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MINI-PREVIEW: Un Becoming: A Play About Hysterectomy (Still Water Theatre)
by
Robert W. McDowell
Un Becoming: A Play About Hysterectomy (Still Water Theatre,
2 p.m. Jan. 30 in Carswell Concert Hall in the Wainwright Music Building,
Meredith College, 3800 Hillsborough St., Raleigh, NC) is a free reading
of a timely new play written by Rick Schweikert and directed by Steven
Roten. This performance is sponsored by the HERS Foundation (http://www.hersfoundation.com/ [inactive
6/05]), an international independent nonprofit group for the education
of
women about the adverse effects of hysterectomy and alternative treatments.
Schweikert writes, “Un Becoming is a play about the
complex issues surrounding hysterectomy. It revolves around the artist
Emma
Douglas. Painting is her life’s breath, except now a medical
opinion threatens everything.… [Un Becoming p]remiered
Off Broadway earlier this year and is being compared with The
Vagina Monologues and Wit. Raleigh is the 47th stop
on a 51-city Protest & Play
tour.” Barbara Seaman, author of The Greatest Experiment
Ever Performed on Women, says, “Anyone who loves women
should see this play, and everyone has a mother!” Note: Following
the Sunday afternoon performance, there will be a talk-back discussion
led by Nora W. Coffey of HERS and playwright Rick Schweikert. For
more information about the play, visit http://www.unbecomingplay.com/.
For tickets, telephone 919/760-8719 or 484/432-8356.
REVIEW:
Still Water Theatre Review:
Un Becoming Exposes the Damage Done by Unnecessary Hysterectomies
by
Robert W. McDowell
The devastation wrought by the surgical removal of a woman’s
uterus and ovaries, often without any medical necessity and without
her informed consent, is the timely target of Un Becoming:
A Play About Hysterectomy. According to Pittsburgh, Pa. playwright Rick
Schweikert’s harrowing expose, thousands of women worldwide
enter the operating room, expecting to have a routine medical procedure
(e.g., a laparoscopy for diagnosis and treatment of fibroids),
and wake up to find that they have undergone complete hysterectomies.
The resulting damage to the woman’s physical and mental well-being
is dramatized, quite eloquently, in Un Becoming.
The Still Water Theatre production of Schweikert’s provocative play, sponsored
by the HERS Foundation and presented as a free staged reading last Sunday afternoon
at Meredith College in Raleigh, NC, deserved a much larger audience and more
local news media coverage than it received. The cast assembled and superbly
orchestrated by director Steven Roten included some of the Triangle’s
finest actors.
Betsy Henderson gave a passionate performance as Emma Douglas, a free-spirited
painter with painful fibroids. Emma is about to enter the hospital for a routine
laparoscopy. Her husband, Dr. Sam Morgan (Zach Thomas), is reassuring. He is
a physician and their good friend, Dr. James Ridge (David Henderson), will perform
the surgery on Emma.
Alarmed by Internet research that reveals a veritable epidemic of unnecessary
hysterectomies, Emma’s colleague and confidant, sculptor John Tracey (Jim
Moscater), tries to warn her that the consent form that she must sign before
surgery gives her doctors all the power they need to perform a hysterectomy,
without even consulting her.
When her surgeon’s distraught wife, Halley Ridge (Canady Vance), reveals
a shocking secret, whatever quiet second thoughts Emma become screaming accusations.
The husband-and-wife team of David and Betsy Henderson were excellent as friends-turned-adversaries
who come increasingly antagonistic as the facts about hysterectomy are revealed.
Jim Moscater was charming as Emma’s increasingly concerned friend John;
Zach Thomas was a bit distant as her supremely unconcerned husband Sam; and Carnessa
Ottelin was good as Sam’s colleague and lover Dr. Rose Parker.
Stephanie Maysonave gave a touching performance as drama teacher Susan Herse,
who was horrified when she learned that her minor surgery had become a hysterectomy;
and Maureen Price was effective as the Ridges’ 12-year-old daughter Megan.
If you are a woman or anyone who has a mother or wife or sister or daughter
or female relative or friend Un
Becoming is a vitally important play to bring
to her attention. Certainly, it addresses issues that every woman should consider
before going under the knife. The price of uninformed consent can be, quite literally,
unbearable.
In the post-performance discussion, Nora W. Coffey of the HERS Foundation and
dramatist Rick Schweikert claimed that upwards of 90 percent of hysterectomies
performed in the United States are unnecessary; there are five times more hysterectomies
in the South than in the Northeast; and eighty percent of hysterectomized women
are castrated at the same time. (For a fuller explication of the issues, see
the web sites listed below.)
The Play: http://www.unbecomingplay.com/.
The HERS Foundation: http://www.hersfoundation.com/ [inactive 6/05].
March 12th March in Washington, D.C. Against Unwarranted, Unconsented, Unwanted
Hysterectomies: http://www.theprotestandtheplay.com/ [inactive 3/08].
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