Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

niyad

(119,939 posts)
Sat Oct 15, 2022, 12:35 PM Oct 2022

Black Women Lead: From the Stage to the Streets


Black Women Lead: From the Stage to the Streets
10/9/2022 by Amanda Brown Lierman and LaTosha Brown


https://msmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/potus-955x1024.webp
The seven actors in POTUS. Julie White (left, top), Lilli Cooper, Rachel Dratch, Vanessa Williams, Lea DeLaria, Julianne Hough (front left), Suzy Nakamura. (Jenny Anderson / POTUS)

Sen. Lindsay Graham’s recent introduction of legislation calling for a federal ban on abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy signals the latest wave of attacks on abortion rights since the Supreme Court ruled in June to end Americans’ constitutional right to an abortion. While our focus is on building the leadership capacity and political power of Black people and women, we are struck by the complementary activism taking place in the arts to underscore this moment in history and to inspire progress.

Broadway’s Tony-nominated POTUS, Natalie Moore’s The Billboard and Molly Smith’s upcoming Arena Stage production, My Body No Choice, remind us to trust women as we collectively work to get our republic back on track. POTUS‘ full name is POTUS: Or, Behind Every Great Dumbass Are Seven Women Trying to Keep Him Alive. Written by Selina Fillinger, the play follows the women behind the U.S. president—the ones who keep him safe, upright and successful. It’s farcical and hilarious, but for those of us on the front lines of American activism and political organizing, it’s strikingly grounded in reality. Beyond the satire, the play affirms a vital narrative about the rights, capacity and dignity of Black women in this country. Vanessa Williams’ character in POTUS, despite graduating from Stanford undergrad and Harvard Law, running five nonprofits and solving world hunger, wonders aloud: “When is it going to be enough? When is what we bring going to be enough for us to lead this country?” It’s a question Vice President Kamala Harris has to be asking herself daily—as even from her exalted position, remains a constant target for gendered and racists attacks on her character and ability.

Black women have always had to fight for legitimacy while searching high and low for our authentic narratives to be shown in the light of day. It’s why the arts matter when building a movement. Because we can register every voter in this country and run eminently qualified women of color for high office, but unless we are consistently challenged to dream outside the boxes we’ve been placed in by society, our voices will fall silent.

. . . . . .




The clinic responds with a billboard of its own: “Black women take care of their families by taking care of themselves. Abortion is self-care. #TrustBlackWomen.”
The Billboard. (Haymarket Books)
. . . .




(Arena Stage)

Through our work at Black Voters Matter and Supermajority, we work to strengthen our freedoms in the face of generational headwinds from voter suppression and misinformation, to desperate threats to our election systems and literal attacks on our Capitol. We recognize that simply registering voters and clearing barriers in their path will only get us so far. To truly activate voters, we must activate imaginations—which is why POTUS, and pieces like it, are more important now than ever before.
. . . . .

No matter who we see in our history books or in the news, Black women have always had our hands on the helm of history. From civil rights to the suffrage movement, from the continued fights for workers’ rights to climate action. And still, we sit at the intersection of sexism and racism to be consistently told to sit back down and wait our turn to lead.Our stories are both grand and grounded; humble and historic. But even as they continue to unfold in the real world, we must support them coming to life on stage, on screen and throughout the artistic sphere to confront America’s racism and sexism. The quickest way to manifest the world we hope to create, including imagining more women and people of color in power, is to first see it in our minds. That means telling our stories—and revealing what’s possible to build a country and democracy that truly works for everyone.

https://msmagazine.com/2022/10/09/potus-play-review-the-billboard-my-body-no-choice-black-women-voting-arts-abortion/
Latest Discussions»Alliance Forums»Women's Rights & Issues»Black Women Lead: From th...