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You are here: Home / Archives for protest

Don Blogs: In the Pink

January 27, 2017 at 10:12 am by Claudia

I didn’t really decide I was going until a few days before. By then, seats on charter buses were sold out and while I entertained the idea of driving down, the notion seemed pretty daunting. DC looks confusing on a map and I’d heard many times before (from people driving down to Florida from New York mostly) that if your travel plans take you anywhere near that area, you have to go round the loops and jams and snarls that are the DC maze. It always  sounded as if you would be driving around the Bermuda Triangle and could be sucked into a vortex and never be heard from again. So I kept trying to get a seat on a bus.

I did.

As we waited to board the big orange bus in the predawn darkness, I quickly saw that I was the only male in line. I suddenly felt like I was crashing a female sorority pajama party. “Phi Beta Pink Hats” or something. Soon, a few other men sleepily arrived and took their place in line and I felt better. The big break came when I went onboard and grabbed a seat at the back of the bus (by the potty) that had no seat in front of it, so my legs could stretch freely into the aisle. This was like getting a Penthouse Suite for a guy 6′4″, and I rejoiced.

When we arrived in DC five hours later, it looked rainy and gray, but the lukewarm coffee in my thermos was bracing. We all staggered off to join a very long line that snaked into the far distance and were told it led to a Metro entrance where you could buy a ticket for the long ride down to where the action was.

I found myself standing behind three folks around my age who were savvy and connected and in about 5 minutes we were sharing an Uber ride. As we drove off like celebrities, leaving everyone else in line, I began getting the Grand Tour. I began to feel that life was an unending avenue of green lights and welcome signs.

Then we got out of the car and found ourselves in a sea of humanity without a compass or a captain. A vast and seemingly endless ocean of pink hats and protest signs all roiling and bobbing and flowing along toward some rumored and distant shore.

I had wound up in the Bermuda Triangle after all.

I decided to leave my Uber shipmates and strike off alone to find my new friends and comrades in the Resistance who had arrived earlier on other buses from the north.

Yeah, sure. Good idea. In short order, I was missing my Uber pals and felt a little like a kid who got separated from his parents at Disney World. Another Old Man and the Sea.

But I was finding my sea legs and back to feeling in top form. I started to feel very uplifted. I mean, “Look  at this!”, I thought. I’d never seen so many people at one time in my life. And they mostly seemed happy and human and very purposeful. I suddenly felt a part of it all. A chant began to roll like a wave toward us. It may have started a mile down the line. “Tell me what democracy looks like!” “This  is what democracy looks like!” Call and response. Call and response. And it really was the truth. This is  what democracy looks like.

The sense of being part of a great swelling movement has stayed with me. The feeling of gratitude for living in my country has been revived in new and stirring ways.

Thanks for letting me share a little of this experience with you. It’s always so great to know you’re here.

Regardless of your personal beliefs, be they for or against, celebrating or protesting, I was standing in this reality: We live in a country where half a million people can meet up and raise their voices and not be shot or rounded up by a despot or fascist. And we do live in a country like that.

For now.

Happy Friday.

Don

Filed Under: Don, presidential election, protest 34 Comments

Working, Not Working, Marching

January 23, 2017 at 9:25 am by Claudia

I’m still doing a little bit of clean up as I sort through all of the paperwork and receipts and lists that I brought back from Hartford. I must say it’s very nice to be back at my desk here in the studio/office – a space, by the way, that is getting cozier by the minute. I really love it up here.

My body is still on theater time, so I’m not getting as rested as I’d like. It takes me a couple of hours to get to sleep and then I wake up early – when Don wakes up. But that will all even out in a few days. Harder to deal with – but also inevitable when you freelance – is waking up and realizing there is no job to go to. Transitions are a part of this life and I have to remind myself to be patient as I navigate re-entrance to my life in the country.

I start work on Anastasia, the Broadway edition, in a few weeks. I’m still waiting for a contract, but that should be taken care of this week. After that, I start work on Heartbreak House  by Shaw, back at Hartford Stage. It’s a blessing, having work for the first 5 months of the year. Believe me, that’s a rarity. And Don leaves at the end of March or beginning of April for LaJolla to start work on Escape to Margaritaville.  The Hill-Sparks household is gainfully employed for the first half of 2017.

So many of my friends and family and readers marched on Saturday. I am so proud of all of you! I think we’ll be talking about this march for a long time; the power of the people, the rebuke to that man’s agenda, the peaceful and non-violent assembly of millions all over the globe. Our voice is stronger than ever and now we have to keep that momentum going.

I am particularly proud of this activist:

There he is. Handsome devil, don’t you think?

One of his pictures from Saturday. A sea of pink hats, men, women, children with the dome of the Capitol in the distance. Oh, these photos inspire me! We looked through all of them last night.

My sister is making me a Pussy Hat. Because you know I’ll be marching somewhere soon.

I’m trying to persuade a certain someone to do a guest post. What do you think? Shall we band together and talk him into it?

Happy Monday.

 

Filed Under: Broadway, Don, protest 83 Comments

Back Home: Me & The Marcher

January 22, 2017 at 10:20 am by Claudia

Groggy, but back home again. The moving process is a long one. I stay in a high rise in Hartford, which means that after I finally pack everything, (and yes, I bring a lot) I have to make at least 20 trips up and down via the elevator and then to my car, which happened to be rather far out in the parking lot. Then a two hour drive home. Then, unloading the car and putting everything away. The whole thing took me most of the day. I finally finished around 5 p.m.

And since I’ve been staying up later due to the play, my sleeping hours are slightly off.

I went through most of the day with only one contact from Don via a quick text that let me know he was okay and safe. Cell service was almost non-existent; I imagine 500,000 extra citizens tweeting, using their phones to take pictures, and IGing made the coverage pretty spotty.

Finally about 4:30, I got a call. Don was back at the bus waiting to leave at 6. His knees were really feeling it! He said it was the most astounding day. He had never seen that many people – so many people that, at times, he simply couldn’t move. A sea of pink hats, of marchers as far as the eye could see. Truly powerful. He had great conversations with lots of people, figured out how to get around on the Metro, and marched and marched and marched some more.

I’m so proud of him. He’s very tired today, of course, and I will be sure to ask more questions of him, but he didn’t get home until after midnight, and he had to drive through heavy fog. I happened to be awake when he got home, so I ran downstairs to greet him.

While he was gone, I was on Twitter reading about the crowds marching all over the world, including Antarctica(!) Unbelievable and so inspiring! Everywhere. 500,000 in Washington, DC, 250,000 in Chicago, over 200,000 in NYC, and 750,000 in Los Angeles. Small towns, state capitols, north, south, east, west, in the heartland, down south – everywhere. Paris, London, Australia, New Zealand, Africa, South America, Canada, Mexico, all over Europe. EVERYWHERE. (Oops! I’m using ALL CAPS like that man’s tweets!) Let me try that again: Everywhere. 

Free Speech, as granted by the Constitution. A peaceful protest, and the largest in the history of the United States.

Hartford was gearing up for its protest as I was packing up the car. The Capitol is just across the street from the apartment building. People were streaming into Hartford from all over. 10,000 of them. Side note: I got to meet the Governor of CT, Dannel Malloy, on Opening Night. I’m a big admirer, so shaking his hand was an honor. He marched on Saturday.

Today, we are attending a local meeting where we’re going to hear from a woman who ran for Congress (and lost) in November. She is a powerful presence and I look forward to learning from her.

Forgot to add: On my way home, I stopped at a rest stop. I was wearing my Nasty Women Vote T-shirt in honor of the day. As I left the bathroom and walked back to my car, a woman shouted out, “Hey Lady! I love your shirt!” As I said on Facebook: We’re everywhere.

But back to being home. It’s lovely. Hartford was lovely as well, but there’s no place like home. I’m back at my desk in the studio/office. I’m looking out at the mountains in the distance. Don’s downstairs. I had a great conversation with my always fascinating and feisty Little Z last night.

All is well.

Happy Sunday.

Filed Under: Don, Donald Trump, Hartford, protest 69 Comments

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Welcome!

I live in a little cottage in the country with my husband. It's a sweet place, sheltered by old trees and surrounded by gardens. The inside is full of the things we love. I love to write, I love my camera, I love creating, I love gardening. My decorating style is eclectic; full of vintage and a bit of whimsy.

I've worked in the theater for more years than I can count. I'm currently a voice, speech, dialect and text coach freelancing on Broadway, off Broadway, and in regional theater.

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