It's time to recognise the Armenian Genocide.
“It's time to recognise the Armenian Genocide.”
The World Motivation
It's time to recognise the Armenian Genocide.
“It's time to recognise the Armenian Genocide.”
It's time to recognise the Armenian Genocide.
Even the people I surround myself with... are wiser, a little bit older than me, where before, all my boyfriends were younger.
Now is the one time in my life I can be 100% selfish. I'm not married; I don't have kids; I can focus on my career.
I am hands-on in any project that I am associated with. I just don't want to put my face or name and lend it to a product that I'm not behind a hundred percent.
If you're a basketball player and you don't stop and take pictures with your fans, you can have an amazing game and everyone still loves you.
My grandmother, Betty Bertha Bright, lived in the Armenian block in Kolkata. After '36 Chowringhee Lane,' we haven't seen that part of the city in films.
The Christian Armenian story was the Polish Jewish story. The efforts of the Armenians to stay alive in Musa Dagh chimed with those struggling to survive the ghetto.
My family was very open. My grandfather was German and a Protestant. My father, a lawyer, was Greek-Catholic and played the violin. My mother was very religious and went to church twice a day. My grandmother was Armenian. So I was raised with three different faiths - that's why I am so open.
He was so depressed, he tried to commit suicide by inhaling next to an Armenian.
On my father's side, I'm descended from immigrants, one of whom was a Syrian refugee from the Armenian genocide, and my mother was an immigrant from Germany whose visa had expired and, for a year and change, was undocumented here in the U.S.