Martin Scorsese’s Two Armenian Angels

By Jirair Tutunjian
Keghart
- Talking about filmmakers who had influenced his work, celebrated director-producer Martin Scorsese more than once has said the guidance of Prof. Haig Manoogian (1916-1980) was the most precious gift he had ever received.
Scorsese was a callow teenager when he enrolled at the New York University to learn filmmaking. Talking about his first class, Scorsese said: “This gentleman got up and spoke with such passion and such energy about cinema. I became part of the cult. His name was Haig Manoogian.”
The director of Mean Streets, Taxi Driver, Goodfellas, Raging Bull and a dozen other classics, went on to say about Manoogian: “He really inspired us. He pushed us… he beat us down and he built us back again. He set a fire in our hearts…” The multi-award winning Scorsese added that his experiences with Manoogian led him to become a film director.
Raging Bull had another Armenian link: it was co-written by Mardik Martin. Born in Iran (1934), Martin was a fellow student of Scorsese at the NYU. They soon became close friends and worked together on such Scorsese films as Not Just You. Mardik and Scorsese would often sit in Scorsese’s Plymouth in the middle of winter writing screenplays. After graduation, Martin co-wrote Scorsese’s Mean Streets; New York, New York; and Raging Bull. His name is included as screenwriter on the Writers Guild of America’s list of 101 Greatest Screenplay.
Mardik was honored at several European film festivals and by Armenia’s Parajanov-Vartanev Institute “for the mastery of his pen on iconic American films.” He died a few days before his 85th birthday.