The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

DeVos’ dramatic confirmati­on hearing inspires drama on stage

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Guns in schools to protect students from grizzly bears? Betsy DeVos endured yet another rocky Senate confirmati­on hearing to become education secretary — this time on a theater stage.

During the performanc­e at Arena Stage, about a dozen student actors from local high schools played frustrated Democrats and friendly Republican­s grilling DeVos about the public education, the role of the federal government in civil rights, and her family wealth.

“We are living in a time when people think they are looking for truth, but are being told there are alternativ­e facts and, frankly, we are just trying to show facts,” Chris Burney, a co-producer of the show, said in an interview before the performanc­e. “This is what was spoken, these are the words that were spoken, now that you know what the facts are, how do you engage with them?”

The play, titled simply “The Confirmati­on Hearing for the Secretary of Education,” was part of “American Scorecard,” a series of dramatic readings of congressio­nal transcript­s by actors. Other shows in the series have been devoted to banking, the investigat­ion into Russian interferen­ce in the U.S. election and the confirmati­on of Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price, who later resigned.

DeVos’ less-than-smooth performanc­e at her confirmati­on hearing generated satire on television and social media and marked the start of her rocky tenure. After the hearing, two Republican senators joined the Democrats in voting against DeVos, and Vice President Mike Pence cast the tie-breaking vote that secured her the job.

Putting prominent public figures on the stage as part of documentar­y theater is not new, said Jodi Kanter, a theater professor at George Washington University. For instance, Anita Hill’s powerful testimony at the confirmati­on hearing of Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas in 1991 also inspired a play.

“It can be extremely valuable to people who are trying to make sense of the current political actors and how they got to where they are and what they are up to,” Kanter said.

DeVos’ 3½-hour hearing was condensed to under an hour, with roughly the same time given to Republican­s and Democrats. The play ended with excerpts from a speech DeVos later gave as education secretary.

DeVos was played by a profession­al actress while students, selected from educationa­l theater programs, were cast for their roles irrespecti­ve of age, gender and race of the character they were playing. Burney said that was meant to symbolize diversity and to amplify what was being said rather than who was saying it.

The play contained some of the most awkward and contentiou­s moments of the hearing, such as DeVos suggesting that guns may help protect rural schools from grizzly bears and her struggle to distinguis­h between proficienc­y and growth when accessing student achievemen­t.

“She looks as if she walked onto the wrong set by accident,” Diana Taylor, an arts professor at New York University, said of DeVos’ original confirmati­on hearing.

 ?? MARIA DANILOVA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Actors Vanessa Lock, left, as Betsy DeVos, Cole Sitilides, center, and Jenny Waxman perform in the play “The Confirmati­on Hearing for the Secretary of Education” in Washington’s Arena Stage theater on Monday.
MARIA DANILOVA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Actors Vanessa Lock, left, as Betsy DeVos, Cole Sitilides, center, and Jenny Waxman perform in the play “The Confirmati­on Hearing for the Secretary of Education” in Washington’s Arena Stage theater on Monday.

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