Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Really, Alex.

He looks like a dufus in this picture, and tonight, he looked like a dufus on the show.

Just after anouncing that the Final Jeopardy category would be "The Heisman Trophy," host Alex Trebek quipped, "Uh oh. All the ladies just went ughhh."

Of course, the camera was focused on Alex and his amazing blue question board, so we couldn't see if the ladies did indeed slump towards the floor like sacks of potatoes in utter despair over a SPORTS category, of all things, or if they held their heads high.

What we did see was both "ladies" answering the question perfectly.

Really, Alex. Aren't we past this ignorance of women's interest in sports? Apparently not.

When I was twelve, my brother and I had the entire Philadelphia Phillies roster memorized. I played Little League with Mike Schmidt's number 20 proudly stamped on my back. We loved everything baseball.

Yet when my grandparents waited in line to get Mike Mussina's autograph (my dad had coached against his high school team), I ended up with his scrawled signature across the newspaper scrap that announced his visit, while my brother got a crisply signed new baseball, complete with one of those nifty plastic baseball holders.

Sibling rivalry, or gender disparity? This is why it's so complicated for women today. We sense that something is off, but we can't quite articulate it.

Consider this: from the moment we could walk, my brother and I were wielding plastic whiffle ball bats. My dad taught my brother to bat left-handed, even though he threw right-handed. It was an advantage against most pitchers. But I was just a girl. I was never taught to switch hit.

To be fair, my dad is quite the pro-feminist guy. I mean, how many other dads encouraged their pre-teen girls to play baseball with the boys?

Still, if we as a society can't get past these rigid gender roles, starting as early as childhood, we will continue to communicate, as Alex did tonight, that women are largely ignorant of sports. They're not cut out for it.

Well, Alex, Title IX was passed in 1972, and women are interested in sports: playing them, watching them, rooting for their teams.

I can't close this Jeopardy-related post without throwing up a cheer for Larissa Kelly, who became the third all-time money winner in non-tournament Jeopardy play this May. She's the highest female scorer in Jeopardy history. Great job, Larissa! Way to show Alex that women know about not only sports, but quite a bit of everything else as well!

This week, my lens is purple

I saw The Color Purple this weekend at Philadelphia's Kimmel Center. The musical was adapted from Alice Walker's novel, and it was fantastic! Such a change from Broadway's typical boy-meets-girl-and-rescues-girl-from-war/overdominating father/tyrannical lover/crazed phantom theme. Instead, the show was populated by women with complex lives, who explore the limits of their strengths and ultimately choose their destinies.


A sampling of memorable moments:

--Miss Millie, a white woman, asks Sophia, a black woman, to care for her children. Sophia responds with a memorable, "Hell, no!"
--The cast engages in a not-so-subtle suggestive song in praise of female sexuality, "Push the Button."
--Celie refuses to continue to submit to Mister's abuse. Her revolution is symbolized by her new industry: a pants-making shop. Now we know who wears the pants in the family!

It's rare to see a show that features women in nearly every role. Even the orchestra conductor was female! I couldn't help but wonder if this was one of the reasons why the theater was only about 3/4 full for a Saturday night performance and why the run-length for this performance was only a month. Do people subconsciously think of a musical written and acted by women as a "women's" musical?

When considering issues of gender, it's also important to look at the intersecting oppressions of race and class. Despite the fact that The Color Purple consisted of an entirely African American cast, the audience was mostly Caucasian. With ticket prices starting at $28, this is likely related to class and access.

It's difficult to alter the status quo when audiences seem to demand the status quo. The Color Purple was empowering to women, particularly black women.

But who was watching?