Rachel Maddow at Jacob’s Pillow
Posted by: Dan Shaw
Posted on: Tuesday, August 11, 2009
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Full Article
Rachel Maddow speaking at Jacob's Pillow on August 8
Rachel Maddow, the MSNBC news star, who has a weekend house in Cummington, MA, came to Jacob’s Pillow for a talk on Saturday afternoon, and it was SRO on the Inside/Out stage. What does Maddow know about dance? “I know nothing about dance,” she told Scholar-in-Residence Suzanne Carbonneau. “I am a fan. I am a fan of dance and of Jacob’s Pillow and a fan of people who know nothing about dance going to see dance.” Maddow made it very clear how vital she believes art is to a free society: “Sometimes we choose to serve our country in uniform, in war. Sometimes in elected office. And those are the ways of serving our country that I think we are trained to easily call heroic. It’s also a service to your country, I think, to teach poetry in the prisons, to be an incredibly dedicated student of dance, to fight for funding music and arts education in the schools. A country without an expectation of minimal artistic literacy, without a basic structure by which the artists among us can be awakened and given the choice of following their talents and a way to get to be great at what they do, is a country that is not actually as a great as it could be. And a country without the capacity to nurture artistic greatness is not being a great country. It is a service to our country, and sometimes it is heroic service to our country, to fight for the United States of America to have the capacity to nurture artistic greatness.”
Her passion and message was crystal clear: “Not just in wartime but especially in wartime, and not just in hard economic times but especially in hard economic times, the arts get dismissed as ‘sissy.’ Dance gets dismissed as craft, creativity gets dismissed as inessential, to the detriment of our country. And so when we fight for dance, when we buy art that’s made by living American artists, when we say that even when you cut education to the bone, you do not cut arts and music education, because arts and music education IS bone, it is structural, is it essential; you are, in [Jacob’s Pillow founder] Ted Shawn’s words, you are preserving the way of life that we are supposedly fighting for and it’s worth being proud of.”
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