnic and specializes in vooices
and character humor. Not afraid of big crowds, he's let it all hang out
in front of at least 10,000 people. He may be one of the few practicing
comics who is also a practicing attorney by day.
Middle East Comic Relief, Thurs., Nov. 17, 8:00 pm. Tix $10, $7 members.
RSVP as seating is limited and this event will sell out. Best bet
is to get your tix in advance, by sending your check to Levantine Center
(mark Comic Relief in the memo of your check), 5920 Blackwelder Street,
Culver City CA 90232, or get them online below. Info 310.559.5544.

The
Levantine Social Club is open each Wednesday evening, from 6 pm-midnight.
Come on out and relax, play some
chess, backgammon, Scrabble or cards, have some Moroccan tea or Turkish
coffee...Open mic from 9 to 11 pm will feature comedy, poets, spoken word
and a range of musical performancesinvite your talented friends, and
get your own material ready!
Each week we give away free movie posters, complementary tickets and other
surprises. You'll find fresh talent, and great conversation across the cultural
spectrum at the Levantine Social Club.
5920 Blackwelder Street, Culver City 90232. Info 310.559.5544.
In
Theatres Now: "Paradise Now"
"Paradise Now" is the story of two young Palestinian men as they
embark upon what may be the last 48 hours of their lives. Winner of multiple
prizes at the 2005 Berlin Flim Festival, and warmly received at the Telluride
and Toronto Film Festivals, the film has also been invited to the upcoming
New York Film Festival. Directed by Hany Abu-Assad ("Ford Transit,"
"Rana's Wedding"), it stars Kais Nashef, Ali Suliman and Lubna
Azaba. The film opens in limited release Oct. 28. Check
your local theatre listings.
Read
a review of the film by May Alhassen.

To
subscribe to our listserve and receive our special updates (which include
free ticket giveaways, articles and more), either visit our Sign-up
page or send a message to: info@levantinecenter.org
and
include Subscribe Me in the subject box. Be sure to give us your first
and last name and how you heard about us!
To
join/support Levantine Cultural Center, simply
go to our membership page and fill in the
blanks, use your credit card, or print and mail in your check for $60
or $120 or $250 annual membership dues to: Levantine Center, 5920 Blackwelder
Street, Culver City CA 90232.

LEVANTINE
CULTURAL CENTER
Cultures of the Middle East & Mediterranean
5920 Blackwelder Street, Culver City, CA. 90232
310.559.5544, info@levantinecenter.org

Levantine Center advocates for, educates about, and in general promotes
and supports Middle Eastern and Mediterranean contemporary arts and traditional
cultures. We present or cosponsor programs of music, literature, art,
film/video, publications, new media and more, often from educational and
historical perspectives. While acknowledging the value of entertainment,
we emphasize scholarship and substance. We are strongly multidisciplinary
and non-sectarian, do not embrace any political or religious doctrine,
and are committed to the principle of cross-cultural cooperation. We support
the strengthening of ties between all cultural, ethnic and religious communities
of the Middle East/West Asia/Levant, as well as between all peoples of
Middle Eastern descent in diaspora.
Back
to Top
|