ProfileIssue: Sagittarius 08 & Honest Self Expression

Saying It Like It Is

kblume_lg_236“Kathryn Blume is Al Gore on crack. With red hair. And a uterus.” 

I’ve been called a lot of things in my years as an actor and activist: A quirky Sarah Jessica Parker. A commie pinko. A hopium toker. Adorable.

You’ve got to figure with reactions like that, you must at least be getting someone’s attention. The paradox of doing politically-oriented theater, which also strives to be high quality art, is that you’re trying to get someone’s attention without looking like you are. You’re trying to encourage your audience to be mindful of a relevant issue by telling a story so good, they won’t be consciously aware that you’re trying to teach them something.

Is this a challenge for me? Absolutely. But it is also deeply exciting when the balance is just right. In my work as a solo performer, that means treating the gravest of issues – the Iraq war and global warming - with a comedic hand, but an honest heart. I’ve learned that if you can make people laugh, particularly at your own expense, then you can get away with saying pretty much anything – especially if you’re open and truthful.

The value of creating that kind of space for honesty is that an artist can end up saying something her audience was perhaps thinking, but hadn’t spoken aloud. They might not even have been willing to admit it to themselves.

kathrynblumeinboycottof_200Kathryn Blume in "The Boycott" officeFor example, in my current show, The Boycott, the farcical story of the First Lady of the U.S. launching a nationwide sex strike to combat global warming, is interwoven with my personal account of writing the show, and struggling with the emotional impact of living on a planet in serious peril. I’ve had many audience members tell me that they feel the same kind of despair and fear for the future of the world that I talk about in my show, but they’ve never expressed it to anyone else. It’s a relief and a lessening of pressure to hear someone else acknowledge those feelings in public.

message_from_gandhi_200Kathryn receives message from GandhiI've also discovered the imperative of leaving your audience with a concrete sense of hope and possibility. Intractable as many problems can seem, if you can give someone even a glimmer that the work they need to do will have an impact, give them a sense of a shred of effectiveness, it’s amazing what they can set their passions to and accomplish.

I feel my job is to say to people “Here is the truth of how things are. Now this is how it can be. This is the world we can create and we are capable of making it happen."

I don’t mean to sound Pollyannaish with these ideas – nor am I speaking from a place of mere theory. I’ve been convinced of what the arts can achieve since my experience as Co-Founder of the Lysistrata Project. In early 2003, right before the U.S. attacked Iraq, my friend Sharron Bower and I organized over 1000 readings of the ancient Greek anti-war comedy Lysistrata in 59 countries and all 50 U.S. states. 

Profile Archives (total entries: 38)

Leo 09 - The Leadership Issue

Rebecca Lolosoli Provides Safe Haven for Vulnerable Women in Kenya

polaroid_rebecca_lolosoli_181Rebecca Lolosoli is much more than the matriarch of Umoja Village, an all women's community located in the Samburu District of Kenya. She put herself on the line for others…her life has been threatened for going against the indigenous Samburu traditions and culture. What started in 1991 as a group of 16 raped women, denounced and outcast by their families, on a patch of sun-dried, neglected land, granted to them by the Kenyan government at the behest of Rebecca is today a unique group of 50 flourishing, happy women and girls, orphans and widows and even a few beloved goats. (read more)

Aries 08

Nina DiSesa Shares Uncensored Tactics for Winning at Work in Her Book “Seducing the Boys Club”

ninadisesa_165Why are there still so few women in top management positions in the corporate world? Nina DiSesa, Chairman of McCann Erickson in New York, thinks it is because women don't understand men and tend to follow the rules and this doesn't work. She explains that women need to learn how to handle men in business in much the same way we do in our personal relationships - through what she calls S&M, seduction and manipulation. Nina says this has nothing to do with sex, and that in the end, everyone wins. In her book "Seducing the Boys Club" she gives the rest of us who think that all we need to do is work hard to get ahead, a swift kick in the butt!

Cancer 10

Linda Furiya Writes About Growing Up Japanese in the Midwest

linda_furiya_150“Many of the meals I ate at home in rural Indiana were Japanese. My mom used what ingredients she could get her hands on then put it out on the table effortlessly. The sensual aspect of Asian food and Mid-west sustainability is ingrained in me. Those are the basic roots of why I love cooking, “ says Linda.

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