Quick Cuts, Sliced Thinly.

Pravin awarded Rudin Scholarship

Award given 03.05.08

March 9, 2008 8:02 PM

Pravin was awarded the Maya and Samuel Rudin scholarship for 2007-2008.

"How You See It" @ CUNY Grad Center

Conference starts at 10am

February 15, 2008 8:04 PM

"How You See It" is screened at the CUNY Grad Center as part of the "Where the Truth Lies" conference.

Pravin's "How You See It" in BlackBook Magazine

January 02

January 11, 2008 11:51 AM

BlackBook Magazine's online edition writes about How You See It with the headline: "Hillary and Barack Plagiarize Themselves."

Dodd's Notepad

ENTRY 6 - Ode to Chis Rose

So I have been looking for excuses to get back to the Crescent City for the last few years, but there has been nothing that has motivated me to return home for more than a 10 day span of time; a Christmas here, a big Birthday there, but nothing that has hooked me. Life just keeps moving. Ive been pursuing my career in theatre pretty hard since I graduated and there always seems to be another place to go or exciting project to get involved with (thats not in NO) and before you know it, you havent been home in a year or lived there in 15.

Katrina didnt even do it.

It came and went, scared the living hell out of me, I thought my uncle was dead for a week, I had a nervous break down in front of 2 of my guy GUY friends (and freaked them right out), headed to Paris for a job in the aftermath of the storm, and over there had no one to relate to or relay my pains from the images of my trashed city (I showed the famous cover of the New York Times with roof tops poking out of murky water for as far as the eye could see and people laughed. Literally.) From there, I got another gig and kept moving, and so on. And before you know it, its been 9 months since the storm.

The closest I came to finding THE something that would force me to rearrange my life (a bit) and dedicate more than a week to my birth city was last Mardi Gras when I received a phone call from both my mom and uncle telling me that THIS Mardi Gras, more than all other Mardi Gras, was important to come home for. It was THE first since the storm and the city needed its residents to come home and support her. I had never gotten such a call from either of them, so I knew I needed to figure it out. I just so happen to have scored a 2 month teaching position at Harvard (The American Repertory Theatre Graduate Program) a week before, but ya do whatya gotta do. I grabbed my beaded umbrella, face paint and my dancin shoes and then hopped the next flight home to Sin City. I had the time of my life that Mardi Gras. Then, the festivities ended and I hopped on a plane and was suddenly back in Cambridge. Life just moves on it seems.

THEN, 3 months ago, 9 months after the storm, IT finally did click. It became very clear that I DID need to return home and DO MY PART. It was not a vague growing feeling that finaly breeched the surface, or a welling guilt that finally popped. Nope. It was a silver bullet. Something very specific that made me DEFINATIVELY say (Dodd, you are going home as soon as you can figure it out.) And IT came in the form of a forwarded email.

Who woulda thunk?

My mother, along with every other citizen of Earth with roots in New Orleans, received a transcript of a speech that Times Picayune Columnist, Chris Rose, gave at the graduation ceremony of Ursuline Academy, an all girls Catholic school in Uptown NO. She then forwarded it to me, I read it, and his words clicked for me.

And now here I am 3 months later.

I still forward it to everyone who asks me about New Orleans and whats going on these days. I think that maybe it will have the same effect on them that it has on me. So go on and give it a read, why dontcha?

Good evening. As you look at me, I know what you're thinking. Just what you need: Another old man who doesn't understand you, giving you advice, rendering forth the wisdom of the ages like some geezer sage from the Paleozoic Era here to utter inspirational platitudes from Dear Abby and that fine self-help manual, "All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten."
Or worse: "Oh, the Places You'll Go."
Those are all great books; don't get me wrong. But in kindergarten, they didn't teach you how to siphon gas during a natural disaster, how to send a distress signal with a flashlight and how to decontaminate a refrigerator -- to say nothing of how to properly open, season and heat a National Guard-issued MRE without burning your hands.
We in New Orleans were always different from folks elsewhere. Now we're real different. I wager that you learned more about life, death and everything in between this past year than in the rest of your life combined.
You are survivors. The Katrina Kids. The Children of the Storm.
And yes, I am middle-aged. Eisenhower was in office when I was born.
Eisenhower was a president. Of this country. Anyway . . .
Yes, I am from the past. I do not own an iPod. I do not text message. I don't have a tattoo on my lower back. I think skateboarding is dangerous. I think ketchup should be red and only red. Energy drinks give me the shakes. I don't know who the lead singer of Maroon 5 is. I think Bruce Springsteen is cool.
For those of you still awake . . . .
I have an advantage that commencement speakers didn't have when I was your age: the Internet. Yes, there was a time before the Internet. It was a long time ago. It sucked.
My kids marvel when I tell them that television was once just in black and white. And that no matter how many channels you tuned into, you couldn't find Hilary Duff on any of them.
They don't believe me.
So I checked out some Web sites for tips about making a graduation speech, but I came up wanting. Most said to lean heavily on inspirational quotes from famous people, but if Ursuline Academy wanted Einstein or Mark Twain to give you a speech, I suppose they would have arranged for Einstein or Twain to be here today.
With the digital technology available today, I suppose that's almost possible.
And I found out that I could even purchase an audience-tested motivational commencement speech online for only $25 -- a much higher fee than the going rate for college term papers; I suppose they are mindful of the budgetary constraints of students as opposed to, say . . . someone who gives a graduation speech.
One Web site pointed out that nobody listens to the graduation speaker anyway because everyone is distracted and preoccupied, but if you make a winking reference to alcohol, you'll catch everyone's attention.
But I'm not going to do that. That would be a cheap gimmick.
And now that I have your attention, let me lay some heavy on you.
There are commencement exercises all over this country today but you and your fellow graduates from the Gulf Coast are different, very different. Particularly here in New Orleans.
The water, it came to your school. The gasoline, chemicals, sewage and blood came to your doorstep. It settled into the ground of this courtyard where we now gather.
Not a pleasant notion to consider on this joyous occasion but, there you are: The elephant is out of its cage again.
You must never forget what happened here. You must take that experience with you into the world.
You must, as they say, represent New Orleans.
I can tell you from my years of work and travel that to be from New Orleans has always been an interesting proposition. Historically, if you were, say, in Europe, and you told someone you were from the United States, generally they would shrug. But if you told them you were from New Orleans, they would want you to pull up a chair at their table, they would want to know more about you and your city.
On our domestic shores, historically, when New Orleanians check into college dormitories their freshman years of college, they are an immediate attraction, and not just because everyone assumes their partying credentials are higher than everyone else's.
You are interesting because where you come from is interesting, unique, colorful, diverse and tolerant. People have always wanted to know about it, to see it for themselves, to touch the magic here if by no other means than by the picture painted by your words, your stories.
Tell them what happened here.
I'm not going to offer you the language to describe it or the politics to color it; use your own words and thoughts.
But I'll give you an example:
My daughter was asked to write about her experiences over the past year when she came back to school in New Orleans in January and this is what she wrote: "There was a Hurricane. Some people died. Some of them were kids."
My daughter was 6 when she wrote that. It just doesn't strike me as what you would wish for your child to write in her first-grade journal, but there it is.
You -- all of us -- are marked for life by what happened here and if you go out into the world and you shrug it off -- if you are soooo over the Katrina thing -- then you are doing a disservice to yourself and to the community that gave you your spirit and identity.
Like it or not, this storm, these circumstances, have marked you. My belief is that your generation and those who come after you in this town will be extraordinarily resilient. That is a good quality to carry with you. You have seen and have suffered loss.
For those of you who fall into that huge swath of our community known as "lost everything," people try to tell you it was just stuff, get over it, at least you're alive and what you lost was just stuff.
Yeah, well. It was your stuff. It took 17 years to get that stuff. And if it all disappeared in one day then, hell yeah, it's all right to be mad about that.
But move on. Make the anger work for you.
Perhaps the most valuable lesson we have learned as a community is humility. The great equalizer. We have been targeted by our circumstances as the recipients of the greatest outpouring of donations, charity and volunteer help in American history.
People from elsewhere, people we don't know, saved us. They gave us their money and their time and they cleared our streets and protected our homes and, funny thing, most of us don't even know who they were. Or are.
They expected -- and in most cases received -- nothing in return.
Are you ready to do the same for someone else when the time comes?
Think about it. Discuss amongst yourselves. And get ready. Because that time will come, many times over, in your lifetime.
Life is short. Now you know that. What happened here shows how it can all be gone tomorrow. So just do it. Seize the day. Carpe Diem. I am Tiger Woods. Rise up. Make Levees, Not War. Vote for Pedro. Whatever.
Just do something important with your young life. Don't sit around and wait until you're 50 to suddenly understand how precious all of this is.
There's always the story of the bitter, angry old man who picks on little children and never says thank you to the waiter or waitress and doesn't say hello to the mailman.
And then one day the old guy gets cancer and a wake-up call, reality check, and he realizes how little time is left and suddenly he's volunteering at the oncology ward at Children's Hospital and he asks after the bank teller's mama and he stops and pets the neighbor's dog and he tells everyone that he can: I never knew how beautiful it all was.
Don't be that guy. Nobody likes that guy.
New Orleans got cancer this past year. We got our wake-up call and if you're living an existence here that is without purpose and mission, then you are asleep.
Twice in my column in recent months I have invoked the words of a Magazine Street barber named Aidan Gill, whose call to arms is the most powerful I have heard since the storm.
He said: "A time will come when someone asks you: 'What were you doing about it?' You can't tell them: 'I was just watching it. I was just an innocent bystander.' Let me tell you something: There are no innocent bystanders in this."
No truer words have been spoken.
I can't tell you what, exactly, to do; how to engage in your community. I wouldn't be so presumptuous; the philosophy here is think for yourself and find your own way.
But if finding your own way involves putting on work boots and heavy gloves this summer and going into neighborhoods you've never seen in this city before, then all the better.
There are tens of thousands of people and institutions that need help in this community and not all of them are going to make it -- but by God, it's not going to be because we didn't try. It's not going to be because we didn't give everything we had -- our hearts, our souls and our bodies -- into saving this place and making it better than it ever was.
Your home.
There are no innocent bystanders. Not in this courtyard. Not in this neighborhood. Not in this city. Not now. Not ever.
One more thing, and this is important:
Be kind to your parents.
I will tell you something that they cannot or will not tell you and it is this: They are consumed right now with a world of worry and doubt that is crushing in its weight.
Maybe you can see this at home or maybe they are good at hiding it from you because that's what parents do -- spend most of our lives trying to shield our children from pain.
They won't tell you this so I will: They're scared. They're terrified. We're all terrified.
Everything we know and love is at risk. So be kind to them.
It's like we're all in a big boat right now, paddling for our lives and we've got to be together of one mind to get through this.
So get in the boat and grab a paddle and get ready for the ride of your lives.
Nothing is more rewarding than a purpose-driven life. And it is here, outside your door, every morning -- or afternoon -- when you wake up.
Don't miss the boat.

Web Design

Lauren Mechling

Lauren Mechling

Graphic Design

War Child + Buddahead Christmas Card

War Child: Christmas Card

Writing

Internet Censorship Abroad -- and At Home

Internet Censorship Abroad -- and At Home

Theatre

La Turista

La Turista by Sam Shepard

Video

The Production Meeting

The Production Meeting