THEATRE PREVIEW
“NICKEL AND DIMED”
Published in KPBS On Air Magazine September
2005
Can
an acclaimed, high-profile journalist subsist on minimum wage? Social critic
Barbara Ehrenreich was determined to find out. She spent a year moving among
three states (Florida, Maine and Minnesota), taking low-wage jobs such as
waitress, hotel maid, house cleaner, Wal-Mart salesperson and nursing home
aide. The result was her knockout, life-changing, consciousness-raising,
best-selling 2001 book, “Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America.”
In
2002, Joan Holden, longtime comical/political writer for the Tony Award-winning
San Francisco Mime Troupe, adapted the non-fiction blockbuster into a play, Nickel and Dimed, with Ehrenreich as the
frazzled central character. After making the regional theater rounds, with a
projected opening this year in New York, the play is having its local premiere
at SDSU, as part of a series of campus-wide events.
Ehrenreich’s
book was chosen for the University’s Summer Reading Program, recommended for
all incoming freshmen and transfer students. Ehrenreich will appear on campus
(Nov. 3) to present a free lecture. And on September 30, the day her play opens
at SDSU, playwright Joan Holden will give a free talk.
The
director of the local premiere is Peter Cirino, assistant professor in the
School of Theatre, Television and Film. The trilingual, multicultural
specialist is the son of an Italian father (who died in the Vietnam War) and a
Mexican mother.
“The
moment I read [Ehrenreich’s ] book, I said, ‘I have to do something with this;
this is my Mom’s life,’” says Cirino. “My mom was a piece-worker in the garment
district of Dallas, making about a half-penny per dress. She also worked as a
housekeeper and nanny, and a hotel cleaning person. Her life mirrored what
Barbara had done. I couldn’t read the book without picturing her. When I heard
there was a play, I knew I had to direct it.”
Cirino
made contact with Holden and began pitching the play to his Department several
years ago. This year, the timing was perfect.
“I
really think it’s an important piece of work,” he says. “It’s informative but
not preachy. And it has lots of comic moments. What it does is promote empathy.
People think the minimum wage is okay; these people have jobs and they can live
on what they earn. But the fact is, as Barbara Ehrenreich found out, you just
can’t survive.”
During
her ‘experiment’ earning $7 an hour, Ehrenreich couldn’t make ends meet. She
failed to provide for herself the necessities of life, let alone the luxury of
health coverage. She discovered exactly how labor-intensive and demeaning those
low-paying, unskilled jobs could be. Ultimately, she was forced to work two
jobs, seven days a week, and still, she almost wound up in a shelter.
Looking
back on the experience, Ehrenreich noted that the hardest thing for her to
accept was the “invisibility of the poor.” “We see them every day in
restaurants, hotels, discount stores and fast-food chains,” she wrote, “but we
don’t recognize them as ‘poor’ because, after all, they have jobs. The working
poor,” she said, “are in fact the major philanthropists of our society. They
neglect their own children so that the children of others will be cared for;
they live in substandard housing so that other homes will be shiny and perfect;
they endure privation so that inflation will be low and stock prices high… My
life is subsidized by the people whose labor I live upon.”
As
prize-winning author Studs Terkel put it, “’Nickel and Dimed’ is a stiff punch
in the nose to those righteous apostles of ‘welfare reform,’” with its promise
that any job equals a better life.
“My
hope,” says director Cirino, “is that the play will ‘guilt’ people into doing
something about the ‘caste system’ that’s developing in American. That they’ll
be motivated to stand up for human rights and get involved.”
Post-performance
talk-backs will be offered, scenes will be presented in SDSU classrooms and
faculty are encouraged to include “Nickel and Dimed” in their syllabi. But
despite all these intellectual pursuits, the hope is that the response to the
book and play will be visceral.
“In
this society,” says Cirino, “it’s so easy to become detached. When we don’t
directly see and feel the ills of society, we have no empathy for them. This
play helps us realize that these people are killing themselves so we can have
an easier life.
“I
think live theater, unlike modern media, can help audiences feel empathy and
compassion. There’s a human being up there going through this situation, and
it’s clear that these events came from real stories and real people. When a
live actor is up there, it creates energy between the topic and the audience.”
Among
its other efforts, the University is offering steeply discounted tickets for
students, groups and low-income workers.
“It
builds such self-esteem to see yourself up there onstage,” says Cirino. And as
for his now-retired mother? “She’ll definitely see herself in it. She’s
probably cry.”
[Nickel and Dimed runs September
30-October 9 in the Don Powell Theatre on the campus of SDSU. 619-594-6884,
theatre.sdsu.edu]
©2005
Patté Productions Inc.