Drama over Diatribe: Pro-Choice Advocates Act Out

“Words of Choice” opens in Boston June 12. The dramatization exploring the “right to choose” abortion may be particularly charged after the arrest of suspected clinic bomber Eric Rudolph and last week’s House vote on so-called “partial-birth” abortion.

Cindy Cooper

(WOMENSENEWS)–“Prior to this, I did not feel like I was in a war. That has all changed. And, the war has not stopped.”

Those are the words of Emily Lyons, an abortion-clinic nurse, describing in a speech the residual effects of the morning, in 1998, when she arrived for her nursing duties at an Alabama reproductive health clinic. She was struck by an exploding pipe bomb containing dynamite and nails that tore into both her eyes, created a hole in her abdomen the size of a fist, shattered the bones in her left leg, and caused multiple other severe injuries. (Last week, the suspected bomber, Eric Rudolph was captured, after being on the run for six years and apparently protected by supporters.)

This year those words are being repeated, but not by Lyons herself. They are being declaimed by an actor in “Words of Choice,” an ensemble of performances drawn from the recent, turbulent history of the struggle to defend a woman’s right to choose to have an abortion. Performed in New York in January 2000 and 2003, Chicago in April 2001, the performance will next be staged in Boston on June 12, sponsored by the Planned Parenthood League of Massachusetts at the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research in Cambridge.

“I am often asked what my injuries were,” the audience hears the actor say, drawing from Lyons’ speech. “I usually respond, ‘how much time do you have?’ I have had 12 operations this year, and expect many more.”

Special Resonance after Recent Events

It is a poignant moment and one with special resonance after last week’s arrest of Rudolph, charged with placing the bomb that maimed Lyons and killed a police officer. Just days after Rudolph’s arrest, the House of Representatives took the anti-choice side and banned so-called “partial birth” abortions–a term many say is so vague that few in the press or public seem to know exactly what it means–and despite the Supreme Court’s earlier overturn of a similar law as “unconstitutional.”

Emily Lyons

Lyons, meanwhile, doesn’t think that the arrest of her particular assailant ends the threat against abortion providers or the tide of violence. “He’s been captured, but there are so many more like him out there willing to kill providers,” Lyons said in a phone interview.

With the choice movement coming under such heavy fire, New York playwright and journalist Cindy Cooper and director Suzanne Bennett are choosing to respond with the weapon at their disposal–words. The words of Lyons and others have been incorporated in the performance piece, in which four actors bring to life excerpts from oral histories, testimonies, articles, speeches, poetry, and other documents that demonstrate the range of facts and emotions women face when confronted with an unwanted pregnancy.

Cooper, author of more than 30 plays, including the oft-produced “How She Played the Game,” says this effort is to add something of significance to the national discussion.

“What’s lost in the public debate on abortion,” says Cooper, “are the people. The anti-choice advocates try to make women who have abortions into stick figures, into bad women making simple decisions. We have to say, ‘It’s not like that. It’s a tough decision. And there are lots of compelling and important reasons this service needs to be available to women.'”

Rape is one of them.

One of the production’s most riveting performances, according to many who attended a January performance in New York, was when actor Mathew Conlon sat before the audience as a real-life father, barely suppressing his rage and anguish over the gang rape of his daughter after she was abducted while leaving a Fourth of July celebration. He later helped her get an abortion, and says, “no matter what law they may pass and how stringent the penalty, I would do it again.” The New York staging was sponsored by Planned Parenthood of New York in commemoration of the 30-year anniversary of Roe v. Wade, the 1973 Supreme Court decision that lifted the ban on abortion.

Testimony about Harrowing Decision

In another scene, Claudia Ades testifies before the U.S. Congress in the mid-1990s about the decision she and her doctor made for her to undergo a late-term abortion after discovering that her fetus was riddled with severe fetal anomalies. Ades testified that she and her husband “wanted this baby desperately,” but discovered that if the fetus survived, it would be born with a nonfunctional brain, a malformed heart–and into a life of pain.

Marty Pottenger, a playwright and performance artist who attended the New York event, said, “I was struck throughout by how important it is to hear people’s heart stories in their own words.” In particular, she said she was impressed by diary excerpts from “Jane,” a Chicago-based feminist underground collective from the pre-Roe 1960s that helped women obtain illegal abortions. The excerpts, said Pottenger, “brought back all these personal memories of counseling women in a tiny women’s center in Florida when abortion was still illegal.”

Comic Relief Served on a Taco

“Words of Choice” takes a comic turn when Conlon plays a publicist for a fictional “morning after” product from Taco Bell. The product is a taco, and according to Conlon’s spoof, it is highly effective at evacuating any pre-fetal tissue. It also comes with a safeguard: In the event of failure, the Taco Bell Corporation guarantees to “hire that person to work for us at $6.25 per hour!” Thus, according to the avid publicist, the dual-use product enables any young, single mother “to provide for herself and her children with uninsured subsistence living.”

And even the anti-choice zealots get a word in, if only to show the extremes to which they will go to stigmatize abortion. An actor strides onstage and, in the frenzied tone of someone hawking exercise equipment on late-night cable TV, begins a fast, earnest pitch for the Halloween Hell House Outreach Kit–the very same kit that’s currently advertised for $199, plus shipping and handling, on the Web site of Abundant Life Christian Center, Arvada, Colo. Participants are instructed to act out a mock abortion using a vacuum cleaner, while someone pretends to be a patient screaming and writhing in pain.

Cooper says this scene so disturbed the actors, they asked her to include the Web address of the Abundant Life Christian Center in the program notes, “because they wanted the audience to know we didn’t make this up.”

New York-based theater critic Alexis Greene, author of “Women Who Write Plays: Interviews with Contemporary American Dramatists,” applauds the daring behind this production, saying, “I think a lot of women are a little reticent today to write about such hot-topic women’s issues.”

Director Suzanne Bennett, also the artistic associate of the Women’s Project and Productions, a nonprofit theater organization in New York City, agrees it’s rare to see such an outspokenly political production on this topic. “There’s still a lot of fear in speaking out to the general public. The past several decades of violence have made people very cautious.”

Ann Farmer is a freelance writer based in New York City.

For more information:

Cynthia L. Cooper–
“Words of Choice”:
http://www.cyncooperwriter.net/work1.htm#CHOICE

Freedom From Religion Foundation–
“The Religious War Against Reproductive Rights”
By Emily Lyons (her account of the bombing experience):
http://www.ffrf.org/fttoday/dec01/lyons.html

Women’s Project and Productions:
http://www.womensproject.org/main.html

Women’s eNews, April 4, 2002:
“I Can Write a Play and See an Idea Flicker By”:
https://womensenews.org/article.cfm/dyn/aid/867/


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