From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org


Playwright re-tells actions of activists in one-person shows


From NewsDesk@UMCOM.UMC.ORG
Date 15 Sep 2000 12:51:08

Sept. 15, 2000	News media contact: Linda Bloom·(212) 870-3803·New York
10-21-71B{414}

NEW YORK  (UMNS) - About a decade ago, Daniel Kinch decided he needed to
write about people who were working hard to change the world but may have
become lost to history "because they didn't have a huge public reputation."

One of his subjects, for example, was Petra Kelly, the German activist who
founded the Green Party and was murdered in 1992. "You have a bunch of
movements that essentially die with her," he noted.

When Kinch joined Washington Square United Methodist Church in New York - a
Greenwich Village congregation with a strong social mandate - he began
writing plays about some of these individuals for the church's theater
company in residence, Kairos Theatre Company. He chose the format of
one-person shows because the productions are "easy to tour," literally
fitting into the trunk of a car.

His latest such endeavor, "On the Grid," will be performed several times in
Prague between Sept. 22-24 by actor Ben Roberts. The show will be among the
events scheduled by activists just before a meeting of the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) in that Eastern European city.

"On the Grid" focuses on the charge that the IMF and World Bank use foreign
assistance to developing countries as a way to exploit people unfamiliar
with cash-based economies. Roberts plays "Jim," an otherwise anonymous
banking official who explains to a group of aid workers that the real
mission of financial institutions is not sponsoring well or bridge projects
but getting developing countries "on the grid" by transforming them into
cash economies in the Western mode.

"Grid" is one of the three one-act plays, "Grid/Pie/Clown," recently given a
benefit performance by Kairos at the church. The second play, "A Good Day to
Pie," focuses on an activist with the Biotic Baking Brigade, which staged a
pie attack on Monsanto chief executive Robert Shapiro in 1998 to call
attention to the bioengineering of food. The third, "A Clown, a Hammer, a
Bomb and God," recounts how an activist Roman Catholic priest, Carl Kabat,
dressed in a clown suit, broke into a Minuteman Missile Base in North Dakota
and disabled a missile on Good Friday in 1994.

Kinch said that his plays are not pure biography. Realizing that many
audiences may not know the background to an issue, he usually provides a
bibliography and explains where his information was obtained. "I'm very
careful to keep it factual," he added.

Often, a performance will be followed by a symposium allowing for questions
and discussion. "Not everybody agrees with the actions of these folks, and I
understand that," he said.

The "Clown" play has been performed some 60 times in the United States and
Europe since premiering at the 1997 New York International Fringe Festival.
Roberts performed the play during the Hague Appeal for Peace in 1999 in the
Netherlands. There, Roberts made contact with members of ASEED, an
organization concerned with ecological justice in developing countries, and
an invitation to Prague followed.

The "Pie" play was created after Rebecca Pridmore, a Washington Square
member, was the successful bidder for Kinch's offer of a one-act play at a
church fund-raiser. He wrote the play specifically for the actress. The
show, originally produced at Kairos Theatre's 1998 One-Act Festival, has
been presented at more than a dozen other venues, including Drew
University's "Greening of the Church" conference.

Kairos also does college and church tours of the plays, depending on
schedules and funding, Kinch said. More information is available by calling
the Kairos Theatre box office at (212) 714-5392 or sending an e-mail to
kairos_co@hotmail.com.

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*************************************
United Methodist News Service
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