February 27,1997 The Banner Page 3 Perspectives Letters to the Editor Hodges’s letter off target Dear Editor, I am writing in response to Mr. (J.M.)Hodges’s misinformed and irrational criticism of Rob Bowen, director of “Angels in America.” As a member of the company, I take personal offense to having my ex periences and those of my colleagues - extolled by an individual whom I have never met and who possess no firsthand knowledge of our pro cess. As I tear apart your criticisms, Mr. Hodges, I would like to give you a few lessons in responsible and effective writing that may be of some use, should you ever again feel the need to publicly express your opinions. The first lesson is never to pretend to possess knowledge of a subject to which you have no first-hand expe rience. In this letter I am not going to touch upon any subjects to which I have no reliable source of infor mation. You see, as a member of the company, I am in a position to speak knowledgeably and honestly about the specifics of our process. You, Mr. Hodges, do not enjoy this same privilege, yet your letter im plies that you are a reliable author ity on all things relating to our show. This is simply not possible, because, as you said yourself, our rehearsals were closed. You make vague and misleading statements concerning the amount of time we spent in rehearsal, and how Bowen “treats them like slaves.” Yet you fail to state any sources at all to back up your claim about our supposed over-working. I sure as hell know you never asked my opinion. Hy pocrisy. Do I smell another lesson brewing? Had you done any real research into this argument, you would have discovered that we have an actor in this company that is a member of the Equity Union, which exists to protect actors from the kind of treatment you allege and has strict rules regarding the amount of hours that can be worked. I can assure you, we came nowhere close to violating those rules. I would remind you that all the actors were made aware of the rehearsal sched ule at auditions, and we chose to participate. The second lesson that I would like to impart, Mr. Hodges, is that a half-truth is as bad as a bald-faced lie when it omits pertinent infor mation that is necessary for a com plete understanding of the issue. You bring up the issue of a black character in the play being played by someone who is white. Yet, in a disgusting attempt to sway your readers’ emotions to issues of rac ism, you conveniently omit the fact that a black woman was cast in this role originally. For reasons that are only her and the director’s busi ness, the person had to leave us late in the process. I am fairly sure that you were aware of the original casting choice, Mr. Hodges, but I am respectful enough not to bring up that issue in a public forum. You also assert that a scene containing nudity was “cut out.” A blatant lie. The scene is there in entirety. True, given the nature of the space we work in, the nudity proved inap propriate, but nudity is not the point of the scene. If you believe that the point of the scene is nudity, you should probably not consider theater criticism as a future en deavor. You most certainly have the right to criticize a show based upon the final product, but when you make personal attacks oa a member of our company and ac cuse others of lying with no rational basis for your attacks, it is disre spectful and childish. When you must resort to name- calling in your writing, it is a good sign that you lack confidence in you statement. Anyone who truly believes in themselves can assert their opinions respectfully and with dignity and still make a point. Hypocrisy is the greatest enemy of effective persuasion, Mr. Hodges. It invalidates your arguments and just makes you look stupid. If you had botheted to do your home work , you would have discovered that Bowen is a wonderful director who cares about his company and the message of the show. Rob is a caring individual and one of the best directors that I have ever had the privilege to work with. It almost seems that you have not really told us why you are so upset. If you truly have a valid criticism, let’s hear it. We have worked hard. We deserve it. By the way, “flop” does not usually refer to shows which sell out every performance and receive standing ovations at every curtain call. Josh Olsen Sophomore, undeclared More ‘Angels’ Dear Editor, Having been in the audience for two performances of Theatre UNCA’s production of “Angels in America,” I feel the need to re spond to J.M. Hodges’s letter to the editor that appeared in the Feb. 20 issue of The Banner. A total of two African-American students auditioned for the role of Belize, and Rob Bowen did give the role to one of these two. Unfortu nately, that actor decided to leave the production for personal reasons approximately two weeks before the show’s opening. Given these cir cumstances, I think Mr. Bowen adapted as well as he possibly could have without canceling or postpon ing the production.' Mr. Hodges is also correct in stat ing that (‘Angels’ author Tony) Kushner calls for the character of Prior to appear nude. Mr. Bowen decided to have the actor playing Prior remain in his underwear. The dramatic action of the play is not interrupted or changed by this thin scrap of cotton, and the scene re mains as written in every other re spect. Mr. Bowen feared that the discomfort the nudity might cause that audience could distract iattention from the true issues of the play. Mr. Bowen did not, as Hodges suggests, “cut it (the scene) out.” I am also uncertain what kind of “exploitation” Mr. Hodges is ac cusing Mr. Bowen of I cannot speak from the perspective of a Mormon, a homosexual, or an African-Ameri- can. As a Jew, I saw many aspects of Jewish culture, religious practices, and language treated with accuracy and respect. It is my impression that the reason why Dr. Grant Hardy was inter viewed was that he is the advisor of the Mormon student group that was actively dealing with and dis cussing the religious issues in the play. It is sad that Mr. Hodges feels left out for lack of consultation, but activity brings attention. Mr. Hodges accuses someone of mak ing generalizations about Mor mons, and then tells us: “...we (Mor mons) are all rational, open-minded human beings who accept people for who they are, not what they are.” It is always inaccurate to gen eralize, Mr. Hodges. Even when you do it. Mr. Hodges complains that Mr. Bowen isn’t qualified to direct this play because he “...doesn’t under stand what it’s like to be any of the characters.” Presumably, he feels that because Mr. Bowen is not Jew ish, Mormon, homosexual, or Afri can-American, he can’t possibly direct it well. The beauty of theater is that it allows audiences, actors, designers, and directors, through suspension of disbelief, to leap out of themselves and into the emo tional lives of characters on a stage. If you still hold to your theory, you should never direct any play that is not about people like yourself. Most disturbing are Mr. Hodges’ malicious and angry attacks on the behavior and person of Rob Bowen throughout his letter. This is sad not only because it takes away from the important focus of the play itself, but because it slanders a good person. Assistant Professor of Drama Rob Bowen is, in fact, an experienced director who shows great courage in making his UNCA directing debut with a play of such power and significance. I think that it shows Rob’s sensitivity for his actors that he closed rehearsals. If you were playing a scene in which you had to strip down to your un derwear or kiss another heterosexual man, would you wan t a lot ofstrang- ers at the early rehearsals, Mr. Hodges? The theater is a holy space to actors, and I suggest that in the future you respect it and them. Congratulations to the cast and crew of “Angels in America.” It wasn’t easy, but you did admirable work with a brilliant and difficult piece of text. Bravo. David Rothman Junior, political science Theatre UNCA deserves thanks Dear Editor, 1 want to thank Theatre UNCA for their brave and inspired pro duction of “Angels in America” last weekend. It was a necessary, timely, and provocative event. What el egant and dignified performances, and what courage to tackle one of the hardest pieces—both techni cally and thematically—in the con temporary repertoire. David Hopes Professor of Literature Amnesty Interna tional needs you Dear Editor, I am writing on behalf of the cam- pus-based chapter of Amnesty In ternational (AI). AI launched nu merous information sessions, letter writing campaigns, and topical events during the past two semes ters, each of which attracted stu dents and community residents alike. We are now in need of new members who will take an active role in organizing, planning, and scheduling events for next term. If you are interested, please meet with us in Ramsey Library’s Red Oak Room (to the immediate right of the lobby doors) on Friday, Feb. 28 at 4:00 p.m. We will have a general discussion about AI and will answer any questions you may have. We will also show a film on slavery in Sudan, followed by a discussion about ethnic genocide in the Great Lakes region of central Africa, both of which will give you an idea of the type of issues we deal with. There will be free pizza for all attendees. Andre Mack Senior, international relations Feminism was ill- defined Dear Editor, I appreciated Ms. Tracy Wilson’s clarification of the false stereotypes of “feminists” as necessarily lesbi ans and men-haters, and I agree that far more women are “feminist” in their thinking and action, as she asserts, than are willing to admit. However, granting Ms. Wilson these accurate insights, I have one question directed, not at her asser tions, but at the presuppositions of her thinking in general. The first is simply this: who says men and women are equal? It’s one thing to assert and argue for this, but why should anyone believe you? What is your source of authority? Is it your own intuition, instinct, common sense, or empirical investigation? Societies throughout history have argued for such particular social understandings (Nazi Germans of Jews; American whites of blacks) without any other reason than that their self-derived philosophies told them so. I believe that your argu ment for equality lacks a very im portant component—authority. So, where do we find authority on what the relationship between men and women is? The best authority is the very designer of the genders. Now, for the sake of argument, let’s say that this authority, higher than yours and my say-so, decreed that men and women were in fact equal in one sense, but not interchange able and not the same (which is really what seems to be at the heart of your argument). How would you respond to that? In fact, what if this authority designed their very natures to act, respond, and think in different ways-in short, to be different! If that were the case, which I believe it is, then women wouldn’t be acting with timidity at all when they decline to join the “equality” bandwagon. They’d be simply de lighting to live as they have been designed, equal in value and worth to a man, but different in gifts, roles, and functions. With this un derstanding of women, then “au thority,” “roles,” “submission,” and “leadership” don’t carry the alba tross image that you paint upon them. Structure designed by the author ofmen and women becomes good and, hold on, even natural. Berry Stubbs Campus Pastor Reformed University Fellowship The fountain of youth may be in a convertible Dave Barry columnist I got a convertible. Now, I know what you’re going to say. You’re going to say: “Dave, you pathetic fool, you’re 49 and you’re having a mid-life crisis. Trade that thing in immediately and get a car more suitable for a person your age, such as a 1910 Hupmobile with air bags.” No, darn it! I love my convert ible! I’ve always wanted a convert ible! For 33 years I’ve been driving boring cars, starting with my mom’s Plymouth Valiant, which was a Ferrari compared with my dad’s car, a Nash Metropolitan powered by a motor the same size as the one found inside Tickle Me Elmo. I am a member of the small, select group of automotive losers who purchased both a Ford Mav erick and a Chevrolet Vega—cars manufacturd when the motto of was—really—powerboat racer. Currently, in addition to selling cars, he is co-producing a kick-box- ing movie. In terms of mature practicality, Jerry is not Mr. Both Feet On The Ground. I think that, if he could have, he would have sold me an F- used convertible with a 5-speed stick-shift transmission. Immediately after I bought the car, I put the top down and took my wife, Michelle, and my son, Rob, for a ride. They both wanted to know why anybody would want a stick shift, seeing as how you have the U.S. auto industry was: “We’re Working Hard To Make You Buy An Import.” For the past seven years I’ve driven a practical, box-shaped car. The auto industry calls it a “sport utility vehicle,” which suggests that it’s sporty. This concept is reinforced by TV commercials showing such vehicles racing up mountainsides, splashing across rivers, winning the Olympic pole vault, etc. In fact, this vehicle is a station wagon. Admit it, sport-utility-ye- hicle owners! It’s shaped a little differently, but it’s astation wagon! And you do not drive it across rivers! You drive it across the Wal- Mart parking lot! When I went to trade in my sport utility vehicle, I was going to buy another practical car; I truly was. But I ran into a salesperson named Jerry. Jerry’s former profession 16. (“Dave, if you’re willing to do business today, we’re going to throw in the floor mats AND the heat- seeking missile package. ”) But I was firm, and in the end we compro mised on him selling me a sporty to spend a lot of time shifting it. “Well,” I explained, in my Knowl edgeable Guy voice, “it’s actually very practical, because by depress ing the clutch you can more pre cisely control how fast the r.p.m.s go through the carburetor, which produces your ignition.” The actual truth, of course, is that a stick shift makes you feel like a major automotive stud. You crank up the song “Little Deuce Coupe” by the Beach Boys, and when they sing, “I get pushed out of shape, and it’s hard to steer, when I get rubber in all four gears,” you sing along at the top ofyour lungs as you push the clutch in, put the car in gear, ease out the clutch and—Kiss my exhaust pipe, automatic-trans- mission weenies! You back out of your space in the Wal-Mart park ing lot. One thing I’m a little concerned about is bullets. I live in Miami, where it is customary to celebrate certain special events (such as night fall) by firing guns into the air. When bullets come down, they sometimes injure people. It’s such a problem that the Miami Herald recently printed a letter to the edi tor, which I swear I am not making up, from a Miami man who sug gested—and I don’t think he was joking—that we would have a safer community ifpeople would do what he does, namely, shoot at the ground. Here is an actual quote from this man’s letter: “There are enough bullets in my yard to throw off a Boeing 747’s compass, but they are all buried where they were fired, not to come down miles away.” Unfortunately, many Miami resi dents are not as thoughtful as this man. So for me, the fun of driving a convertible is dampened by the nag ging concern that maybe I should be wearing a steel hat. Another concern I have is that Rob, who has a driver’s license despite being only 16, which from my per spective is the same thing as being a fetus, wants to drive my car. I fig ured learning the stick shift would slow him down; I know it took me a while. My mother taught me, and I can remember the two of us yelling at each other a lot as the car, with me at the controls, would lurch forward two feet, then stall, two feet, stall, two feet, stall, and so on, causing our heads to be flung violently back and forward, like human windshield wipers. To travel just one mile that way would have required several weeks and thousands of aspirin. But Rob picked it right up. The second try, vroom, he was off. So of course he wants to use the convert ible. My feeling is, sure! He can use it whenever he wants. The only con dition is that first he has to drive for 33 years. Until then he gets the Hupmobile.