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MIT's Dramashop Presents 'Antiretrovirals and Water Refugees: A Living
Newspaper on Haiti'
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Kayleigh
Boyle, Mary Curtin, and Kay Laguzza with bunraku-style puppets
by Sara Peattie
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For Immediate Release: March 19,
2009
Media Contact: John Bell
Email john.bell.puppeteer@gmail.com
(617) 599-3250
Dramashop Contact: Clinton L. Scroggins
Email clscrog@mit.edu
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Cambridge,
MA...A new puppet, object, and music spectacle
about the politics of global healthcare in Haiti premieres at MIT's Kresge
Little Theater
for a two-week run from April 9 to 17. "Antiretrovirals and
Water Refugees: A Living Newspaper on Haiti" looks at the
past, present, and future of Haiti in terms of the politics of global
healthcare, as refracted through the work of Paul Farmer's Partners
in Health organization and its fight against AIDS. An updating of
the 1930s activist docudramas called Living Newspapers, this show
combines bunraku-style puppets, shadow theater, giant puppets, toy
theater, video and audio sampling, and live brass music to consider the
compelling global nexus
of culture
and history that is Haiti. The production will also feature a series
of post-show discussions about Haiti, healthcare, and the history
of American political theater.
Directed
by MIT guest artist and puppeteer John Bell, "Antiretrovirals
and Water Refugees" is produced by MIT's Dramashop, and features
puppets designed by Boston puppeteer Sara Peattie of the acclaimed
Puppeteers Cooperative. The production's wide-ranging collective
of designers and performers includes MIT theater and visual arts
students and staff, as well as musicians, artists, and performers
from the Boston area.
Just as the 1930s Living Newspapers were an innovative American theater
technique that allowed performers and audiences to consider the serious
challenges of the Depression in a thoughtful and highly entertaining
manner, "Antiretrovirals
and Water Refugees" will examine the story of AIDS in Haiti
in terms of the larger contexts of Haitian history and international
politics, from the stunning complexities of the Haitian Revolution
(the only successful slave rebellion in history) to the development
of post-plantation agriculture, the United States invasion of 1915
(and its celebrated anti-hero, Smedley Butler), the accession of
"Papa Doc" Duvalier,
and the violent upheavals of the 1980s -- all of which, as Paul Farmer
has pointed out, have had an effect on healthcare. The success of
Partners in Health's antiretroviral program in helping Haitians with
AIDS survive emerges as a positive sign for the future possibilities
of global healthcare; but the persistence of the Haitian spirit,
as evidenced in the stories of a Haitian family from the Central
Plateau region, is the true hero of the play.
A special feature of the "Antiretrovirals and Water Refugees" performances will be post-show discussions about Haiti,
global healthcare, and the 1930s Federal Theater Project. These include the following:
- Thursday, April 9: Dr. Sonya Shin, physician volunteer at Partners in Health since 1996, including work in Haiti, Peru and Russia. Dr.
Shin will talk about her work with PIH in Haiti's Central Plateau.
- Friday, April 10: Professor Hanna Rose Shell, of MIT's
Program in Science, Technology, and Society; and the director (with Vanessa
Bertozzi) of "Secondhand
(Pepe)":
a 24-minute tri-lingual film about the materiality of recycled clothes that
flow from the United States to Haiti. The film will be shown in its entirety,
after which Professor Shell will lead a question and answer session.
- Saturday, April 11: Members of RESPE: Ayiti (Research and Engagement Supporting Poverty Elimination in Haiti), who will speak about
their partnership with the rural community of Balan, Haiti and the launch of the grassroots community health clinic in Balan this summer.
- Wednesday, April 15: Kate Greene, Haiti Finance Manager, Partners in Health.
- Thursday, April 16: Susan Quinn, author of "Furious Improvisation: How the WPA and a Cast of Thousands Made High Art out of Desperate Times,"
a presentation and discussion of historic film and slides from the Federal Theatre Project (sponsored by the Center for Advanced Visual Studies, MIT).
John
Bell is a member of the Obie-Award-winning Brooklyn-based theater
company Great Small Works, a Fellow at MIT's Center for Advanced
Visual Studies, and Director of the Ballard Institute and Museum of Puppetry
at the University of Connecticut. Sara Peattie's designs for Puppeteers'
Cooperative puppet spectacles large and small have been a feature
of Boston's First Night Parades for many years, and a central element in
the creation of community-based spectacles across the United States from
Seattle's Bumbershoot Festival to the Lincoln Center Out-of-Doors Festival.
Detailed listings information
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"Antiretrovirals and Water Refugees:
A Living Newspaper on Haiti"
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Thursday through Saturday, April 9-11;
and Wednesday through
Friday, April 15-17 |
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General Admission: $8, Students $6 |
| All shows at 8 p.m.
Post-show discussions at 9:30 p.m |
Kresge
Little Theater, 48 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge |
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Tickets available 45 minutes before showtime at the Kresge
Little Theater boxoffice |
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For advance tickets: http://dramashop.mit.edu/tickets/ |
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Further ticket information: email ds_tickets@mit.edu |
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