“The telling of stories is a really powerful kind of activism—it allows you to empathize, to put yourself in others’ shoes.”
Tag: Theatre and Performance Art
Walking On: Sister Helen Prejean’s Powerful Persistence
35 years ago, Sister Helen Prejean walked down the hall at Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola with her unsteady hand on the quivering shoulder of Patrick Sonnier. His death by electrocution that night would have slid barely noticed, then and now—except Prejean was so outraged by what she saw that she wrote it down.
We Heart: Robin Ritz’s Feminist Anthem for the #MeToo Era
Robin Ritz’s song and video celebrate the divine feminine—in the women in our lives, in our archetypes and in ourselves.
Storytelling for Social Change: Inside the #HealMeToo Festival
Hope Singsen had done very little producing before she began putting together The #HealMeToo Festival, which just wrapped in New York City. She started with a plan to find a […]
Ms. Smith Goes to Washington: Inside the Modern Send-Up of a Classic Political Story
Hundreds of feminists, seated in long wooden benches under the vaulted ceilings of the Los Angeles City Council Chambers, bore witness last week to a historical revisitation fit for the current political moment.
The Ms. Q&A: What Diane Paulus Learned by Telling Gloria Steinem’s Story
“The chance to immerse myself in this project and deepen my understanding of Gloria’s life and work has been completely life-altering.”
Stories from the Witch Hunt
Handmaids. Witches. Comedians and musicians. These were not your standard #MeToo stories. This was The Witch Hunt, a variety show inspired by the #MeToo movement.
Sisterhood, Herstory and Talking Circles: Inside Gloria’s Life
Stepping into Daryl Roth Theatre, just steps from Union Square, now feels like stepping into a feminist time machine.
At This D.C. Festival, Women’s Voices Take Center Stage
The Women’s Voices Theater Festival currently wrapping up in Washington, D.C., featured over 30 theatrical productions written by some of the country’s pre-eminent women playwrights. We spoke to two of them.
A Feminist Retelling of Sovereignty
Activist, writer and lawyer Mary Kathryn Nagle once persuaded her professor to let her write a play based on a Supreme Court ruling that tribal nations have sovereignty over what happens on their lands. That project became the seed for Sovereignty.