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About Eugene weekly. (Eugene, Oregon) 1993-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 2023)
theater Constitutional Drama A PLAY ABOUT POLITICS BY A FORMER EUGENEAN KICKS OFF THE SEASON AT OREGON CONTEMPORARY THEATRE By Dorothy Velasco W ho knew that we could laugh so much about our nation’s Constitution — and take it so seriously at the same time? The opening show of Oregon Contemporary Theatre’s 2023-24 season, Heidi Schreck’s What the Constitution Means to Me, is an invaluable choice considering America’s current political climate of extreme polarization. Schreck, an award-winning actor and playwright originally from Wenatchee, Washington, studied theater at the University of Oregon. While living in Eugene, she also starred in a couple of plays at Lord Leebrick Theatre, the precursor to OCT. The first play she wrote, Creature, was performed in 2013 at UO after several successful previous productions. It’s about time that her most acclaimed play, nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, should be performed at OCT. And what a production. The play, directed by Craig Willis, who also designed the set — a realistic veterans’ hall — is essentially a one-woman show brought to stunning life by Inga Wilson. In the first regional and New York productions, Schreck played herself, the character named Heidi. Now the show is open to other actors, and Wilson is just as charming, funny, emotional and forceful as Schreck. Don’t be misled by the dry sounding title. It harks back to high school essays and debating competitions, but Heidi is never dry. As played by Wilson, we see her at her current age, around 50, and as a 15-year-old whose mother has convinced her to hone her speaking and debating skills in order to compete around the country at events sponsored by the American Legion. These competitions offer generous prize money for college, exactly what young Heidi needs. She’s so good that she manages to pay her way entirely through college with her earnings. The play runs about 100 minutes without intermission and eventually becomes somewhat repetitious. Having seen a number of plays without intermission, I’m beginning classifieds Pet/Supplies Meetings CHRISTIAN SOCIAL GROUP TEENAGERS . Text 541-731-5912 CANE CORSO PUPPIES be ready for their FOR new families 10/25. ICCF Registration, Health Test, Certificate of Health from Vet, First set of vaccines and deworming, Tails docked/Dew claws removed. Contact 541- 731-4021 FO R SA L E Fuel & Heating BEAUTIFUL EFEL OIL STOVE It burns fuel Across E M P LOY M E N T Help Wanted MAJOR ONLINE RETAIL WEBSITE LOOKING FOR FREELANCE MAINTENANCE AND DESIGNER. MAY LEAD TO OUTSIDE WEB- SITE DESIGN FOR CLIENTS. PATRICK 775- 997-4264 Lessons MUSIC LESSONS EUGENE Music lessons in your home. Piano, Guitar, Ukulele, Violin, Viola, Bass, Clarinet, Saxophone, Drumming & Voice. Services start at $37 or $142 monthly. Call/text Rachel (541) 337-9567 or learn more at www.musicles- sonseugene.com disabled person. 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Small spaces between areas, or what’s represented in “Do You Mind?” --if you were on the London Underground. the long entries 63. The Weeknd, a.k.a. ___ Tesfaye 64. California berry farm founder 65. Yale students 66. Washington, D.C., baseball team, familiarly 67. Art sch. study 68. “Divorce Capital of the World,” once Down 1. Launching platforms 2. “Spiral Jetty” state 3. Small laptop 4. Soft serve machine option 5. Food additive initials 6. At the drop of ___ 7. ___ Chico (“Agua Mineral” H O M E S E RV I C E S Fencing/Decks NEED HELP TO BUILD YOUR NEW FENCE, deck or replace siding or any repairs call 541-870-3213 brand) 8. “Young Sheldon” rating 9. Ad tagline for the frustrated and confused 10. Put one ___ (fool) 11. ___ account (term for a bank’s holding at a different bank) 12. “Now I understand” 15. Those things, in Spanish 18. Actress Watts 22. Table game 24. “Haters ___ hate” 26. Several scenes, sometimes 27. Luau dish 29. Ancient Greek gathering spot 30. Chips brand with a “Blue Heat” flavor 31. “Press Your Luck” turns 34. Attachments for a seaside hobby, perhaps 35. Volume count 39. Rummage event 40. Singer Rita 41. Furthest degree 43. Wild West Wyatt 44. Lopsided 45. One-celled protozoan 46. Official seal 49. “Blowin’ in the Wind” singer 50. American, in England 52. Actress Stevens of ‘60s TV 54. Mom’s mom, in some places 55. Sci-fi movie with a “Legacy” sequel 56. Mlle., in Monterrey 58. ___ arms 59. Old U.S. gas brand 62. Mel of baseball ANSWERS TO LAST WEEK’S oil number 1 (kerosene). Very economical to run. Has never been used. Large oil tank goes with it. $400 dollars or best offer. (541)-510-4715 BY MATT JONES ©2023 JONESIN’ CROSSWORDS (EDITOR@JONESINCROSSWORDS.COM) SEEKING PART TIME CAREGIVER to assist M U S I C/ E N T E R TA I N M E N T What the Constitution Means to Me is playing at Oregon Contemporary Theatre through Oct. 1; times and tickets through OCTheatre.org or 541-465-1506. Jonesin’ Crossword LINE ADS: $12/3 lines • ADDITIONAL LINES: $4.25 To place a classified ad: CALL 541.484.0519 EMAIL classy@eugeneweekly.com WEB classifieds.eugeneweekly.com WRITE 1251 Lincoln St. Eugene, OR 97401 VISIT our office Monday-Friday 9am-5pm B U L L E T I N B OA R D to believe there must be something in our DNA that tells us 90 minutes is just right and 100 minutes is slightly too long. During the show we see approximate examples of Heidi’s defense of the Constitution, as much as the adult Heidi can remember. Oh, the sincerity and passion of a 15-year-old! The older Heidi tells us she fell in love with the Constitution at a young age, and that she loves it to this day, but now she understands much more than she did as a teen. Back then when she read about the rights provided to “the people,” she didn’t realize that people had to be white, property-owning men. No women, no Blacks (who were mostly enslaved at the time the Constitution was written) and no Native Americans had those rights. Only the white male property owners could vote. She also learned more about domestic violence and sexual abuse, topics she could never discuss in her teen years, but by asking questions and piecing together bits of information, she learned about several generations of mistreatment within her family. As an adult, she can tell us, the audience, about her family history, and reveals that now she realizes the Constitution, the Supreme Court and the elected government may have failed to provide equal protection to all and might benefit from a makeover. Serious topics, but the explosive humor is a strong counterweight. My favorite example: Heidi tells the audience she’s prone to crying, not just daintily-dab-your-eyes crying, but what she calls Greek tragedy crying. Wilson’s demonstration would make Carol Burnett proud. She starts with full-out howling and shrieking, she twists her face into a tragic mask and she contorts her body in tortured writhing. Funniest crying I’ve ever seen. Wilson is backed up by two other actors in small but important roles. Alexander Holmes plays two characters: an upright Legionnaire timekeeper at the competitions, as well as Mike, an actor who traveled with Heidi to play the Legionnaire. Noah Oristano, an actual teen, plays a spirited debater. E U G E N E W E E K LY . C O M S E P T E M B E R 2 1 , 2 0 2 3 13