Our theatre is an empathy gym where we come to practice our powers of compassion. Nelson Mandella, Martin Luther King, Mother Theresa, Ghandi; these are the olympic athletes of empathy. But the rest of us need to go to the gym. It’s tough to be compassionate in everyday life. We get cut off in traffic, get our purse snatched, get knocked down, our house broken into, our country is threatened. It’s tough to be empathetic. But from the darkness and anonymity of our seats, we are safe to risk entering into the lives of the characters on the other side of the proscenium. We feel what they feel, fear what they fear, love what they love, and hope for what they hope for. And along the way, with our one hundred hearts beating together in the dark, we realize that under the skin we are the same. And as we leave, we take that miraculous spirit of unity out into the world to make it better
Saturday, February 25, 2012
Wednesday, February 15, 2012
Much as Ezekial and Jeremiah spoke to the Hebrews about imminent calamities and the moral corruption of their times, our modern playwrights speak to us. Born with ultra-sensitive antennae, they draw from their experiences, kernals of truth that most of us miss. Lost in our lives we lack the ability to see ourselves. We’re too busy living. Our playwrights distill their visions into stories that illuminate, that help us see, that give us the perspective we crave, that send us back out into our lives with renewed purpose to grow and to make our community better. Join us at SF Playhouse and help us present these important voices that speak the truths we crave.
Tuesday, February 7, 2012
Our theatre is an empathy gym where we come to practice our powers of compassion. Nelson Mandella, Martin Luther King, Mother Theresa, Ghandi; these are the olympic athletes of empathy. But the rest of us need to go to the gym. It’s tough to be compassionate in everyday life. We get cut off in traffic, get our purse snatched, get knocked down, our house broken into, our country is threatened. It’s tough to be empathetic. But from the darkness and anonymity of our seats, we are safe to risk entering into the lives of the characters on the other side of the proscenium. We feel what they feel, fear what they fear, love what they love, and hope for what they hope for. And along the way, with our one hundred hearts beating together in the dark, we realize that under the skin we are the same. And as we leave, we take that miraculous spirit of unity out into the world to make it better, one play at a time.
No comments:
Post a Comment