Arts: Another Serkis Freak

ANOTHER SERKIS FREAK

The Irish Times
August 12, 2011 Friday

Following big roles in films where his mug was never seen Gollum in
Lord of the Ringsand the regal ape in King Kong Andy Serkis cements
his reputation as the master of a new kind of acting as the smart
chimp Caesar in the actually-very-good Rise of the Planet of the Apes.

He s also played the truly feral Ian Brady. He tells DONALD CLARKEabout
acting s dark side

IT S HARD not to draw inappropriate parallels. So let s do so. The
unexpectedly splendid Rise of the Planet of the Apes, prequel to that
classic 1968 picture, depicts a city in a state of appalling turmoil.

Oppressed, ignored and abused, the great apes of San Francisco have
risen up against their human overlords. The police look on helplessly
as the primates run amok through the hilly streets and inflict violent
deadlock on the US s most famous bridge.

It s Tuesday afternoon and Andy Serkis who plays the chimpanzee
instigator has just travelled from his home in north London to a sedate
corner of Mayfair. As we speak, the fires are dying down in Croydon,
Lewisham and Hackney. It s all a little eerie.

Yeah, I know, he says. Oh God. It s hardly surprising, though. The
touchpaper has been lit by some incident and it has led to this
manifestation of anger this feeling of being dropped through the net.

There s been no leadership from the government. And there s no cause
on the streets. It s just a flailing around of pure anger.

As I understand it, Serkis used to be a committed activist for
the Socialist Workers Party. He must feel the old Marxist energies
bubbling up.

Nothing happens. Even when people are properly galvanised. Even when,
as happened with the Gulf War, thousands of people come out and march
against war, nothing happens.

Serkis s scrunched, furrowed face is now well known. But his big
breakthrough came in a role where his mug was never seen. Back at
the turn of the century, impressed by his flexible, angular timbre,
Peter Jackson asked him to voice Gollum, reptilian ring junkie, for
his epic Lord of the Ringscycle. The role steadily evolved and with
the help of computer modelling Serkis went on to provide the creature
s every movement.

Peter really wanted an actor in the role. He didn t want the actors
playing Sam and Frodo to act against a tennis ball on a stick and
have to imagine how he would be moving. That was a significant shift
from an animated character to a nuanced, three- dimensional character.

A few years later Serkis repeated the trick as the title character
in Jackson s King Kong. Now, playing Caesar, the chimp who, his
brain enhanced by an artificially created virus, precipitates the
revolution that will eventually lead to the ape-dominated society
depicted in Planet of the Apes, he cements his reputation as the
master of a new kind of acting. Caesar is a touching creation. It s
all computer-generated imagery. But it s also all Serkis.

Many actors still do not know how it works, but it s just another way
of capturing an actor s performance. If you are playing an extreme
role like Gollum or King Kong, you can play that role without layers
of prosthetic make-up. You begin to feel that that sort of make-up
is a bit theatrical.

Serkis, who is now 47 and was raised in and around London, is known
for immersing himself in his roles. Before playing Ian Dury, bolshie
post-punk singer, in Sex & Drugs & Rock & Roll, he walked with a cane
for weeks. In preparation for King Kong, he spent hours communing with
a gorilla in the zoo. He admits there wasn t time to get down with
the chimps when preparing for Rise of the Planet of the Apes. But he
still brought the role home with him.

Absolutely. When you go into these characters it s not easy to turn
them off, he muses. Your body starts to change. This was shot in
Vancouver, and there s a big park in the city. My regime was to run
around the park before everyone was up. Then I d work on getting into
character. I d go back to the hotel as Caesar. You find rituals.

One suspects Serkis would have had a healthy career even without that
odd experience on The Lord of the Rings. An engaging, smart man with
a singular approach to performance always tortured, always slightly
sinister he s the sort of offbeat character actor who stays in work
while the pretty lead performers get mercilessly annihilated by age
and changing fashions.

Serkis comes from a colourful background. His father, of Armenian
descent, was an Iraqi gynaecologist. While mum brought up the family
in West Ruislip, dad remained in Baghdad, where he briefly endured
detention by the Saddam Hussein regime. He admits to having been
a troubled child. Shades of that furious infant can be seen in his
jaw-dropping turns as Ian Brady, the moors murderer, in the superb
TV movie Longford; and as Ian Dury, a talented man, but no cuddly
pussycat.

Serkis initially intended to become a painter. After enrolling to
study art at Lancaster University, he was informed that he needed
a second subject. Remembering how much he enjoyed his experiences
acting at school, he edged towards the dramatic arts. A successful
turn in Barrie Keeffe s Gotchasealed the deal.

While auditioning for the RSC or the National Theatre, he did, however,
still have to make time to carry out his Socialist Worker duties. I
assume he owned a donkey jacket.

I did own a donkey jacket, he laughs. I was involved in the party
for some time. It just didn t work out with being an actor. That job
demands that you empathise and see another person s point of view. I
couldn t work those universes together the way Brecht did. I couldn
t be that black and white. The characters I play are always in a
grey area.

Like Ian Brady? Serkis has owned up that he takes his characters
home with him. How did that work out when as a father of three he was
playing a notorious murderer of children? Whenever you play a part you
are putting a bit of yourself under the microscope. Playing Brady I
was examining the darkest bit of myself. He and Myra Hindley said the
moment they felt most alive was when they were taking away the lives
of those children. That validated their existence. You have to then
transpose those feelings some way. What validates my existence? I
could only think the most potent thing was witnessing the birth of
my children at home.

This is both complicated and creepy. So he places that experience in
the same corner of the psyche where Brady hoarded his own memories
of child murder? It s to do with empathy, but not sympathy? Yes. That
s right. You gather up the experiences from that moment and use them.

Serkis s dedication to method acting has led him to some happier
places. In 1991, while working at the Royal Exchange Theatre in
Manchester, he was cast opposite a young performer named Lorraine
Ashbourne. The actors were playing lovers and, both at home to
Stanislavski, decided to go on a date to capture some authenticity.

Two decades later they are happily married.

That s true. We actually decided to meet in character. So we met up at
this pub at the back of the station and began talking. To be honest, I
think subconsciously it was just a way of getting off with one another.

Having finally plumped for acting over painting and rabble-rousing
though he still does a bit of both Serkis found himself in demand.

Throughout the 1990s he pursued a successful career essaying earthy
character roles. You will see him in Mike Leigh s Topsy-Turvyand,
playing Bill Sikes, in the 1999 ITV version of Oliver Twist.

Then, in 2001, The Lord of the Rings: Fellowship of the Ringbrought
him a very peculiar class of fame. Everyone loved to hate Gollum and,
after a while, news got around that some bloke named Serkis had acted
out every one of the creature s moves. In 2004 he was terrific as
Martin Hannett, Joy Division s legendary producer, in 24 Hour Party
People, but you still couldn t say he had a famous face.

That s was a great thing for me. I don t want to be overexposed as an
actor. You can easily burn up the currency of your face. This type of
acting is a way of having the creative thrill without being typecast.

Gollum has been a significant part of my life. People think of me as
that. But I can still play Ian Brady or Ian Dury. I can still get on
the Tube without being recognised.

Really? Surely not now. Recent high-profile turns featuring his own
face rather than a mass of pixels have surely made him a bit of a
cult hero.

I m sure the average Lord of the Ring fanatic, having ploughed through
all those DVD extras, could, without his or her spectacles, identify
Serkis from the other side of a wide field during the darkest night
of the year. They are the keenest of fans. He must have had a few
unusual encounters.

Oh yeah. But not in an overwhelming way. The only really fanatical
thing I remember was at Disneyland a few years ago. This girl grabbed
me. She was crying her eyes out. She wouldn t let me go and she was
holding me really tight. Her family had to pull her off me. Now, that
was quite bizarre. I get people shouting Oi, Gollum! from across the
street. But if you can t deal with that . . .

Serkis will be back as Gollum next year when the first part of Peter
Jackson s bifurcated take on JRR Tolkien s The Hobbitfinally hits
screens. He has finished shooting all his scenes, but, at Jackson
s request, has returned to New Zealand to work as a second-unit
director. He s enjoying the duties and is keen to direct his first
feature.

Good luck with that. But we don t want him to give up on the acting.

Aside from anything else, after offering us an array of grotesques,
it would be nice to see Serkis playing a nice guy for once. Does he
not do cuddly?

Phew! I don t know if I can handle cuddly. As I say, the characters
I love to engage with are in the morally grey area of the human
condition. He pauses for a moment. Or other species that throw a
light on that human condition.

What an odd career this man has.

Hairy Hollywood: Apes on screen

It s ape week. Two first-class films concerning that biological
superfamily Rise of the Planet of the Apesand Project Nim enliven a
traditionally sluggish corner of the summer. Who are our favourite
apes in movies and TV?

Nobody beats King Kong, the enormous gorilla who (forget the remakes)
helped reinvent adventure cinema in 1933. Then of course there was
Cheeta, the co-star of the Tarzanmovies. For years it was believed
that the second Cheeta, now supposedly a septuagenarian, was still
alive, but those claims were debunked three years ago. Boo!

The creepiest ape has to be Max in Nagisa Oshima s Max Mon Amour. That
creature was depicted having an affair with poor Charlotte Rampling.

Eugh! Mention must be made of the primitive primate who co-starred
in Bedtime for Bonzo, but that s enough about Ronald Reagan. Ha
Ha! No offence.

Let s not forget King Louie in The Jungle Book. After all, he was the
king of the swingers. If Bingo from the Banana Spilts was really an
ape then he counts too. And the hilariously psychedelic Mojo Jo in
the surreal series The Powerpuff Girlsalso gets a nod. Dr Zaius in
the first Planet of the Apesmovie. We ve gone totally ape, baby.

ANKARA: Armenian Immigrant Children To Be Allowed In Minority School

ARMENIAN IMMIGRANT CHILDREN TO BE ALLOWED IN MINORITY SCHOOLS

Today’s Zaman
Sept 2 2011
Turkey

Families from Armenia who reside in Turkey as illegal aliens will be
able to send their children to schools run by the Turkish Armenian
Patriarchate thanks to a two-year battle fought by Deputy Patriarch
Aram AteÅ~_yan.

News reports on Friday said Education Minister Omer Dincer had
given his permission to allow Armenian children residing in Turkey
as irregular immigrants to unofficially attend classes in Armenian
schools in the next school year. This comes shortly after Turkey
announced it would return all property confiscated from religious
minority foundations and associations during the early republican era.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan also approved the decision to
let children from Armenia attend the schools as guest students.

“The ministry has given the necessary permission and we are very happy
about this,” Deputy Patriarch AteÅ~_yan stated. He said the children
will be enrolled as guest students, meaning they will be exempt from
class examinations and will not be able to receive a diploma. “But
we plan to give them a certificate to show that they attended our
schools. They will have to use this document to get an equivalent
diploma in their own country. As for how this will work and what kind
of procedures will be followed, we’ll see about that later.”

He said the Armenian community has been fighting to allow irregular
immigrants to attend Armenian schools for two years. According to
AteÅ~_yan, about 1,000 children from Armenia are living in Turkey with
their parents, who have come here for work but have no papers. “We will
send the children to about 10 schools, including Uskudar Kalfayan,
Feriköy Merametciyan and Kumkapı Bezciyan. I don’t know how many
parents will send their children to school, because most of these
families live in neighborhoods far from where our schools are located,
but it is a great step to take even if only a single child is able
to attend school.”

AteÅ~_yan said that in terms of the inclusion of irregular Armenian
immigrants in the Turkish school system, they have reached a point
that was very meaningful and important for the Armenian community. He
said he wanted to thank Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arınc, Education
Minister Dincer and former Education Minister Nimet Cubukcu, as well
as other officials, on behalf of the Armenian Patriarchate and the
Armenian community of Turkey.

In another development, the International Russian School in Antalya,
which follows the Russian Federation’s education curriculum, started
its school year on Sept. 1, when schools open in Russia. There are
70 Russian students in the school’s elementary section. The school’s
principal, Victor Bikkenev, said the diplomas earned by the students
in the school are valid in Russia. Classes are conducted in Russian
at the school, which also offers Turkish, English and German classes.

It’s Better To Conduct Endless Negotiations

“IT IS BETTER TO CONDUCT ENDLESS NEGOTIATIONS”
by Artem Kobzev

WPS Agency
DEFENSE and SECURITY
August 10, 2011 Wednesday
Russia

DMITRY MEDVEDEV WILL TRY TO RESET THE KARABAKH REGULATION AT A
MEETING WITH ILHAM ALIYEV; Dmitry Medvedev will meet with President of
Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev in Sochi. The main topic of the meeting will
be regulation of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. If the negotiations
take place successfully, meeting of Medvedev and President of Armenia
Serzh Sergsian will probably be the next step and it may be followed
by a trilateral summit.

Dmitry Medvedev will meet with President of Azerbaijan Ilham
Aliyev in Sochi. The main topic of the meeting will be regulation
of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. If the negotiations take place
successfully, meeting of Medvedev and President of Armenia Serzh
Sergsian will probably be the next step and it may be followed by a
trilateral summit.

Last time, Medvedev, Sargsian and Aliyev met at the end of June in
Kazan where there was another round of trilateral negotiations. The
summit in the capital city of Tatarstan had no results and the
parties did not sign the document that had to become the “road map”
of regulation in Nagorno-Karabakh. It is based mostly on the so-called
Madrid principles proposed by the co-chair countries of the Minsk OSCE
group (Russia, France, US) as an algorithm for solving of the problem
of Nagorno-Karabakh: Azerbaijan is to be given the districts of the
so-called security zone around Nagorno-Karabakh, an international
peacekeeping operation should begin in the conflict zone, refugees
receive a possibility to come back and afterwards there is a “legally
binding referendum” about the status of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Both parties believe that some of the clauses of the document
contradict each other and their signing in such form may trigger a
serious outburst of public discontent in both countries and hence
the summit in Kazan has ended without sensations.

Literally on the next day after completion of the summit Armenia and
Azerbaijan exchanged accusations blaming each other for the failure
of the negotiations. According to Foreign Minister of Armenia Edvard
Nalbandian, the parties failed to come to an agreement because
at the latest moment “Baku represented about ten amendments.” His
Azerbaijani colleague responded that it were Armenians who demanded
too many concessions.” Aliyev added fuel to the fire personally. He
said that occupation of 20% of the Azerbaijani land by Armenia was
a temporary phenomenon and that territorial integrity of Azerbaijan
would be restored by “any method.”

According to sources of Moskovskie Novosti, big expectations from
the meeting in Kazan and its follow-up failure were explained by the
fact that Russian and Armenian diplomats overestimated the scale of
the political compromises with which Baku could agree. Medvedev had
to correct mistakes of the subordinates urgently. He sent a letter
to Aliyev and Sargsian where he outlined his vision of the Karabakh
regulation. According to available information, the Russian President
considered some arguments of the Azerbaijani party sensible. So,
it was not surprising that Azerbaijan was the first to respond to
this signal. In the middle if July, Foreign Minister of Azerbaijan
Elyar Mamedyarov arrived to Moscow and handed the response message
from Aliyev over to Sergei Lavrov. Along with this, he refused to
comment on its content.

The Armenian party was even more verbose. Armen Arzumanian, press
secretary of the Armenian President, said, “The response letter of
President of Armenia Serzh Sargsian was already sent to President of
Russia Dmitry Medvedev.”

Alexei Vlasov, general director of the information and analytical
center of the MGU for studying of the post-Soviet space, said, “There
is information that the Azerbaijani party has agreed with the proposals
fixed in the letter of Medvedev. Along with this, it is not known what
Sargsian has answered to his message.” Vlasov believes that that is
why the Russian President meets with the Azerbaijani colleague first
and not with the Armenian one. According to the political scientist,
it has been said earlier that the next trilateral meeting will take
place only after Moscow receives guarantees that all parties of the
conflict are ready to sign a document that it has been planned to sign
in Kazan. If negotiations with Aliyev take place successful, meeting
of Medvedev and Sergsian should become the next step according to the
logic of the political process. It will be followed up by a trilateral
meeting at the end of August or at the beginning of September and
signing of the corrected and modified “road map.” Vlasov concludes,
“If this is so, it is possible to say that the parties reach a new
round of the negotiation process.”

Other experts, for example, invited researcher of the center of
strategic and international research in Washington Sergei Markedonov,
believe that after a certain surge in activeness in the attempts of
regulation of the problem of Nagorno-Karabakh in the trilateral format
under the aegis of Moscow a new dead end starts appearing finally.

First, this happens because the parties (and Nagorno-Karabakh) are
not ready to agree with the entire set of proposals of the “road map.”

Second, even if it is signed there will be inevitable difficulties
in real implementation of its paragraphs.

In his interview on August 4 Medvedev reiterated that events of
August of 2008 should become a lesson for Armenia and Azerbaijan. The
President said, “It is better to conduct endless negotiations about
the fate of Nagorno-Karabakh than to spend these five military days.”

Serzh Sargsyan, Robert Kocharyan, Arkady Ghukasyan And Bako Sahakyan

SERZH SARGSYAN, ROBERT KOCHARYAN, ARKADY GHUKASYAN AND BAKO SAHAKYAN VISIT MEMORIAL IN STEPANAKERT

Mediamax
Sept 2 2011
Armenia

Yerevan/Mediamax/. Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan accompanied
by the NKR President Bako Sahakyan, former NKR Presidents Robert
Kocharian and Arkady Ghukasyan, Catholicos of All Armenians Garegin
the Second visited the Memorial in Stepanakert today.

Serzh Sargsyan paid homage to victims killed for the sake of Artsakh
independence, laid flowers to the graves of the first Chairman of
the NKR Supreme Council Artur Lazarian and those who fought at
Artsakh war.

Moscow Decides On Resolution Of Karabakh Conflict – Armenian Communi

MOSCOW DECIDES ON RESOLUTION OF KARABAKH CONFLICT – ARMENIAN COMMUNIST PARTY

news.am
Sept 2 2011
Armenia

YEREVAN. – Resolution of the Karabakh conflict depends primarily on
Moscow, the chairman of the Communist Party of Armenia Ruben Tovmasyan
told a briefing on Friday.

“I do not call on Armenia to become someone else’s province. We simply
must keep in mind how many times Russian people helped Armenia and
treasure up our friendship with Russia,” said Tovmasyan.

Speaking about independence anniversary of Nagorno-Karabakh, he noted
that Karabakh is now a self-contained entity.

“The Republic has a sufficient volume of production and marks
increase in foreign investments. Karabakh is on its way to sustainable
development,” said Tovmasyan.

Armenian-German Military Cooperation In The Framework Of The Europea

ARMENIAN-GERMAN MILITARY COOPERATION IN THE FRAMEWORK OF THE EUROPEAN INTEGRATION

National Assembly
Sept 2 2011
Armenia

On September 1 Hrayr Karapetyan, Chairman of the NA Standing Committee
of Defense, National Security, Internal Affairs and Armen Rustamyan,
Chairman of the NA Standing Committee on Foreign Relations met
Christian Schmidt, State Secretary on parliamentary issues of the
Defense Federal Ministry of Germany. Davit Tonoyan, First Deputy of the
RA Defense Minister and Hans Jochen-Schmidt, Ambassador Extraordinary
and Plenipotentiary of Germany to the Republic of Armenia also attended
the meeting.

Armen Rustamyan recorded that Armenia’s foreign policy was conditioned
by the Euro-integration processes, and complex programmes were
implemented in Armenia in this direction, particularly, for complying
the security system of the country with European standards. Armenia
is interested in establishing sustainable peace in the region, and in
this respect highly assesses the cooperation with the European partner
countries in such issues, like the Armenian-Turkish relations and the
solution of the NK problem in accordance with international principles.

Hrayr Karapetyan thanked for the support shown by Germany in the
sphere of defense, particularly, in the spheres of military-medical
and military education of Armenia. He acquainted the guest with
the ongoing reforms and implemented legislative amendments in the
RA defense sphere, adding that this year the NA would adopt the
Disciplinary Statute, where the officers’ and military servicemen’s
rights and obligations would be specified.

Christian Schmidt expressed satisfaction for the Armenian-German
military cooperation procedure and expressed hope the
inter-parliamentary cooperation would be more activated in that
direction. He expressed his gratitude for the participation in the
German troops in Afghanistan and for the important contribution.

In the course of the meeting the issues related to the European
integration processes, regional security, the Armenian-German
parliamentary and military cooperation development and the peaceful
settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic problem were also
discussed.

Under Kocharyan’s Pressure

UNDER KOCHARYAN’S PRESSURE

Lragir.am News

16:45:12 – 02/09/2011

Wikileaks leaked the letter of U.S. deputy ambassador to Armenia
Joseph Pennington to the U.S. Department of State of March 7, 2008
which reports about the talk between embassy’s workers and member of
the Constitutional Court of Armenia Judge Valeri Poghosyan.

Pennington notes that Valeri Poghosyan in the night of March 6 secretly
turned to the U.S. Embassy to have a secret talk in his house.

The issue was related to the appeal of first president Levon
Ter-Petrosyan to the Constitutional Court with which he demanded to
declare invalid the results of the 2008 elections.

The cable runs that Poghosyan determined his wish to have a talk by
the fact that he knows “whom the U.S. supports”.

According to the cable, Poghosyan said that he had received numerous
calls from a person who presented as the head of the staff of
the president Robert Kocharyan with the demand to present to the
presidential office. But he laughed and ignored the calls. He also
said that he was even threatened that his brother would be dismissed
if he did not answer the calls.

The document runs that Poghosyan was unable to take part in the
hearings of the case because he was ill, but “he assured that even
if he was healthy, he would not take part in them”.

He also said that one of the judges to the case Kim Balayan cooperated
with the authorities because his son Tigran Balayan was appointed
Spokesman for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

He admitted that if pressure from the office of the president lacked,
the greater part of the judges were inclined to issue a verdict in
favor of Levon Ter-Petrosyan.

Poghosyan said “total autocracy” is present in Armenia where it is
impossible to solve issues through a legal way.

He also said, according to the revealed cable, that the authorities
were so shameless that they threatened to dismiss him, though they
had no legal ground.

Workers of the embassy asked Poghosyan about the possibility of
unpublished deaths on March 1 and the rumors that army forces from
Karabakh were taken to Yerevan, Poghosyan answered that “these rumors
are not totally ungrounded”.

In the end of the document, Pennington wrote that they have no ground
to confirm the accusations of Judge Poghosyan, but the fact that
an Armenian high ranking official says such things, already means
something. Poghosyan was appointed Judge during Ter-Petrosyan’s
tenure in 1995 and since he did not hide his political position,
the recent events are possible to have influenced on him.

http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/country23202.html

Personal Exhibition Of Works Of Anna Shahnazaryan To Open In Beirut

PERSONAL EXHIBITION OF WORKS OF ANNA SHAHNAZARYAN TO OPEN IN BEIRUT

ARMENPRESS
16:24, 2 September, 2011

Personal exhibition of works of young Armenian artist Anna Shahnazaryan
will take place in “Lucy Tutunjyan” showing hall in Beirut September
3-9 within the framework of events dedicated to the 20th anniversary
of independence of Armenia on the initiative of Diaspora Ministry
and All-National Armenian Educational and Cultural Union.

Diaspora Ministry’s press office reported that 28 works will be
presented. The exhibition will be opened by Hranush Hakobyan.

Grape Purchase Volume Expected To Reach 155 Thous. Tons In 2011

GRAPE PURCHASE VOLUME EXPECTED TO REACH 155 THOUS. TONS IN 2011

PanARMENIAN.Net
September 2, 2011 – 16:06 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – The volume of grape purchase expected this year is
accessed by Armenian processing companies at 150-155 thousand tons.

As Deputy Agriculture Minister Robert Makaryan told a PanARMENIAN.Net
reporter, the demand for the product in 2011 exceeds that reported
in 2010 by 15-20%.

“In 2010, average purchase price for 1kg of grapes comprised AMD
124,4. An agreement was reached with representatives of processing
companies against lowering the price any further,” the Deputy
Minister noted.

“Price is formed by the market, yet largely depends on the quality
of grapes, which promises to be high this year,” the official said.

“I believe, this year we’ll have no problems with grape purchase,”
Makaryan concluded.

U.S. Embassy Office Of Defense Cooperation And U.S. Department Of De

U.S. EMBASSY OFFICE OF DEFENSE COOPERATION AND U.S. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE COMMEMORATE SASNASHEN PLANE CRASH

armradio.am
02.09.2011 18:15

On September 2, Major General Mark Zamzow, the Vice Commander of
the 3rd Air Force at Ramstein Air Base, and the U.S. Embassy Office
of Defense Cooperation joined Deputy Defense Minister Davit Tonoyan,
Sasnahen Mayor Andranik Shomian, and Sasnashen residents to commemorate
the 54rd anniversary of the crash of a U.S. C-130 airplane on Armenian
soil. The event was held at the C-130 memorial in Sasnashen, located
on a rocky outcrop overlooking the plane crash site.

Representing the U.S. Department of Defense, Major General Zamzow
delivered remarks at the event, thanking the community of Sasnashen
for the respect and honor they have shown the fallen airmen. “I was
deeply touched when I heard that the citizens of Sasnahsen still
remember this event, and have conducted a memorial remembrance every
year since 1958 to commemorate the aircrew that died that day….The
manner in which you conduct this ceremony, and the way in which
you maintain this memorial, speaks volumes for your strength as a
community,” said Major General Zamzow. Major General Zamzow also
mentioned that he piloted a C-130 aircraft earlier in his career,
and that he understands first-hand the risks that pilots face.

During the event, personal effects were returned that were found at
the crash site.

Many Sasnashen residents also attended the event. School children
walked to the memorial carrying Armenian and U.S. flags, and one
elderly resident recalled the day of the crash. “I heard the explosion
close to my house and came running to see what happened,” she said.

According to local accounts, the U.S. airmen maneuvered their aircraft
away from the village to spare civilian lives as it crashed to the
ground. “This final act of bravery,” said Major General Zamzow,
“was an instinctive reaction for these airmen, and it was simply the
right thing to do.”