Monday, March 20, 2006

Blind Date




Bill T. Jones is blogging on the Company's website (link on title) and is worth checking out. I originally saw Blind Date on March 4th at Alverno College. It was performed to an enthusiastic, packed house - who literally sat in stunned silence at the end of it before breaking into frantic applause. My dear 78 year old Mother-in-Law said it was the "best live performance she had ever seen in her life." This is high praise from a woman who has see a lot.

The evening before there was a panel discussion at Alverno, "Patriot Acts: Patriotism in the Era of the Patriot Act." Moderaterd by Amy Shapiro (Prof. of Philosophy, Alverno) it included Bill, along with Lt. Colonel Clark Backus (Prof. of Military Science, Marquette), Karine Mareno-Taxman (Asst. U.S. Attorney in WI), Sandra Graham (Prof. of Psychology, Alverno and Minister, United Church of Christ) and Roger Quindel (Milw. County Supervisor).

It was an interesting group...but I felt it never got off the ground because the audience (and perhaps the panelists) were confused by the title....taking the idea of the Patriot Act - literally the document itself - and tripping up on the fact that they didn't understand it enough to talk about it.

I wished that the discussion could have gone more in the direction of what one does in an age of undue restrictions - how might one retain her patriotism (or define it) during a time of avid disagreement with a government that seems to demand that patriotism be defined in terms of the corporate, the powerful, and the political....

The good thing was that all of these ideas about framing patriotism and leadership and difference were in the forefront of my brain as I sat watching the performance. The company contains these ideas - using movement, music and text together in a way that is powerful. It is a visual unfolding of the questions. It will stay with me for awhile.

These are confusing times.

1 comment:

michael said...

That would be a great panel. It is my patriatism that makes me angry about the lies, but I don't feel like this is recognized.