online salon for art, news, essays, and organizing action

Category: Theater

  • Testifying Through Presence: Handmaids at the Maine State House

    Testifying Through Presence: Handmaids at the Maine State House

    On Friday March 28 of 2025, members of the theater group of The Audacity traveled from their various home towns of the midcoast to the Maine State House in Augusta, donned the red robes and white bonnets that visually refer to Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale, and stood outside the hearing room where the Judiciary Committee of the Maine State Legislature received testimony regarding L.D. 975 and other bills that would outlaw and criminalize abortion in the state of Maine. The visual testimony of this group augmented the written transcript of testimony by 34 members of The Audacity submitted to the public record for the same hearing. Multiple members of the theater group had lived through a time in American history during which abortion had been criminalized and women punished for making choices about their own bodies.

    Protesters from Midcoast Maine assemble at the Maine State Legislature outside the hearing on bills that would criminalize abortion in the State of Maine -- Friday, March 28 2025

    Participant Lisa Kushner arrived alone:

    “I attended that event dressed in a red costume. When I walked up outside the statehouse there were 2 small groups of people, anti abortion Christians and pro abortion supporters. Those against the bills were loudly chanting slogans like ‘my body my choice’. There were more young people than I’d seen at other demonstrations. I joined another red cloaked person who was there on her own. I was looking for The Audacity group but didn’t know where they were meeting up.

    After about 15 minutes the red cloaked white bonnet maidens came from the Cross building in single file through both groups of protesters. A silence occurred. It was a dramatic moment.

    The red tape covering their mouths was really effective.”

    Nancy Davis describes the day:

    “I was part of the handmaid‘s group who went to Augusta on Friday. We met outside the Cross  building a little after nine, finished getting our red outfits on and strolled through the building to the capital. We were a big stand out in the crowd as we approach the capital building. Lots of people took our picture and news crews filmed us entering the building. unfortunately, the hearing was in a small room and couldn’t accommodate groups of people. People who wished to speak, had to sign in, declare if they were in favor or opposed to the law and wait their turn to speak one by one. Of course they chose the people who were opposed to abortion go first. So we stood for a couple of hours waiting and still realized we had a long time to go so most people left to go home. Three of us were interviewed by Channel 8 news. However, I watched, and unfortunately, only one of us was quoted and in just a few words. I was the only one filmed in the story, although the two women with me were much more articulate than I.”

    Kimberly Krejsa adds:

    “We gathered together in a cold, windy parking garage.  Looking furtively around, we quickly put on our disguises; red gowns, white bonnets. Briskly, we walked to the rendezvous point, gathering more maidens as we approached the government building.  Protesters gathered outside, yelling and chanting at each other; cameras were turned in our direction as we solemnly walked into the building.  We were recognized and warmly greeted by several folks.  We could hear people murmuring about our costumes as we walked about, silently protesting the extremity of these 7 bills.  People signed up to argue their case, one by one, in front of the legislative committee.  Passions were high, arguments were eloquent and the committee was patient and kind.  Everyone had a chance to speak if they did not mind waiting for hours.  Some of the personal testimony was heart-breaking as people shared their personal stories.  It was good trouble.”

    Seven members of The Audacity dressed as Atwood Handmaids in front of the legislative hearing room in which bills proposing to criminalize abortion and otherwise restrict it were being considered.  Date: March 28 2025.

    Cynthia Stancioff concludes:

    “We were sort of struggling with costumes in the wind, not all that unified in appearance, and without any choreography of our movements. So I think we looked like a small group of distinctly-dressed, mostly-old ladies (one childbearing age person among us), there to make an impression – but doing nothing in particular. It was clear some people recognized the trope, but there wasn’t news coverage as far as I could tell, so we impressed a hundred people or so? Maybe I missed a tv camera or something though.


    “I felt like we needed some plan (marching orders, as it were) of how to walk around, like single file, heads down, – didn’t have to be fancy to be dramatic, but we didn’t take advantage of the theatrical possibilities! A fair number of people did take pictures of us, and we met with only approval, no opposition that I could see.”

  • Testimony at Rockland City Council on The Dangers of Police Cooperation with ICE

    The following is a video record of the testimony of of Abi Morrison, Annegien Zuidema, and Peter Yanz to the Rockland City Council in Maine on March 10, 2025. Video credit: Marjorie Strauss. Transcript follows.


    You have a choice: a choice between words and actions.

    The resolution affirming community trust and clarifying law enforcement responsibilities claims that Rockland police will not participate in targeting people based on immigration status. But this council has already taken federal money, the Operation Stonegarden Grant funds, and those will compel our law enforcement officers to do exactly that.

    On January 29, 2025 the president signed S. 5 into law. Under this law, anyone merely suspected of being undocumented can be detained, and also if they are also just suspected of having committed a crime. There is no conviction necessary; there is no judicial review. Anyone who isn’t white is at risk. Once detained, they disappear into a system with no transparency and no oversight. Families don’t know where their loved ones are. They don’t know if they will ever see them again.

    And now, for the first time in history, our government is using Guantanamo Bay to detail immigrants who were apprehended here, on U.S. soil. This is completely unprecedented, it is completely illegal, and it is happening now. The administration refuses to provide notices of transfer. Detainees are living in daily fear of being moved without warning, without reason, and without recourse. They are cut off from their family, cut off from their attorneys, literally cut off from hope.

    And this is what we do know about conditions at Guantanamo Bay thanks to an American Civil Liberties Union lawsuit: detainees are confined in solitary, windowless cells for at least 23 hours each day. Detainees are allowed extremely limited time outside their cells. They are constantly shackled and invasively strip-searched. They are never permitted to contact family members.

    Guards engage in verbal and physical abuse including restraining people to a punishment chair for hours, withholding water as retaliation, threatening to shoot detainees, fracturing an individual’s hand by slamming a radio into it. People are losing 10-20 pounds over the span of several weeks. They can’t sleep because of what they’ve endured there. These degrading conditions and extreme isolation have led to several suicide attempts as well.

    People are getting picked up who have a green card, who are here legally. This isn’t some far-away injustice. This is here and now. The rate at which Customs and Border Patrol are picking up people doubled just in January.

    The council can’t have it both ways. It can’t claim to stand for justice with a resolution while taking money from a system that is based on cruelty. If we are going to truly stand by this resolution, then we have to act. We have to return the Operation Stonegarden grant before the new fiscal year. If we don’t, this blood is on your hands.

  • I Just Proposed a Play about Fascism to My Local Theater

    And I am jazzed about it.

    Hello, everyone. My name is James Cook, I’m a sociologist and a theater nerd and facilitator of The Audacity, and I’m making a pitch tonight to an area theater on the importance of mounting a play that deals with the rise of fascism. Here’s the pitch:

    And here’s the text of my proposal, along with a pitch and a cast list:

    God, I hope I get it.

  • Photo, Video, and Media Coverage of The Audacity’s  2/22/25 Camden Die-In

    Photo, Video, and Media Coverage of The Audacity’s 2/22/25 Camden Die-In

    Shortly after noon on February 22, 2025, members of the theater working group of The Audacity gathered in front of the Camden Opera House to die.

    As Oliver Kaplan of the University Denver notes in an essay for Political Violence at a Glance, the “die-in” is a time-honored method for making hidden violence apparent. Classic research on conformity has identified a troubling pattern: people are less inclined to be troubled by violence committed against people if that violence can be hidden from the senses. Die-ins don’t force passers-by to confront actual scenes of violence, but they do force people to symbolically confront that violence.

    The Camden Conference had selected its theme of “Democracy Under Threat: Global Perspectives” before the election of Donald Trump and the rapid descent into authoritarianism, bigotry, and corruption of his first month in office. The Audacity’s theater group decided to use a die-in to augment the conference by bringing the subject of democracy home, and to draw attention to those people who are already dying due to the disintegration of democracy under the hammer of the Republican Party in control of the House, the Senate, the White House, and an increasing share of the federal judiciary.

    Under a large tombstone declaring that “People Are Already Dying,” people lay with smaller tombstones reminding passers-by of the ways that the disabling of democracy leads to deadly consequences for real people.

    [Photo Credits: Dora Lievow]

    As conference-goers left for lunch, a demonstrator read the following statement:

    People Are Already Dying,

    and uncounted numbers more are

    threatened by the wrecking of

    American democracy.

    We Stand in Solidarity with

    the theme of the 2025 Camden

    Conference, “Democracy Under

    Threat,” and welcome attendees.

    We Will Exercise Our Rights

    to identify the threats to democracy

    and to tirelessly advocate for an end

    to this anti-democratic takeover.

    Please Join Us in conference

    halls, classrooms, and the streets.

    We must stand together or fall alone.

    We Are The Audacity, taking

    Creative Action Together.

    Occasionally, someone changed their mind, as happens in this video clip from Chris Wolf, reporting for the Pen Bay Pilot:

    Chris Wolf’s February 22 reporting on the protest can be found here, and Daniel Dunkle’s reporting on the same day for the Midcoast Villager can be found here.

    “This Could Be You,” reminds one gravestone captured in this photo set from Becca Shaw Glaser: