I hold you, babe.

Jocelyn played Debussy while the returns played on the screen at Tuesdays@9 Chicago.

Generally speaking, I don’t lose sleep when celebrities die. But a few days ago, Quincy Jones died and I found myself tossing and turning. I’ve been a fan of Mr. Jones since the 1980s. In recent years, I’ve enjoyed watching two Netflix documentaries about him: Quincy is about his career and personal life, and The Greatest Night in Pop is about his involvement with the “We Are the World” music video. Both are downright inspiring.

Jones obviously loved music and collaborating; and whenever someone so deeply and successfully loves their craft — and commits to it through thick and thin — and actually loves and somehow holds all the people it touches — Lord have mercy, I am moved. May we all be so held! And may we all hold our craft.

***

Norm Macdonald died in 2021. I lost sleep when he died, too. He was a phenomenal comedian, writer, and host. He was so original and obviously someone who loved his work deeply.

Not long before he died, he interviewed Jane Fonda on “Norm Macdonald Has a Show.” It was completely enjoyable and at the end, he kissed Jane Fonda fully on the lips. It was hot.

I have watched the interview — and the kiss — several times, not because I’m a pervert, but because I wanted to analyze the buildup. I wanted to see if I could figure out how it happened. I never figured out how it happened but I do believe that only people who hold and are held by their craft can kiss like that. Macdonald’s commitment to long anecdotal jokes, amazing writing, and exquisite stand-up inspire and motivate me every day. He was held by his craft.

That was the last time I lost sleep when a celebrity died.

***

The last time I lost sleep when a politician died was in 2002. That’s when Minnesota Senator Paul Wellstone was killed in a plane crash just days before the election. This was back when I lived in Minneapolis, where Wellstone was not only respected and beloved by both parties, he was expected to run for president. Wellstone was held by his politics and the political community seemed to hold him, too.

It was a strange time in politics. It was the post 911 days: George W. Bush was president, Jesse Ventura was governor, Wellstone was dead, a Republican won his seat, and we were at war with Iraq, not to mention involved in several other “armed conflicts.” I didn’t necessarily lose sleep every night, but I didn’t start sleeping well until 2007, when Obama was elected president.

***

Going back in time to 1998, I recollect another time I lost sleep when a politician died. That’s when Sonny Bono died in a skiing accident. This is so stupid, but at the time I still held hope that he and Cher would get back together. I saw them sing “I Got You Babe” on David Letterman’s late night show in 1987 and marveled at how comfortable and careful they were with each other. Surely they would get back together.

Anyway…

After a successful career in entertainment Sonny Bono moved to politics. He became the Republican mayor of Palm Springs, California and later served the Golden State as a congressman. But then he skied into a tree and died.

Not long before he died, Sonny Bono called then-Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich (also a Republican) out for being inappropriate. For once, “inappropriate” wasn’t tied to sexual behavior. Bono said Gingrich was inappropriate because Newt had gone from being a politician to a celebrity. Bono said, “You need handlers. You need to understand what you’re doing. You need to understand the attitude of the media toward celebrities.” Bono thought Gingrich needed to be reminded that he was to be a politician first, not a celebrity.

Isn’t that interesting? A former celebrity called another Republican out for being blinded by their own celebrity status.

I (still) disagree with Bono’s conservative politics. For one, he co-sponsored the Defense of Marriage Act, which –until 2013 — prohibited the federal government from recognizing same-sex marriages. It was passed by Congress in 1996 and signed into law by Mr. Marriage himself, then-President Bill Clinton. But my point isn’t that I’m sitting here counting the countless hypocrisies of our nation’s leaders. My point is I respect that Bono confronted Gingrich. I think that’s important.

***

Fast forward to the Obama years. Unsurprisingly, Gingrich was a vocal critic of President Barack Obama. He called Obama a “con” motivated by a “Kenyan, anti-colonial” worldview. Moreover, the racist Gingrich was an early and ardent supporter of Donald Trump before, during, and after his first election. Last month, Gingrich said on The New Yorker Radio Hour and WNYC that “he’s [Trump’s] had four years to think about what he’s learned…and he has a much deeper grasp of what has to be done and how to do it.”

Grasp.

Grasp means to take or seize eagerly. There is nothing deep or comforting about a grasp. Any way you look at it, a grasp is desperate. And once again we are headed into the political clutches of an administration who grabs and grasps.

***

What comes first when you identify yourself? Are you comfortable with who you are and what you do? Do you hold your family, friends, and craft deeply and dearly? Or do you grasp at them whenever you need attention?

***

Last night, while the country and my county voted red, I was at work. Instead of our usual Tuesdays@9 Chicago show with cold readings and a musical guest, we hosted a watch party. We had a huge screen and an open mic where folks could share something creative while we waited for the returns. It was deep, comforting, and enlightening to see artists share poems, stories, and music that were important to them. I saw and learned new things about my colleagues and my family.

***

I’m still wrapping my brain around the fact that the majority of the nation and my neighbors re-elected a hate mongering and racist celebrity. It wasn’t even close.

***

Countless celebrities have run for office. Clay Aiken (D), Clint Eastwood (R), Al Franken (D), Melissa Gilbert (D), Fred Grandy (R), Diane Neal (I), Cynthia Nixon (D), Ronald Reagan (R), Arnold Schwarzenegger (R), Jerry Springer (D), George Takei (D), Shirley Temple Black (R), Fred Thompson (R), Jesse Ventura (I), and others. Most of the aforementioned were elected, but a few like Aiken, Gilbert, Neal, and Nixon were unsuccessful candidates. We remember them either way, because they’re celebrities, and they know that.

***

Though Kamala Harris lost the election, I have to believe that progress has been made, and that we can learn and maybe even evolve from this two-party system. Until then, in the words of Langston Hughes, I will “hold fast” to my family, friends, and craft.

And my country.

Thanks for reading (and not grasping). -Constance

P.S. Jocelyn attends Northern Illinois University in DeKalb but took the train into Chicago to participate in our watch party.

Ridi, Writi, Looki – What I Read, Wrote & Saw in 2021

Books we handed out at the Winter Solstice Poetry Caroling event in December.

There’s an old Latin phrase that serves as a mantra for artists who wish to keep it fresh. It’s “ridi, writi, looki.” It means “I read, I wrote, I saw.” Every year, I compile a list of the books I read, the shows I saw in person and the plays I wrote. Here they are.

BOOKS

susan, linda, nina & cokie by Lisa Napoli

Ida B. the Queen by Michelle Duster

Nothing Personal by James Baldwin

Reasons to Stay Alive by Matt Haig

The Midnight Library by Matt Haig

Smile, The Story of a Face by Sarah Ruhl

Mingling with the Enemy by Jeanne Martinet

Eurydice by Sarah Ruhl

Good Neighbors by Sarah Langan

Between the World and Me by Ta-Nehisi Coates

The Black Panther Party: A Graphic Novel History by David F. Walker and Marcus Kwame Anderson (Illustrations)

Beautiful Things: A Memoir by Hunter Biden

I Hate Running and You Can Too: How to Get Started, Keep Going, and Make Sense of an Irrational Passion by Brendan Leonard

People Who Love to Eat Are Always the Best People: And Other Wisdom by Julia Child

Dearly by Margaret Atwood

Habitat Threshold by Craig Santos Perez

Owed by Joshua Bennett

Let Me Tell You What I Mean by Joan Didion

Selected Poems by Arthur Gregor

The Shining Moments: The words and moods of John F. Kennedy by JFK, edited by Gerald C. Gardner with an introduction by Adlai E. Stevenson

Halfway Home: Race, Punishment, and the Afterlife of Mass Incarceration by Reuben Jonathan Miller

The Book of Delights by Ross Gay

Building a Movement to End the New Jim Crow: an organizing guide by Daniel Hunter

A Libertarian Walks into a Bear: The Utopian Plot to Liberate an American Town by Matthew Hongoltz-Hetling

The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness by Michelle Alexander

Appalachian Elegy: Poetry and Place by bell hooks

Just Under Clouds by Melissa Sarno

The Perfect Nine: The Epic of Gikuyu and Mumbi by Ngugu Wa Thiong’o

R.U.R. by Karel Capek

Song for a Whale by Lynne Kelly

Letterman, The Last Giant of Late Night by Jason Zinoman

Appalachian Reckoning: A Region Responds to Hillbilly Elegy – Edited by Anthony Harkins and Meredith McCarroll

Blubber by Judy Bloom

The Elephant in the Room: One Fat Man’s Quest to Get Smaller in a Growing America by Tommy Tomlinson

SHOWS

It was a relief and joy to see live theatre and dance. Even ordering tickets is fun! I will never take seeing live productions for granted again. That’s not just a new year’s resolution–that’s a lifetime promise. Looking forward to seeing more theatre in 2022 and here’s what I saw in 2021:

These Shining Lives by Melanie Marnich at Winnishiek Playhouse in Freeport, IL. Years ago I read Radium Girls by Kate Moore. Though written after Marnich wrote the play, I read the novel first and it inspired me to see the play.

Macbeth by William Shakespeare at Rock Valley College Starlight Theatre in Rockford, IL. This was a sprawling outdoor, nighttime production. Side note: The first time I saw Macbeth was in 1999 at Jungle Theatre in Minneapolis, inside.

Eurydice by Sarah Ruhl at West Side Show Room in Rockford, IL. After I saw the play, I read Ruhl’s script and her memoir “Smile” about her experience with Bell’s Palsy.

My daughters just before going in to see Eurydice, their first in-person play since February 2020.

Laughterreise by Fourth Coast Ensemble at The Annoyance Theatre in Chicago This performance included classical music, opera, poetry and sketch comedy.

Expanding Universe at Ruth Page Center for the Arts in Chicago (50-year Anniversary Celebration / dance in October).

Jeeves Saves the Day – Margaret Raether’s adaptation from P. G. Wodehouse’s “Jeeves” story / stories at Artists’ Ensemble in Rockford.

Spring dance recital at Ruth Page. Jocelyn is the dancer on your right.

I also saw my kids’ spring, summer and intensive dance recitals, also in person at Ruth Page, but can’t remember the names of those shows, sorry.

PLAYS

I have been writing plays for more than 20 years. My first play was the 10-minute mother-daughter drama, The Mason Jar. It received a staging at Stages Theatre Company in Minneapolis, a staged reading at Chicago Dramatists and was a finalist at the Turnip 15-Minute Play Festival in New York City. I have lost count of how many plays I have written since then but I know I will never forget my first. Here’s what I wrote in 2021:

The Dumbwaiter is a 10-minute absurd comedy about hospice and ageism and it was read at Naked Angels Tuesdays@9 Chicago in February.

What Comes Next is a 10-minute drama about homelessness and it received a staged reading at Chicago Dramatists’ 48-Hour St. Patrick’s Day Play Festival in March.

I finished another draft of the one-hour play Feverland. It’s about Al Capone as seen through the female gaze. It’s written for an all-woman (non-binary) cast, including Al, and challenges our society’s obsession with gangster life. It received a staged reading with the First Draft program at Chicago Dramatists in March. I am still working on it and I hope to workshop it in person in 2022.

I conceived and directed the Quarantanniversary at Naked Angels Tuesdays@9 Chicago, also in March. I wrote interstitial dialogue as well as the character “Rhonda Ross.” For this event, 40 artists showed up as their twin and stayed in character for the entire night. This means that the writers wrote as their twins, actors acted as their twins, the musician performed as her twin and the hosts led the meeting as their twins. It was a vibrant and cerebral evening of thoroughly unique theatre.

I wrote and tested six episodes of Chicago-based mock show The Stormy, Husky, Brawling Show at Naked Angels Tuesdays@9 Chicago, April through May.

I wrote and produced five more episodes of The Stormy, Husky, Brawling Show in June and July. Episodes aired on Facebook and YouTube. My intention with this project was to create a show that bridged pandemic online theatre to in-person theatre. We filmed some of it on Zoom, the outdoor scenes in person, and the studio scenes with a skeleton crew of fully vaccinated, socially-distanced actors. We stayed safe, created new art and moved toward the new frontier of theatre. You can read more about it here.

I wrote the 10-minute ghost drama Dora’s Bait Shop in October. It was read at Naked Angels Tuesdays@9 Chicago as part of the Halloween show.

Dora’s Bait Shop is a 10-minute play for three actors. It’s about a hunting accident.

I wrote the 10-minute filicide drama Natural Life in November. It was read at Naked Angels Tuesdays@9 Chicago.

I wrote the 10-minute holiday drama The Lunker of the Lake in December. It was read at Naked Angels Tuesdays@9 Chicago.

I also wrote this blog and organized two outdoor artistic events that were free and open to the public. In October, I conceived and directed the Silent Hiking & Writing Retreat where writers met, hiked in silence, wrote and shared their work with the group. And in December, I conceived and directed Winter Solstice Poetry Caroling. Instead of Christmas Caroling, we caroled our friends, neighbors and family with winter-themed poems. Both “pandemic proof” events were artistic, intelligent and fun. I plan to continue these events into 2022 and beyond.

Winter Solstice Poetry Caroling. Photo Credit: Raine Sides.

I owe a debt of gratitude to Naked Angels Tuesdays@9 Chicago for giving me the space to test and share my new work. This is also where serve as music and comedy director. If you’re a writer or actor or musician or comedian, and you’re curious but skeptical about checking it out, let me tell you something: This isn’t your ordinary theatre clique! It’s inclusive, safe and fun. It’s a mecca for writers, actors, directors and musicians. It is brilliantly led by creative directors Joshua Fardon and Patricia Mario. Check us out! Or if you live in New York (the original!), Los Angeles or Miami, check out those branches of Naked Angels because they are excellent, too.

Thank you for reading! Happy New Year! -Connie

P.S. “Ridi, writi, looki” is not really a Latin phrase. I made it up.

FAQ About The Naked Angels Tuesdays at 9 Quarantanniversary

March 30, 2021 is the Tuesdays at 9 Chicago Zoom Quarantanniversary and we are celebrating with a “Meta March Twin Tuesdays” show!

Q: What does that mean?

A: Angels are invited / encouraged to show up as their twin to Tuesdays at 9 Chicago on March 30. Remember to change the name on your Zoom box to the name of your twin and stay in the character of your twin all night long.

Q: Could you give me an example?

A: Sure. My name is Connie Kuntz. I will be busy on March 30th, but luckily, my twin sister Rhoda Ross has agreed to fill in for me. Rhoda is a hypochondriac and always thinks she is dying.

Q: Okay. Does my twin have to be a dork like your twin?

A: Your twin can be whatever you want. You’re probably familiar with the “evil” twin concept or the “sexy” twin concept. You can go that route or you can create a twin who is subtle, unique or cerebral or spiritual or whatever. There is tremendous room for creativity and interpretation.

Q: I already have a twin in real life. Now what?

A: Create a triplet. And if you are a triplet, create a quadruplet. And so on. Just remember to change the name on your Zoom box to the name of your sibling.

Q: What if I get cast that night?

A: Then your twin will read.

Q: What about stage directions? How will our twins know to applaud the people who read stage directions?

A: Tell them!

Q: What should I wear?

A: Whatever your twin would wear. Just remember to change your Zoom box name to your twin’s name.

Q: Who are the writers that night?

A: The writers and the musical act will be announced in the usual way; on social media with the Tuesdays at 9 poster art (which will be somewhat different, since it’s being designed by the artist’s twin). The creative directors, writers and the musical act will be the twins of familiar Tuesdays at 9 talent.

Q: Why are we doing this?

A: It’s important to experiment with new forms of interactive creativity during the pandemic. The layer of meta adds a unique, intriguing artistic element. Plus, we’re crazy.

Q: How long will this show run?

A: The usual two to two-and-a-half hours. Scenes will be shorter to make room for more audience interaction.

Q: Why are you so weird?

A: I don’t know. Ask Rhoda.

Tuesdays at 9 Chicago has been going strong since September of 2018. When the pandemic threatened to shutter our cold reading series, we moved to Zoom! March 30 marks our one-year quarantanniversary of virtual cold readings. Celebrate with us!

Fat Girl, Skinny Girl, et al.

I’m directing a staged Zoom reading of the play Fat Girl, Skinny Girl, et al. by Kerri Killeen. I hope you come, but not because it’s going to be fun.

It’s a disturbing, compelling drama about a young woman with an eating disorder. She is called, simply, Girl, and she will stop, start, break, and heal your heart.

Girl spends a significant amount of time in hospitals or clinics, exercise / yoga studios, and the mirror. Mostly, she is in her head. She is in a constant state of counting calories, working out, and berating herself, rather, selves. Sometimes the selves berate her. Watch and see who is in control.

Girl’s “selves” appear as Fat Girl and Skinny Girl and they are there to argue, manipulate, and pressure Girl into thinking she’s not enough. It can be uncomfortable to watch, which is one reason I think this play is so important to experience.

Tens of millions of people — of all ages, backgrounds, weights, and genders — are affected by anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, and binge-eating. Eating disorders are often caused by a variety of factors ranging from genetics to social situations. Though complete recovery is possible, people with eating disorders often suffer from depression and anxiety and are at a higher risk for suicide and mental complications.

Please be advised that there is a content warning for our staged reading:

Subject matter includes and is not limited to: eating disorders, self-harm, and struggling with mental illness.

Fat Girl, Skinny Girl, et al. takes on a difficult subject, yes, but please know it will be brought to life by an excellent, intelligent cast: Tony Bozzuto, Michael Colby, Atlie Gilbert, Anne-Marie Little, and Jessica Rivera. Our producers are Joshua Fardon and Atlie Gilbert. And this is part of the Naked Angels Tuesdays@9 enterprise.

Virtual doors open at 7:15 p.m. on Saturday, October 16. When I have the link to the Zoom, I will post it. It is free to attend, but donations will go directly to Sarah’s Circle, a nonprofit organization with a mission of serving women who are homeless or in need of a safe space in Chicago.

Thank you for your interest. Let me know if you have any questions or concerns. -Connie