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Tonya Pinkins Pt 2. : It’s Not A Card, It’s An Issue

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I’m so thankful for the Internet. It acts as a way to connect. It serves as a body of information. It provides entertainment. It gives us a platform to educate, inform, and otherwise voice our opinions.

I came across a piece of commentary written to mimic the style of Pinkins’ recent releases, but reflecting the way some outsiders perceive Pinkins’ point of view.

“It is not enough that I am the title character. It is not enough that I am given liberty to change the staging, and effectively co-direct the play. If I cannot control everything from the set, to the lighting, to the costumes, to the score, to the goddamn script, I’m going to throw a temper tantrum and quit your stupid play. And even if you do give me complete control of the entire production, including what everybody gets paid, you had all better properly kiss my butt on command or I will still quit! And I will then play the race card and the gender card

This is exactly what Pinkins is speaking out against.

You can have an entire website dedicated to hate speech and slander, and title it with that person’s name, because, as previously stated, the Internet is the best place to come to share our opinions, right?

I’m glad we’re on the same page, but let’s make sure we are on the same paragraph.

While it’s empowering to share your experiences and stand your ground, what you won’t do is blatantly discredit the experience of another. Disagree with decisions, sure. But discredit their experience? Never.

Emphasis on THEIR. THEIR, meaning, something YOU or OTHERS may not have experienced, but, an instance, feeling, idea, or circumstance that a person and/or group can speak to because it is part of their life and has been woven into their everyday truth.

Hear me and hear me loud and clear.

There are no cards.

You will not tell me that my experience as a Black woman in America does not have validity. You won’t belittle my cognizance and consciousness around the daily sexism, racism, and prejudice I face.

My life experiences are not cards.

They are issues.

To open up your vocal cords, or take to a computer to draft a message despite living in a world that continuously shows us our lives and PERSPECTIVES don’t matter, is an act of resilience. Time and time again, we may not speak out in fear that our experiences will be ripped apart and discarded and we will be deemed whiney, angry, weak, or lazy.

In her latest statement, Pinkins proclaims no man will speak for her in 2016, largely in response to the he said she said that’s been going on in response to her first statement. She highlights the importance of the intersectionality between race and gender, which results in an experience that many in the production have not experienced.

She says:

“My departure from CSC’s Mother Courage was not bourne of one episode but of a lifetime of experiences of inequality, patriarchy and misogyny. CSC’s Mother Courage was simply the straw to break my silence.”

Tonya’s experiences aren’t cards. They are issues that have built up her courage to not only share her experience, but act on how these experiences made her feel. She broke her silence, and because SHE broke it, all we need to do is listen to her voice.

Read her entire statement in response to those who have spoken out about her initial statement

No Man Speaks For Me in 2016

There is a plethora of “He said, She said surrounding my departure from Classic Stage Company’s Mother Courage. Tonya said this and Brian Kulick said that and Michael Potts says this… “

Now I say, Michael Potts is not equipped to speak for me. Michael Potts was a postscript to the production after John Jelks, withdrew for personal reasons. If, as Potts says, “I was running it,” the Chaplain would have been played by Frances Jue.

Potts states that I, “…insisted on being called ‘Momma…” which he spells like the disrespectful ‘Yo Momma.’ I asked to be respectfully called ‘Mama’ as in Mama Nadi in RUINED. A term of respect for women of a certain age in the Congo. Potts’ ignorance of this appellation is emblematic of his myopia throughout this production.


It was at my suggestion that CSC endeavored to negotiate a new translation by Branden Jacobs-Jenkins. When that proved impossible, Eve Ensler of V-day: City of Joy in the Congo was the next and best choice. Eve and I would be following in the footsteps of Ntozake Shange who translated and transported Mother Courage the Reconstruction South forThe Public Theater and Rose Mbowa. who translated and performed as Mother Courage in the first authorized African production in Luganda the language of Uganda. But, a couple of weeks before rehearsals began, I was told that the death of Brecht’s heir stalled the approval of an Ensler translation in time for the start of our production. In hindsight, I question if that was even true. This left me with Kulick’s Frankenstein “McDraft.” based loosely on John Willet’s edited translation of the Brecht.

Potts appears in a little less than half of the play and has donned himself narrator of a my experience? HE didn’t hear me say this when HE thought I should. Why isn’t Potts more versed in the job he was elected to; Equity Deputy? As deputy, Michael Potts failed the black women in Mother Courage by failing to attend to their beseechings.

Mirrirai Sitole and Zenzi Williams asked Michael Potts to call an equity meeting to address the testosterone overdosed environment. I asked Potts about the meeting and he replied “The meeting occurred and you were late” The meeting he referenced was a meeting of Kulick, cast and crew. Only Equity members may attend Equity meetings. Potts never called the “equity meeting” the women requested.

Zenzi Williams said ,”I have never been spoken to the way he [Brian Kulick] spoke to me.” Mirirai Sithole was traumatized and said “It was not a safe space.” Both women were brought to tears in rehearsal. On this Potts is as mute as dumb Katrin. Ladies forgive me for telling stories that are not mine to tell but Michael Potts is white washing history to defend the master, to protect the way it is and the way it is must change.

I told Kulick that as Artistic Director of Classic Stage Company and as the director of the play, he was responsible for the squelching mysogyny. I said it to his face with company members present. He said, “I’m sorry,” He did nothing.

When Kevin Mambo ceased playing the scenes with me in performance and instead circled me on stage like I was prey. Kulick did not stop him. Instead, he told me I “…was driving the actors [male] insane.” Well, Mother Courage is supposed to drive the men insane because they can’t have her, they can’t control her and they can’t stop her. That was Brecht’s intent.

Kulick spoke for himself regarding his trans[-]plantation of Brecht to the general Congo. Does Kulick need Potts, to be his armor the way we three Black women needed him to be ours during this ordeal? Potts failed us then and continues to fail us now. Kulick empowered the male actors to behave like men in war, to bully and undermine us because women are always the first casualties of war.

Dr. Robin D. G. Kelly, author and Gary B. Nash Professor of American History at UCLA states that “Black women are in fact more vulnerable because of the exclusions of race and gender and Black men often play a role in perpetuating inequality/vulnerability/oppression,”

Potts and Kulick have worked together five times. I surmise Potts’ is safeguarding his next job by sacrificing me, the Black woman who spoke truths that he would rather remained unspoken. Black women show up in support of Black male movements everyday. Why Potts are you coming for me when White men are at the apex of a pyramid built upon Black vaginas?

Dr Kimberle Crenshaw, co-founder of The African American Policy Forum and law professor at UCLA and Columbia University School of Law says, “We have failed Black [women] when their experiences are not centered at the core of our vision of racial justice. We have failed them when we resist empowering women as core leaders of our organizations. We have failed them when we subject them to catcalling and other forms of sexual harassment on the front lines of protests against racialized violence. We have failed them when we applaud their work in these settings, while marginalizing them in the corridors of power behind closed doors.”

“We have also failed them when we encourage or force them to choose between their gender and their race; and when we question their loyalty to the race when they raise feminist issues rather than working with them to erase the roadblocks those concerns represent.”

My experience at CSC reflects inequality at the intersection of race and gender. Were I differently abled, transgendered, muslim or a combination of them, I would experience inequality distinctly differently for each and every way in which I was not a part of the healthy, White, male, Christian normative of American society, where privilege and power reside.

Just as there is uniqueness within that “norm”, there is infinite and overlapping uniqueness outside of it. Intersectionality addresses overlapping social identities and related systems of oppression, domination or discrimination. Potts would deny me my unique experience and voice.

My departure from CSC’s Mother Courage was not bourne of one episode but of a lifetime of experiences of inequality, patriarchy and misogyny. CSC’s Mother Courage was simply the straw to break my silence.

-Tonya Pinkins

 

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Events and Happenings

Erika Dickerson-Despenza Addresses Flint Water Crisis with Cullud Wattah

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Playwright Erika Dickerson-Despenza

There is limited seating left for Erika Dickerson-Despenza’s new play CULLUD WATTAH at The Public Theater. Opening today, Thursday, March 7th and running until Sunday, March 10th in the Public Studio is about three generations of Black women living through the current water crisis in Flint, Michigan.

“It’s been 936 days since Marion’s family has had clean water. When local activists file a class action lawsuit against the city, Marion—a third-generation employee at General Motors—must decide how best to support her two daughters, sister, and mother while lead seeps into the community, their home, and their bodies. As corrosive memories and secrets rise among them, the family wonders if they’ll ever be able to filter out the truth.”

2018 Relentless Award Semifinalist and poet-playwright makes her Public Theater debut with CULLUD WATTAH directed by Lilly Award winner Candis C. Jones; the cast includes Deonna Bouye (Marion), Alana Raquel Bowers (Reesee), Caroline Stefanie Clay (Big Ma), Nikiya Mathis (Ainee), and Kara Young (Plum).

The creative team includes Production Stage Manager Gregory Fletcher, Stage Manager Priscilla Villanueva, and Movement Director Adesola Osakalumi. Along with scenic design by Arnulfo Maldonado, Costume Design by Ntokozo Fuzunina Kunene, lighting Design by Jeanette Oi-Suk Yew, and sound design by Megan Culley

We believe in this work so much we’re giving away 4 tickets to the performances on March 10th. 2 tickets to the matinee and two the evening performance thanks to our founder Drew Shade and actress/playwright Jocelyn Bioh. Go to our Instagram to find out how!

Also, find out more about how you can help the Flint Water Crisis and support this show HERE.

Listen to Erika talk about her work on an episode of Off Book Podcast below

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Events and Happenings

Surely Goodness and Mercy by Chisa Hutchinson Begins Off-Broadway

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Performances begin today, Tuesday February 26th, for the New York premiere of  Surely Goodness and Mercy, presented by Keen Company. A story about an exceptional boy living a troubled life in Newark, NJ who does a good deed for an often unnoticed person.   Sarita Covington, Jay Mazyck, Brenda Pressley, Courtney Thomas, and Cezar Williams star under Jessi D. Hill’s direction.

Set in an under-funded public school in Newark, Surely Goodness and Mercy by rising playwright Chisa Hutchinson, tells the story of a bible-toting boy with a photographic memory who befriends the cantankerous old lunch lady. Against all odds, Tino and Bernadette help each other through the mess of growing up and growing old.  

Surely Goodness and Mercy has spent the last year charming audiences across the country: “Notably absent from Hutchinson’s frank and sobering story: cynicism” – Chicago Reader; “(Surely Goodness and Mercy has) a soul-stirring quality, touching audiences with its sincerity” – Daily Utah Chronicle; “it’s impossible not to like it” – The Salt Lake Tribune. Now, Keen is honored to bring this big-hearted new play to New York for the first time.

Performances for this limited Off-Broadway engagement of Surely Goodness and Mercy will continue through Saturday, April 13th only, with opening night set for Wednesday, March 13th.

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