Saturday, November 21, 2009

Mick Foley Standing Up for a Kid's Right to Sit Down

The Daily Show had this segment on a man who was fired for expressing his disapproval of gay marriage, and a child who is harassed in school for refusing to stand up for the Pledge of Allegiance because he believes the government should extend marriage rights to gay and lesbian couples.


The Daily Show With Jon StewartMon - Thurs 11p / 10c
Gaywatch - Peter Vadala & William Phillips
www.thedailyshow.com
Daily Show
Full Episodes
Political HumorHealth Care Crisis



In trying to find more information about both cases, I searched the Internet and stumbled upon the Mass Resistance website. I found out that this organization has been characterized as a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center. Their website seems to be devoted to anti-gay content, and as far as I can tell it was there that the video was first published. Here's a story about the incident from the local news in Boston:




Here's the whole video about Will Phillips:

Thursday, November 19, 2009

An AP story on Texas' marriage ammendment

Apparently, the language Texas used to ban any incarnation of gay marriage essentially bans all marriages. Priceless.

Offbeat Bride

Here's a link to Offbeat Bride, a forum featuring less-than-"Traditional" weddings. Worth a look!

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Marriage on the Radio

This past Saturday, Zac and Amelia and Katie and I met and basically discussed our own impressions of marriage and our experiences of weddings. I was struck by a thing about marriage that seems to be a kind of truth behind a lot of things - that there are supposed ideals or rules that define a marriage or even a wedding, but those rules are flexible and change according to people's actual experience. That is, a lot of what marriage seems to entail is a negotiation between people's own personal habits and lifestyles and accommodations to each other, which are in truth quite complicated, and the standard operating procedure that seems to be the "myth" or idea of how things are supposed to be. So the actual experience never matches up to the idea of it; but the idea helps give the experience meaning. Does that make sense?

Also, Zac brought in a clip from an episode of This American Life about what happens in marriage called "The Sanctity of Marriage." You can listen to the whole thing here.

There's also a segment on marriage from the BBC show "In Our Time," which you can find here.

Finally, Amelia's previous video post reminded me of this Carter Family song, which I love. It's called "Single Girl, Married Girl." (There isn't any video, just the song):

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Wish I Were a Single Girl Again



There are many versions of this song out there, dating back to 1904 according to one source. This music video is a little strange, but the sound quality is good and the song is kind of fun.

An editorial from Slate.com...

...considering gay marriage, among other things, a part of Prohibition, and why legalization of these things is coming soon.

Saturday, November 14, 2009

Robyn Ochs, bisexual activist

I saw Robyn speak at a big queer college conference a few years ago. Here are links to an article and a video about her marriage to her partner Peg.

Friday, November 13, 2009

Art and Politics/Let Me Down Easy

For anyone working on the project or who might be considering giving us an interview, here is some information about Anna Deavere Smith, by whose work our project was very much inspired. (There's a YouTube video bar on the side that is supposed to display videos of her work, but for some reason it messes up occasionally. If she's not appearing, just refresh your browser until you see her there.) We won't be using interview material in exactly the same way, but do intend to perform people's words exactly as they spoke them. In our production, this kind of material will be interspersed with dramatic texts and other documentary evidence.

She has been in the news quite a lot lately because of her new production Off-Broadway at Second Stage, entitled Let Me Down Easy. I was fortunate enough to see this as a work in progress a few years ago in Austin, TX, and thought it was fascinating and remarkable.

Today, Anna Deavere Smith gave an interview on NPR's Science Friday, and this evening she'll be a guest on Bill Moyers Journal. I think you can download a Podcast of the Science Friday show, and check your local PBS listings for the time of the Journal. I know that here in Louisville, it's on KET at 10:00 this evening, but there are other times when it will be rebroadcast.

If you're interested in the general topic of "art and politics," here's the archive of Now on PBS devoted to the subject.

Thursday, November 12, 2009

A Little Information on the Current Conversation about Marriage in the United States

I thought it might be useful to write a link-filled post with articles to give some background on the current discourse in the U.S., especially surrounding the issue of LGBT marriage equality.

In my previous post, I mentioned DOMA. The Justice Department is defending the act against suits questioning its constitutionality, but President Obama has issued a statement that the defense is on legal grounds only, and the administration believes the law is discriminatory and should be overturned. I need to research the status of these lawsuits further. I do know that California's Proposition 8 was upheld by the CA Supreme Court. The federal suits that were filed stated that the law made a fundamental change in the state constitution, which would mean that it needed to be approved by the legislature before taking effect.

While this is going on in the courts, the law is also being addressed federally in the legislature. House Democrats proposed, in September, a law they've called the "Respect for Marriage Act" that repeals DOMA.

On the state level, this month the Maine law legalizing same-sex marriage was overturned in a statewide election. The campaigns to overturn these state laws are often run or at least supported by religious organizations. Today in D.C., the Catholic Church threatened to discontinue social programs because of a proposed same-sex marriage law.

It's interesting to consider how the very institution of marriage brings up questions of the relationship between church and state. I think it will be good to spend some time examining more closely the civil vs. religious ideas of what marriage is/should be, and the legal vs. spiritual aspects involved. I wonder in what ways these two sides are fundamentally opposed, and what ground they share, if any. I suspect the relationship is fairly complicated. Like a marriage.

Here's an interesting article that just frames the whole issue in a different way.

Meanwhile, here are some more videos that have been circulating lately from the pro-marriage equality side. (I will admit that I have not yet started to delve very deeply into the arguments of the other side, but do plan to do that. I want to hear what the logic is, even though I personally am very staunchly in favor of marriage equality. I truly am interested--and I think my collaborators are, as well--in making this a wide-ranging discussion so we can hear as many different perspectives as possible on the topic and try to make sense of our differences).






Finally, in honor of the 40th Anniversary of Sesame Street this week, here's Grover and his friend Jesse discussing the very question we're asking:

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

And one more, because posting videos is easy

Something Old, Something New, Something Borrowed ...

Hello, everyone. I apologize for taking quite some time to post an update on here. This semester is a very busy one for me in terms of teaching and trying to write, but I'll try to post notes on our meetings as quickly as possible from now on.

We've had two very productive meetings, and I have to say I'm feeling encouraged and inspired by everyone who's shown interest in participating. The conversations we've had remind me why I think doing this kind of work and using theatre to stimulate dialogue (and vice versa!) seems so vital to me. So thank you so much to everyone who has contributed so far.

In general, as we talk about this and start devising a performance (for one definition of "devising" performance, go here), we seem to be approaching it asking the general question: "What is the institution of marriage, exactly?" It's everywhere in culture and literature, but we want to know what it means. How is it built through language, images and people's experience? How does it change people, and how have people changed the institution over time and across cultures?

Our first meeting - with me, Zac, Amelia and Katie - was spent discussing how we would embark on this project and sharing material we thought we might like to use. We came up with a lot of useful questions and topics for discussion, including:

- marriage as a civil institution vs. marriage as a religious institution
- legal vs. spiritual aspects of marriage
- the difference between "marriage" and "weddings."
- the history of marriage
- the economics of weddings (dowrys, buying gifts, preparations and cost, etc. etc.)
- the role of love in marriage
- monogamy, polygamy, polyamory: what's the significance of only one partner?
- marriage as a loss of independence
- memory and weddings (specifically photographs)
- the "script" and "characters" of weddings and marriage (proposal, ceremony, etc.)
- marriage as a choice or an obligation?
- for whom has marriage been prohibited in other cultures or in the past, and why (between classes, between races, between faiths, etc.)?
- are there other models for marriage? can we find and propose a new model/new rules?
- Objection!! The moment in the wedding where the community is asked to voice an opinion.

At both the first meeting and our meeting with new people from the community this past Saturday, we offered more material we had gathered and read it together.

As an introduction, I brought the actual language from the federal (so-called) "Defense of Marriage Act," which was passed by the 104th Congress. I also shared an Associated Press article that went out after the election in Maine that overturned their state's law legalizing marriage for same-sex couples. I was struck by the terminology used by a man from a Christian legal group who worked to overturn the law: he said they had succeeded in preserving "natural" marriage. I'm interested to hear someone's explanation of what that means.

Zac brought a scene from Moliere's The Miser, and Amelia brought a scene from The Most Fabulous Story Ever Told, by Paul Rudnick. I offered selections from two of Charles Mee's plays that center around marriage, Big Love (based on Euripides' The Suppliants) and A Perfect Wedding (based on A Midsummer Night's Dream).

Among other plays and films we read and discussed: the second act of Our Town, A Fiddler on the Roof, Medea, Othello, My Big Fat Greek Wedding, Monsoon Wedding, Romeo and Juliet, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, and separate songs from Sweeney Todd and Gypsy.

When we had other folks join us this past Saturday, we introduced ourselves and described the project, had a general discussion about the topic, and read and discussed some of the material.

More topics that came up during that conversation:

- even some heterosexual marriages are thought not to "count." What has to happen for a relationship not to be considered a "second class" marriage.
- the statistic we've all heard is that over half of marriages fail.
- people stay together "for the kids" or because they want to have children. What is the root of this?
- the connection between marriage and sex
- Who are weddings for? The couple? Friends and family?
- the association of weddings with comedy in dramatic theory, and how tragedies also deal with marriage, but differently

Amelia brought up a really interesting question: why put a wedding in a play? What dramatic function does it generally serve?

So. We have here an onslaught of questions and ideas, and over the course of the next few months will be discussing these things, interviewing people about them, collecting more information, and trying to shape it all into a performance.

Please, everyone, help us out! Tell us here, in comment form, what your thoughts are on any of these things. Let one of us interview you about marriage. Come to our next public meeting on December 5 at 1:00 in the afternoon.

More to come ...

- Amy

"Prop 8 - The Musical"



Also probably old news. Let's hope I successfully embedded this time.

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

I'm sure most people have seen this...

But it always makes me smile.



More to come!

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Public Meeting This Saturday, November 7

We will have a public meeting this Saturday, November 7 for anyone with interest in participating in our community dialogue about marriage and the theatre project accompanying it.

The meeting will be at 1:00 in the Theatre Building at the corner of Floyd and Warnock in Louisville. We'll be meeting in Room 115, which is to the right as you enter through the Floyd Street lobby.

The agenda is to introduce ourselves, describe the project, read and hear the community's thoughts on some material we hope to use, and finally answer questions, concerns and suggestions you have about this work.

There is free parking on Saturdays in the lot next to our building. Here is a map of the location:


View Larger Map


And here is a link to the TARC trip planner, where you can plug in your address and find out how to get here on the bus.

We hope to see you on Saturday! If you can't attend this meeting, please plan to come to our next public conversation on December 5 at 1:00.

Also, feel free to comment here on the blog at any time, or email with questions or suggestions.