Why theater is essential to democracy Oskar Eustis

Theater matters because democracy matters.

Theater is the essential
art form of democracy,

and we know this because
they were born in the same city.

In the late 6th century BC,

the idea of Western democracy was born.

It was, of course,

a very partial and flawed democracy,

but the idea that power should stem
from the consent of the governed,

that power should flow
from below to above,

not the other way around,

was born in that decade.

And in that same decade, somebody –
legend has it, somebody named Thespis –

invented the idea of dialogue.

What does that mean, to invent dialogue?

Well, we know that
the Festival of Dionysus gathered

the entire citizenry of Athens

on the side of the Acropolis,

and they would listen to music,
they would watch dancing,

and they would have stories told
as part of the Festival of Dionysus.

And storytelling is much like
what’s happening right now:

I’m standing up here,

the unitary authority,

and I am talking to you.

And you are sitting back,
and you are receiving what I have to say.

And you may disagree with it,
you may think I’m an insufferable fool,

you may be bored to death,

but that dialogue is mostly
taking place inside your own head.

But what happens if,
instead of me talking to you –

and Thespis thought of this –

I just shift 90 degrees to the left,

and I talk to another person
onstage with me?

Everything changes,

because at that moment,
I’m not the possessor of truth;

I’m a guy with an opinion.

And I’m talking to somebody else.

And you know what?

That other person has an opinion too,

and it’s drama, remember,
conflict – they disagree with me.

There’s a conflict between
two points of view.

And the thesis of that
is that the truth can only emerge

in the conflict
of different points of view.

It’s not the possession of any one person.

And if you believe in democracy,
you have to believe that.

If you don’t believe that,
you’re an autocrat

who is putting up with democracy.

But that’s the basic thesis of democracy,

that the conflict of different
points of views leads to the truth.

What’s the other thing that’s happening?

I’m not asking you to sit back
and listen to me.

I’m asking you to lean forward

and imagine my point of view –

what this looks like and feels like
to me as a character.

And then I’m asking you
to switch your mind

and imagine what it feels like
to the other person talking.

I’m asking you to exercise empathy.

And the idea that truth comes
from the collision of different ideas

and the emotional muscle of empathy

are the necessary tools
for democratic citizenship.

What else happens?

The third thing really is you,

is the community itself, is the audience.

And you know from personal experience
that when you go to the movies,

you walk into a movie theater,
and if it’s empty, you’re delighted,

because nothing’s going to be
between you and the movie.

You can spread out, put your legs
over the top of the stadium seats,

eat your popcorn and just enjoy it.

But if you walk into a live theater

and you see that the theater is half full,

your heart sinks.

You’re disappointed immediately,

because whether you knew it or not,

you were coming to that theater

to be part of an audience.

You were coming to have
the collective experience

of laughing together, crying together,
holding your breath together

to see what’s going to happen next.

You may have walked into that theater
as an individual consumer,

but if the theater does its job,

you’ve walked out with a sense
of yourself as part of a whole,

as part of a community.

That’s built into the DNA of my art form.

Twenty-five hundred years later,
Joe Papp decided

that the culture should belong to
everybody in the United States of America,

and that it was his job
to try to deliver on that promise.

He created Free Shakespeare in the Park.

And Free Shakespeare in the Park
is based on a very simple idea,

the idea that the best theater,
the best art that we can produce,

should go to everybody
and belong to everybody,

and to this day,

every summer night in Central Park,

2,000 people are lining up

to see the best theater
we can provide for free.

It’s not a commercial transaction.

In 1967, 13 years
after he figured that out,

he figured out something else,

which is that the democratic
circle was not complete

by just giving the people the classics.

We had to actually let the people
create their own classics

and take the stage.

And so in 1967,

Joe opened the Public Theater
downtown on Astor Place,

and the first show he ever produced
was the world premiere of “Hair.”

That’s the first thing he ever did
that wasn’t Shakespeare.

Clive Barnes in The Times said
that it was as if Mr. Papp took a broom

and swept up all the refuse
from the East Village streets

onto the stage at the Public.

(Laughter)

He didn’t mean it complimentarily,

but Joe put it up in the lobby,
he was so proud of it.

(Laughter) (Applause)

And what the Public Theater did over
the next years with amazing shows like

“For Colored Girls Who Have Considered
Suicide / When the Rainbow Is Enuf,”

“A Chorus Line,”

and – here’s the most extraordinary
example I can think of:

Larry Kramer’s savage cry of rage
about the AIDS crisis,

“The Normal Heart.”

Because when Joe produced
that play in 1985,

there was more information about AIDS

in Frank Rich’s review
in the New York Times

than the New York Times had published
in the previous four years.

Larry was actually changing
the dialogue about AIDS

through writing this play,

and Joe was by producing it.

I was blessed to commission and work
on Tony Kushner’s “Angels in America,”

and when doing that play
and along with “Normal Heart,”

we could see that the culture
was actually shifting,

and it wasn’t caused by the theater,

but the theater was doing its part

to change what it meant to be gay
in the United States.

And I’m incredibly proud of that.

(Applause)

When I took over Joe’s old job
at the Public in 2005,

I realized one of the problems we had
was a victim of our own success,

which is: Shakespeare in the Park
had been founded as a program for access,

and it was now the hardest ticket
to get in New York City.

People slept out for two nights
to get those tickets.

What was that doing?

That was eliminating
98 percent of the population

from even considering going to it.

So we refounded the mobile unit

and took Shakespeare to prisons,
to homeless shelters,

to community centers in all five boroughs

and even in New Jersey
and Westchester County.

And that program proved something to us
that we knew intuitively:

people’s need for theater
is as powerful as their desire for food

or for drink.

It’s been an extraordinary success,
and we’ve continued it.

And then there was yet another barrier
that we realized we weren’t crossing,

which is a barrier of participation.

And the idea, we said, is:

How can we turn theater
from being a commodity, an object,

back into what it really is –

a set of relationships among people?

And under the guidance
of the amazing Lear deBessonet,

we started the Public Works program,

which now every summer produces

these immense Shakespearean
musical pageants,

where Tony Award-winning
actors and musicians

are side by side with nannies
and domestic workers

and military veterans
and recently incarcerated prisoners,

amateurs and professionals,

performing together on the same stage.

And it’s not just a great social program,

it’s the best art that we do.

And the thesis of it is
that artistry is not something

that is the possession of a few.

Artistry is inherent
in being a human being.

Some of us just get to spend
a lot more of our lives practicing it.

And then occasionally –

(Applause)

you get a miracle like “Hamilton,”

Lin-Manuel’s extraordinary retelling
of the foundational story of this country

through the eyes of the only Founding
Father who was a bastard immigrant orphan

from the West Indies.

And what Lin was doing

is exactly what Shakespeare was doing.

He was taking the voice of the people,
the language of the people,

elevating it into verse,

and by doing so,

ennobling the language

and ennobling the people
who spoke the language.

And by casting that show entirely
with a cast of black and brown people,

what Lin was saying to us,

he was reviving in us

our greatest aspirations
for the United States,

our better angels of America,

our sense of what this country could be,

the inclusion that was at the heart
of the American Dream.

And it unleashed
a wave of patriotism in me

and in our audience,

the appetite for which
is proving to be insatiable.

But there was another side to that,
and it’s where I want to end,

and it’s the last story
I want to talk about.

Some of you may have heard
that Vice President-elect Pence

came to see “Hamilton” in New York.

And when he came in,
some of my fellow New Yorkers booed him.

And beautifully, he said,

“That’s what freedom sounds like.”

And at the end of the show,

we read what I feel was a very
respectful statement from the stage,

and Vice President-elect Pence
listened to it,

but it sparked a certain amount
of outrage, a tweetstorm,

and also an internet boycott of “Hamilton”

from outraged people who had felt
we had treated him with disrespect.

I looked at that boycott and I said,
we’re getting something wrong here.

All of these people who have signed
this boycott petition,

they were never going to see
“Hamilton” anyway.

It was never going to come
to a city near them.

If it could come,
they couldn’t afford a ticket,

and if they could afford a ticket,
they didn’t have the connections

to get that ticket.

They weren’t boycotting us;

we had boycotted them.

And if you look at the red and blue
electoral map of the United States,

and if I were to tell you,

“Oh, the blue is what designates

all of the major nonprofit
cultural institutions,”

I’d be telling you the truth.

You’d believe me.

We in the culture have done
exactly what the economy,

what the educational system,
what technology has done,

which is turn our back
on a large part of the country.

So this idea of inclusion,
it has to keep going.

Next fall, we are sending out on tour

a production of Lynn Nottage’s brilliant,
Pulitzer Prize-winning play “Sweat.”

Years of research in Redding, Pennsylvania
led her to write this play

about the deindustrialization
of Pennsylvania:

what happened when steel left,

the rage that was unleashed,

the tensions that were unleashed,

the racism that was unleashed

by the loss of jobs.

We’re taking that play
and we’re touring it

to rural counties in Pennsylvania,

Ohio, Michigan,

Minnesota and Wisconsin.

We’re partnering with community
organizations there to try and make sure

not only that we reach the people
that we’re trying to reach,

but that we find ways
to listen to them back

and say, “The culture
is here for you, too.”

Because –

(Applause)

we in the culture industry,

we in the theater,

have no right to say
that we don’t know what our job is.

It’s in the DNA of our art form.

Our job “… is to hold up,
as ‘twere, a mirror to nature;

to show scorn her image,

to show virtue her appearance,

and the very age its form and pressure.”

Our job is to try to hold up
a vision to America

that shows not only
who all of us are individually,

but that welds us back into
the commonality that we need to be,

the sense of unity,

the sense of whole,

the sense of who we are as a country.

That’s what the theater is supposed to do,

and that’s what we need to try to do
as well as we can.

Thank you very much.

(Applause)