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Chris Hedges: A ‘Prophecy’ Worth Watching

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marmar Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-14-10 06:10 AM
Original message
Chris Hedges: A ‘Prophecy’ Worth Watching
from truthdig:



A ‘Prophecy’ Worth Watching

Posted on Jun 13, 2010
By Chris Hedges


Orson Welles and John Houseman were preparing to mount a production in June 1937 in New York City called “The Cradle Will Rock,” a musical written by Marc Blitzstein and set in “Steeltown USA.” The musical followed the efforts of a worker, Larry Foreman, as he attempted to unionize steelworkers. His nemesis was the heartless industrialist Mister Mister, who owned the steel mill and controlled the press, the church, local civic groups, politicians, the arts and the local university, where, as a trustee, Mister Mister made sure the pliant college president fired professors who did not laud the manly arts of war and capitalism. “The Cradle Will Rock” spared no one, from Mister Mister’s philanthropic wife and spoiled children to Reverend Salvation, who preached war in the name of Jesus, to feckless artists who devoted themselves to the cult of art. At one point the artists, along with Mister Mister’s wife, sing:

"And we love Art for Art’s sake,

It’s smart, for Art’s sake,

To Part, for Art’s sake,

With your heart, for Art’s sake,

And your mind, for Art’s sake,

Be Blind, for Art’s sake

And Deaf for Art’s sake,

And dumb, for Art’s sake,

They kill, for Art’s sake,

All the Art for Art’s sake."


The show was scheduled to open at the Maxine Elliott Theatre with an elaborate set and a 28-piece orchestra. But Washington, bowing to complaints, at the last minute announced that no new shows would be funded by the theater project until after the fiscal year. The theater was surrounded by armed guards since, the government argued, props and costumes inside were government property. Welles, Houseman and Blitzstein—who would later be blacklisted—rented the Venice Theater and a piano. They met the audience outside the shuttered Maxine Elliott Theatre and marched the theatergoers and the cast 20 blocks to the Venice. They invited onlookers to join them and filled the 1,742-seat house. Actor’s Equity had forbidden the cast to perform the piece “onstage” so the actors stood in the audience singing across the seats. The poet Archibald MacLeish, who attended, thought it was one of the most moving theatrical experiences of his life.

“This was censorship by another form,” the head of the Federal Theater Project, Hallie Flanagan, noted acidly at the time. By 1939 the Federal Theater Project was killed. It was the first of the Works Progress Administration (WPA) projects to be dismantled, “a reminder,” the playwright Karen Malpede said, “of the power of the theater.”

The corporate and government censorship—practiced in the name of sponsorship—that was imposed on “The Cradle Will Rock” is the censorship that has decimated the arts, the universities, the press and the church and destroyed the theater. These liberal institutions have been bought off. Corporate money, grants and government support reward those who stay on script, who do not challenge the cruel structures of American imperialism, our permanent war economy and unfettered capitalism. And those productions that break the rules are tossed aside. It is this kind of insidious censorship that takes cutting-edge productions, such as Malpede’s fierce new anti-war play, “Prophecy,” running at the Fourth Street Theater in the East Village in New York City until June 20, and relegates them to obscurity. ...........(more)

The complete piece is at: http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/a_prophecy_worth_watching_20100614/



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BrklynLiberal Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-14-10 06:32 AM
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1. Gave me goosebumps....a movie was made about this....
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0150216/
A true story of politics and art in the 1930s USA, centered around a leftist musical drama and attempts to stop its production.

Hank Azaria ... Marc Blitzstein

Rubén Blades ... Diego Rivera

Joan Cusack ... Hazel Huffman

John Cusack ... Nelson Rockefeller

Cary Elwes ... John Houseman

Philip Baker Hall ... Gray Mathers

Cherry Jones ... Hallie Flanagan

Angus Macfadyen ... Orson Welles

Bill Murray ... Tommy Crickshaw

Vanessa Redgrave ... Countess Constance LaGrange

Susan Sarandon ... Margherita Sarfatti

Jamey Sheridan ... John Adair

John Turturro ... Aldo Silvano

Emily Watson ... Olive Stanton
Bob Balaban ... Harry Hopkins
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Bluenorthwest Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-14-10 07:39 AM
Response to Reply #1
2. Directed by Tim Robbins
A wonderful and very entertaining film. Netfix this now!
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Blue_Tires Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-14-10 09:14 AM
Response to Reply #1
4. wow...how did i never hear of that one??
i've got to try and track it down...
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Doctor_J Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-14-10 08:54 AM
Response to Original message
3. This continues to this day - sometimes blatant, sometimes insidious
In academia, on the ham-handed side you have David Horowitz's Hitler Youth reporting professors who are not sufficiently pro-fascism (and often getting Fox "News" appearances out of it). On the other end, with grant money drying up, some are forced to turn to the likes of Monsanto and Big Oil for funds, with the predictable slant to the funded research.

I strongly recommend Michael Parenti's "Dirty Truths" for a nice first-hand account.
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freespeechtv Donating Member (27 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jun-14-10 01:41 PM
Response to Original message
5. Great find! Thanks for posting this article--Cradle Will Fall is a wonderful film too--don't miss it
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