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Welcome to OpenForum.  We love plays that start a good conversation and there are many ways and places to have that conversation! This is your one-stop place to join in on the discussions going on about all the shows at Forum.

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OpenForum Blog:

On the Bechdel Test (and theatre)

Posted on January 3, 2012 in Female Voices Festival

 

 
 
by Managing Director, Julia Harman Cain (@JuliaHarmanCain)
 
 
 
 
For the uninitiated and curious, the "Bechdel Test" sprang from this comic by Alison Bechdel and was credited to her friend Liz Wallace in 1985.  Here is the gist:
 
Does a movie have the following?
 
1. Two female characters.*
2. Who talk to each other.
3. About something other than a man.
 
That is the whole test. Just to clarify, the Bechdel test does not measure whether a movie is good or interesting or even feminist. Rather, this is a mind-poking way to ponder the presence of women in movies.
 
(For the NPR story on the "Test," click here)
 
The results are nuts. Many of my favorites completely flunk: the original Star Wars, 12 Angry Men, Schindler’s List, The Dark Knight, The Lord of the Rings, Raiders of the Lost Ark, The Princess Bride, Shawshank Redemption, Interview with a Vampire, and Inception. Even most early episodes of The West Wing and Law & Order. You know what does pass? 10 Things I Hate About You. And Mean Girls. (So there.)
 
A corollary: if you have to wrack your brain, then it may as well not pass. Maybe Claudia and that older lady vampire talk when they are getting burned to death in the thing. But since I’m not sure and I own the movie, it is not a clear pass.
 
An inverse: when people give you crap about the standard being too tough, try the rule in reverse (as in, with men). Everything will pass. Everything. Likely in the first five minutes of running time. Including Sesame Street
As Anita Sarkeesian of Feminist Frequency points out here, the absence of nuanced, named female character is a systemic problem. And the rule forces us to realize that such a problem exists. Movies are predominantly by men, for men, and about men. Which is not necessarily the fault of a given person or studio. But these movies sell and receive awards, and thus the formula goes unquestioned. Or unnoticed.
 
I am not a film expert, but a one-gender, one-sexuality perspective seems like bad business. Why limit your product and potential audience? Why ignore 50% of the pool of actors and directors and writers? It makes no sense to me. How does that forward film as a medium? How does that encourage advances in writing and style? How does it even make the maximum amount of money?
 
Moreover, creating an exclusive, gender-biased world breeds sameness in what that world produces. It yields predictable dynamics, predictable storylines. And seasons with No Strings Attached and Friends With Benefits back to back. 
 
 
The theater rule: in my spin on the test, you pick a theatre. And test the season. 
 
We gave that a whirl here at Forum and the results were interesting. Since we have moved to Round House, here is what passed: Angels in America, Amazons and Their Men, Scorched, Headscarf and the Angry Bitch, and for colored girls… One Flea Spare passes in the last scene; while it has not started rehearsal yet, The Language Archive should pass. bobrauschenbergamerica and Mad Forest do not.
 
So what does this mean? I would guess that it is less a reflection of one theatre and more a reflection of our community as a whole.
 
Taking classics out of the mix, plays tend to fare better than movies. By a pretty solid margin. Check out the top-five longest running Broadway shows. I feel like an insane person arguing this, but Cats passes  -- “Memory” is a duet with two felines. A Chorus Line, Les Miserables, and Chicago pass. Phantom of the Opera is on the edge, but does pass (ballet scene). So do Rent and Wicked.
 
For a more fun example, so do a lot of the shows that I have seen in DC. They pass easily too. As in, I don’t have to pore over the script or call someone who worked on the show. I can remember a precise conversation -- even in a show like House of Gold that I saw once over a year ago -- that passes the test. Which says to me that the test is not just about equity of representation.
 
When all of a play’s characters -- not just the Bruce Waynes or Han Solos, but men and women alike -- are complex, multifaceted, and weird, I remember them. There is a reason that I can quote Mean Girls like a champ. That movie is no Citizen Kane, but the female characters are actually unique and weird. Art that captures a broad slice of the world, and actually does so in a complex way, tends to stick with you. Try out the test on the last five winners of the Pulitzer Prize in Drama. Not only do they pass, but you also can probably remember exact lines or moments.  Theater is not perfect (and anecdotes are not statistics), but maybe movies should take a hint.
 
In essence, the test is not the be-all-end-all. And plenty of incredible films and plays do not pass it, which by no means renders them less incredible. But the test is also a way to stay aware of how far we have to go. A way to question what is produced and funded and celebrated. A reminder of what we are seeking. Not just a 50/50 gender split on the cast list. But a cast that feels like our world. Characters that are complete and memorable. A world that is not just equal, but detailed.
 
-----
 
* Characters” is the key word, to me. Two female extras in line at Starbucks are not characters. Those three blonde girls in the different colored dresses in Beauty and the Beast are not either. In fact, the “Mo Movie Measure” stipulates that the female characters need to have names. Whoa there. 
 
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Posted by bazrlpb on 02/17/12 | Reply
Does for colored girls actually pass? I haven't read it in awhile but (a) it has no scenes and (b) it's almost entirely about men. I actually think "for colored girls" is a really good example of the *limits* of the Bechdel test (which are almost as fascinating as the spotlight the test shines)
Posted by Isaac on 01/10/12 | Reply
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Q & A with FOR COLORED GIRLS... Director Jamil Jude

Posted on December 16, 2011 in Season 8

 

by Artistic Director, Michael Dove (@michaeldove) with Jamil Jude (@mrjdjude)
 
 
 
 
 
 
As we open for colored girls who have considered suicide / when the rainbow is enuf  I wanted to get a few thoughts from the show's director and founder of Colored People's Theatre Collective, Jamil Jude.
 
 
MICHAEL DOVE:  What led you to wanting to direct this play? How does it connect to the founding of Colored People's Theatre Collective?
 
JAMIL JUDE:  I wanted to direct this show for a couple of reasons: 
 
I was really inspired by a reading of the show I saw at Prince George's Community College in 2009. I had the chance to meet Ntozake at the reading. Even in old age and declining health, she embodied the spirit of a Goddess and the security of self that I admire in women (so very much like Sechita!)
 
In 2010, Tyler Perry's version came out and it was nothing like the beautiful play I heard read. I wanted an opportunity to show people what the play could be. I wanted a chance to bring people back to the beauty of the poetry. I also had an amazing choreographer I wanted to work with. 
 
Colored People's Theatre Collective; we tried to devise a show ourselves in early 2010 but our applications for space went unanswered. This play, for the obvious and also for the not so obvious, fits our mission exactly. Can this play, which is so distinctly about women of color, transcend the use of the "N" word and other cultural references and illuminate the universality of the piece.
 
So, in short (lol) that's why I wanted to do this piece.
 
 
MD:  What was the experience of the first production, in the Fringe, like?
 
JJ:  The Fringe production was a HUGE learning experience. Fringe has its own set of rules and restrictions, and at times, we found that hard to work around. On the other hand, we were SO thankful for the support we received from our Venue host and the rest of the Fringe team. We really felt like we belonged in the DC community with the amount of love and support we received. Opening night had to be the single-most rewarding moment of my artistic career and definitely set CPT off on the right foot!
 
 
MD:  The show has really evolved since I saw it in the Summer. In fact, I've been surprised by and excited about the fairly radical changes you've brought to it. Can you talk a bit about the re-conception of the story and how that came about?
 
JJ:  When we talked about putting the show up a second time, we wanted to keep the fun we had this summer but present something a little different to reflect the growth, as a company but also as a community. 
 
Also, Lady and Brown, Nicole Brewer, is happily expecting her first child! AND IT'S A GIRL! When our 8th "for colored girl" was added to the mix, we needed to find a way to address our extra cast member. I had this idea of a baby shower and liked it but didn't know if it would work. 
 
Jacqueline Lawton provided us with a really amazing dramaturgy packet for the show. In the packet there were quotes from Ntozake where she spoke about wanting to present a piece that can counter the emotionless, contraceptive talk young women were receiving as they matured through life. Her play removes the mystical/romantic ideas we have of growing up and shows us the reality of life. Life is beautiful, painful, delicate, complicated and magical and this play captures it all! 
 
As I sat back down with the play after having read Jacqueline's packet, the shower idea seemed to work even better! Let's use the play, a play that would have still been new when Nicole was born, and let's pass it on to her baby. Let's allow the play to guide the future generations of young women much like Nicole's mom, her friends, and their generation were shaped by the play's experiences. Our collection of stories will be passed along to the future in a series of gifts, poems, stories, dance and reality!
 
 
MD:  We met when you were working at Arena Stage. Since then, you've moved up to Minneapolis to be the Producer in Residence at Mixed Blood Theatre. What sort of work are you doing up there and how does that community compare or contrast to the DC area?
 
JJ:  The Minneapolis theatre community is so dynamic! There are artists working in every direction of the genre and doing great work. It feels so good to be a part of that community. 
 
Mixed Blood is dedicated to using theatre to address the artificial barriers that keep people from succeeding in America. Very much like CPT, Mixed Blood sees theatre as a vehicle for change and social justice. 
 
This season we are looking for ways to revolutionize the way people access theatre. Through Radical Hospitality, we offer no-cost admission to all of our main-stage programming! We've seen an amazing amount of support for the program and our audiences have begun to better reflect the America we live in. 
 
I head up our discussion series. These include our blog, nightly-post show audience conversations, speaker series, lobby post-it notes and social media. Talking to audiences about the art is my favorite part of theatre and I get to do it every night!! 
 
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MAD FOREST: notes from the dramaturg

Posted on October 11, 2011 in Mad Forest

 

 

 

 

By Mad Forest dramaturg, Hannah Hessel (@hanvnah)

 

From the program for Mad Forest

 

On the plain where Bucharest now stands there used to be “a large forest crossed by small muddy streams…It could only be crossed on foot and was impenetrable for the foreigner who did not know the paths…The horsemen of the steppe were compelled to go round it, and this difficulty, which irked them so, is shown by the name… Teleorman – Mad Forest.”

– A Concise History of Romania 
 
 
The late 1980s were a time of political uprooting in Eastern Europe. Many countries, under Communist rule, were suddenly making changes towards democracy. In many of these places the changes came out of organization and order; the steps can be understood and followed. This was not the case in Romania. In 1989 the revolution took people by surprise. It wasn’t that the people weren’t interested in change, or hadn’t expected it at some point, but the violence, suddenness and bloodiness of the revolt was stunning. It was in that sudden aftermath that playwright Caryl Churchill and director Mark Wing-Davey visited, explored and imaginatively recorded the world they saw.
 
Romania, under Communist rule since the late 1940s, was ruled by Nicolae Ceausescu, the general party secretary. He ruled as a dictator creating harsh rules and a society built around paranoid fear. The party line was one of dedication to Ceausescu, highlighting his love and devotion to the Romanian people. Economically the people were suffering. In the early Eighties Ceausescu had enforced food rationing. The official monthly ration contained just over two pounds of flour, sugar and meat, one pound margarine, and five eggs.  There was never a guarantee that food would be available in the shops.  The unhappiness and oppression of the people existed as a bubbling under the surface. It was as if everyone in the country was waiting and no one was acting. When it did start, it happened suddenly and with such quick rage that it is difficult for historians looking back on it to track. Just a couple of years following the revolution a poll was taken of the Romanian population asking if they felt that the events of December 1989 were indeed a revolution, only 46% felt that it was. A similar poll taken in 1999 had the results at 49%.
 
The atmosphere in Bucharest post-revolution was one of relief and confusion when Churchill, Wing-Davey, a designer and 10 student actors arrived at the end of March 1990.  They listened, questioned, observed and explored the city. On returning Churchill compiled the research and wrote Mad Forest.
 
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What does this revolution mean?

Posted on October 10, 2011 in Mad Forest

 

 

by Mad Forest director, Michael Dove (@michaeldove)

(updated, 10/10/2011, 2:37 pm EST)

I'm starting to realize that I've had revolutions on my mind for a really long time, now.

 

In part, it's our current production of Mad Forest, which takes place in Romanian Revolution 1989. Then there was Monday's (Re)Acts performance where 8 artists created short works in reaction to different revolutions throughout history. On top of that, we've had a few major events cross our news channels over the past year: "Arab Spring," the UK riots, and the Occupy Wall Street protests happening in New York and all over the country.

But going back even further, I'm realizing that the term and concept of "revolution" have been fairly central aspects of my life since before adolescence. I grew up in the Shenandoah Valley, Virginia, where you couldn't walk 10 steps without tripping over a Civil War landmark plaque or battleground. Add to that the fact that my parents choose Williamsburg, Virginia as our twice-a-year vacation spot where your head is constantly filled with tales of the British Colonization and the American Revolution. After that, I'm realizing that it was no coincidence that I've found myself in Washington, DC, surrounded by American History relics inspired by our great war against our oppressors. 

So, taking a step back from all of this, I've been asking myself "what does  'revolution' mean, exactly? Are all of these current and historical events related? What part of our human nature causes us to revolt?"

I remember from my Latin class in high school that the word "revolution" is from revolution, "a turn around." It's a distinct and fundamental shift away from a system or an idea. The popular (or even, perhaps, romanticized) notion of a revolution is a populist movement against oppression. Revolution from a destructive tyrant, from a repressive system of social/religious beliefs, or maybe an industrial revolution that changes nearly all aspects of daily life.

Relating this concept to how I view the types of plays I feel are important and the types of stories Forum Theatre is focused on telling, I'm looking at the "what does 'revolution' mean" question in terms of "how we can live together, better." I think, deep down, these events happen when a group of people realize that there HAS to be a better way. A movement that says "We are not being treated the way we feel we should." 

With Mad Forest we have a story about the perception of a revolution that leaves everyone asking "what exactly happened? Who really led this movement?" And while many people wanted the change that revolution promised, what came after was a release of pent-up emotions and feels that became a whole new challenge.

As we look to the futures of Egypt, Libya, and the other Arab Spring revolutions, as we look to the legacies of our own American conflicts, the results of the revolutions discussed in our (Re)Acts night, and as we ponder the outcomes of the Occupy Wall Street movement, we have to constantly ask ourselves how these events can be used for good and how can they bring us together as a society that treats its members more fairly.

-----------------------------------------------------------

 

An Egyptian activist named Mohammed Ezzeldin explained what he saw was the connection between Occupy Wall Street and the protests against Hosni Mubarak.

 

Updates/conributions:

Our friend Ari Roth (@arirothdc), the Artistic Director at Theater J, send me these two news stories that felt relevant to this conversation:


Egyptian Prime Minister Essam Sharaf promises investigation of violence (Washington Post)

 

 

 

Revolution: Egyptians return to Tahrir Square (CBS News)

 

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Creating an OpenForum for MAD FOREST

Posted on September 30, 2011 in Mad Forest

 

By Mad Forest dramaturg, Hannah Hessel (@hanvnah)
 
Following the opening night performance of Mad Forest, the lobby was buzzing with conversation. There’s nothing new about an opening night reception being loud but there was something new that night. A friend noted to me at the end of the night that it’s the only opening night she could remember where all the chatter was about the play. 
 
People want to talk about Mad Forest
 
We want people to talk about Mad Forest. We always want people to talk about our productions. That’s one of the reasons we make the producing choice’s we make. It’s the reason we have the OpenForum discussion series, it’s the reason we have this blog. At Forum, the work doesn’t just happen on the stage, it happens in the audience. We always hope that the work on our stages leaves audiences with questions that they want to ask. Theatre is a questioning art. Since it happens both communally and individually, no theatrical experience is completely shared. 
 
The communal individualism is even clearer in our production of Mad Forest where seated in the round no audience member experiences the same thing. And then you have a playwright like Caryl Churchill who writes her plays to force the questions, not explain her own answers. She was quoted early in her career as saying:
 
“Playwrights don’t give answers, they ask questions...We need to find new questions, which may help us answer the old ones or make them unimportant and this means new subjects and new form.” (Churchill, 1960).  
 
In Mad Forest she lives up to her quote. The form and the subject both implore the audience to think, to question and to turn the questions inward. 
 
All of this is to say Mad Forest is the perfect OpenForum play. There’s one downside though: the play is long and the last metro leaves at 11:46pm.  This leaves under a half hour (leaving time to go to the restroom and walk to the metro) for an OpenForum discussion on our typical Thursday night OpenForum. Sure, some folks have cars, some folks bike and some folks live in Silver Spring. They can stay later and keep the discussion going. But I do none of those things. I need to catch that metro. I’ll be there though. I’ll be leading the OpenForum audience discussion sessions but they will be short. And we need more time - there are too many questions, too many thoughts, too many opportunities for audience members to connect to each other and to the work. 
 
So, OpenForum blog readers here I turn to you. I need your help trying to figure out the best way to turn our OpenForum discussions electronic. I want to find a way to have the discussions on the audiences own time. To let them get home, check in on the kids, get a drink, do whatever their routine is and still have the opportunity to check in, to ask their questions and to connect. 
 
The easiest option is asking people to comment on a blog entry like this one, or asking them to comment on a thread in facebook discussions. But neither of those options feel right to me (but don’t let that stop you from commenting below). Here’s why they don’t feel right: OpenForum is a safe space. When you are in one of those discussions it feels personal, private, what you say you are sharing only with the people right in front of you - they people who experienced the production with you that night. The internet? Not such a safe space. What you say will be there forever, anyone can read it. Though you can say things anonymously, you aren’t creating connections that way - and we all know that people who feel shy about sharing will not comment, which means important community voices are left unheard. 
 
So other options? Google+ Hangout? Would that make sense? It wouldn’t allow for people to join in on their own time, it would have to be scheduled. 
 
Here’s my thought: email. Simple and sweet. You want to participate? Send your email to me at hannah@forumtheatredc.org. For every five emails I get I will send out an email starting the conversation chain. If you participate, this means you will suddenly have a private conversation in your inbox with me (or other Forum company members) an four other audience members you may or may not know.  You can ask your questions and hear other people’s thoughts in a non-public space.  Plus, you can still make it home before midnight!
 
What do you think? Let us know below or by email. 
 
Want to participate? Send an email to hannah@forumtheatredc.org and in the subject line write “OpenForum.” Don’t want to share your real email? Create a fake one. It’s easy!
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