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Wanted to add here, Constance and Ocean were part of the Jungle Theatre cast which had the same director and choreographer as McCarter and Arena (Sarah Rasmussen and Jim Liedtl) additionally Liedtl played Karnak in brown face in jungle theatreās run :(
Just a note: this post started as a discussion of and is going to spend a decent amount of time discussing Yannick Mirkoās firing and replacement in Ride the Cyclone, but I realized I wanted to address my experience with ablism in theatre in general. I canāt force anyone to read this, but if you have the time and you care about representation in theatre, Iād to ask you to try and hear what I have to say
TLDR: Yannick Mirko's speaking out is bringing more attention to ableism in theatre, I added some examples I've seen to emphasize that ableism in the theatre world is really common
Literally I take a break from writing my papers for finals for like 10 minutes and I find out that Arena Stage cast Yannick Mirkoās able-bodied understudy to play Ricky in their production of RtC.
For anyone not caught up, Yannick Mirko is the first disabled person to play Ricky Potts, a canonically disabled character, in the musical Ride The Cyclone. He was unjustly fired from the production he was in (the McCarter atheater) because of their disability. They had one medical emergency and was told that his disability was too unpredictable that he would be replaced by his understudy, who is not disabled.
Now, onto the Arena Stage production. Three of the seven cast members played the roles they are in now in the McCarter Theater production (Jane Doe, Mischa Bachinski, and Noel Gruber). Two are playing their original role from a different production (Constance Blackwood, Ocean OāConnell Rosenberg). One appears to be playing their role for the first time, though I could be wrong on this (The Amazing Karnak). The only cast member of the Arena Stage production who, as far as I can tell, was an understudy for their first production is their Ricky Potts. Ricky is being played by the able bodied understudy who took over the role when Yannick Mirko was fired from the McCarter Theater production. He was also reportedly referred to by his disability aids during the rehearsal process, rather than his name.
This is genuinely disgusting. Theatre is already so discriminatory to disabled people and the McCarter Theater and Arena Stage productions have so far only proved that they can get away with it. Admittedly, I have minimal social media presence so there could be conversations I havenāt seen, but I have seen a maximum of 5 people talk about this.
Itās very much worth noting that most productions I have been in or seen weāre willing to bend over backwards to make sure an able bodied actor could stay onstage. Iāve been in five shows where an understudy was sent out. Three because the actors had Covid and two because the actor was in the hospital and would not be discharged until after the show was over. This may sound like a lot of productions with understudies, but Iāve been in theatre for 11 years. Iāve been in 30 shows. Five shows, especially mid-pandemic, is nothing. I have been in shows where directors have done everything in their power to keep an able bodied actor in a lead role (including many cases of severe illnesses and one with a concussion and staples in his head). Iāve seen an actress onstage while she had broken ribs. Iāve seen a friend perform after slicing her leg and spraining her ankle. Ive seen a different friend come to a three hour rehearsal after spending the morning vomiting. Two different people I know have performed with dislocated joints. Iāve been onstage when I was so sick I couldnāt breathe or speak. Iāve been onstage when my glasses broke and I couldnāt see as far as the people around me. Most actors I know who have left productions only left because they could not physically return or because they were fired for actually valid reasons (skipped nearly half of the rehearsals so they could go on vacation without informing the director).
If these were fine, if Iāve been praised and seen actors praised for doing this, why was Yannick Mirko fired for one medical emergency? Easy answer: Ableism.
One less-than shocking part for me was realizing that Iāve worked with one of the people who was involved in the McCarter production for an awards show. I watched her work with disabled performers in one of the other acts. And, mind you, by āwork with,ā I mean that she told them their spots and expected them to know where to go. She was absolutely lovely to everyone else (especially leads but I donāt want to get into the treatment of ensemble actors right now, thatāll probably be a different post one day).
I also want to discuss my experiences with ablism in theatre, as someone who has witnessed it and, very recently, started experiencing it (to, admittedly, a significantly lesser degree than many).
The first show I was in with a disabled actor, I was 14. My friend was made to climb multiple set pieces despite her leg not being fully functional. Sheād been in a wheelchair for several months at school that year. I didnāt fully realize something was wrong until she started complaining about minor pain to me. She never wanted anyone to go to the director and she never went on her own.
My next is when I was 15. I didnāt realize what was really happening for many years. He had missed several rehearsals with no word to our directors and was made to leave the show. This sounds normal enough, I mentioned someone else who was forced to do the same earlier on. This would be normal if the director hadnāt checked in on and allowed able bodied actors who had done the same thing back into the show. I figured at that point in my life that heād just missed more shows or assumed that heād come to the mutual agreement to leave. I donāt have answers, but Iāve started to doubt those beliefs in recent years.
My next show with a disabled actor was when I was still 15. We had one disabled actress, a girl in a wheelchair. The show was set in a high school. She was in onstage twice. The first time, she sat on the side during a group number and sang with us (she was never taught any choreography. The second time, a cast member brought her on, she was crowned prom queen, and then she left the stage and was never seen again until curtain call. Honestly, at the time, I thought it was weird that we were treating her as less capable and not allowing her into any more of the show, but itās hard to bring that up with anyone. Especially when everyone you try to talk to about it defends the choice. Everyone said that she was less capable or that sheād stick out or that her wheelchair would get in the way. I didnāt feel I could address it, so it was left unsaid. She went to school with me for five years and I never saw her in another production.
It took several years to be in another show with a disabled actor. My school was by all accounts really great about our treatment of disabled people until it came to extracurriculars.
My most recent show that Iām talking about was not technically with a disabled actor, but one who was injured for the entire rehearsal and performance process and was treated similarly from what I could see. It was last year. They were cast in the group that was onstage the least. Nobody in that group was invited to any vocal rehearsals and they were all in one choreography rehearsal. They were also made to stand at the bottom of a set piece on their own because they couldnāt climb it like the rest of their group.
Iād also like to discuss my experiences since finding out that I have a wrist problem that will likely impact me on and off for the rest of my life. For context, I have limited mobility in one of my hands due to a problem with my wrist and thumb. I cannot fully bend my wrist in any direction, nor can I comfortably straighten my thumb all the way or make a fist with the thumb on the inside.
Iād also like to note that I am currently in university taking a creative writing minor, so that sucks because my wrist and thumb do affect my ability to type and write, so it flares up a lot. I also really like to draw and sew for fun and Iāve had to greatly limit my ability to do the things I enjoy. Iāve been in two shows since I went to my doctor because of the pains and four shows since the pain started affecting my abilities to do things.
This first show I was in after my wrist got bad was a very dance heavy production that consisted of two group numbers and a solo or duet for every cast member. The worst part for me was dance warmups, where we were instructed to do many things forced us to put large amounts of pressure on our hands. Primarily different forms of lunges and pushups. I would cry after every dayās warmups. I could barely hold my props.
The next show, I actually worked crew on. I was involved in props, costumes, and makeup, as well as moving sets/props between scenes. I made props with box cutters and scissors I could barely hold. My hands shook so hard when I was trying to melt the edge of a ribbon to keep it from fraying that I dropped a match (thank god I was outside and on pavement). I sewed costumes until I couldnāt do anything for the rest of the day. One of the worst parts was when I hand-sculpted multiple special-effect-makeup prosthetics for one of our actresses. I could hardly hold my makeup brushes or my dummy head that I was sculpting on by the end of every one I made (three sets, for context, every set used two pieces). The other worst was moving sets. I was originally set to move a desk for an office scene that was so heavy that I cried after our first rehearsal and requested to be switched to a new job. I was given a bookshelf that was on wheels. Two of the four wheels were broken and I had to pick up the shelves to get it into the correct position anyway. This show was actually the reason I went to the doctor about the wrist pains.
My next show was actually an improv workshop followed by two performances. I spent the day of the workshop painting for a school activity. I ended up in a wrist brace for the full workshop. I have never seen a group of people so cautious around me, nobody was even willing to touch that arm, which made a certain amount of improv very strange because we were doing a lot of physical stuff with each other. Everyone else was grabbing hands and stuff and they were just awkwardly standing next to me. I ended up taking off my brace for the performances so that I could feel like a part of the show. and hurting myself because I should have been wearing it.
The last show was a recent production where off-and-on through the rehearsal process, I was in the brace. There were many comments made asking about why my wrist was still hurting me, which I assume is a certain amount of ignorance because yes, my wrist still hurts, I haven't been able to move it properly for half a year. However, I was not given a single costume I could wear the brace with and another cast member was instructed to pull my by the arm that was hurt. Luckily, between pain meds and excessively taking care of myself, it didnāt hurt during production week, but Iād still call that some bad treatment.
Basically, theatre sucks for disabled actors. Please, help bring awareness to this. If youāve seen or experienced ableism, I encourage you to speak out. Yannick Mirko is a wonderful performer and an inspiration to me. Heās been through so much. Also, Iām not fond of cursing, but fuck McCarter Theater and fuck Arena Stage. Cast disabled actors as disabled characters and donāt replace them with an able-bodied understudy.
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!!! There is stories of SIX having someone on for one role, the principal being on until a certain number, then having to come off, then someone swinging on last min. There was an instance where Sam Pauly (US Tour 2019 and Broadway 2021 Katherine Howard) performed the show sitting because she broke her ribs. WHY COULDNT MCCARTER DO A QUICK STOP SHOW AND GET MATTHEW BOYD READY TO FILL IN QUICKLY? Also Ricky is not needed for Sugar Cloud??? Like he's on BVs... so what ur BVs are quite?
Just a note: this post started as a discussion of and is going to spend a decent amount of time discussing Yannick Mirkoās firing and replacement in Ride the Cyclone, but I realized I wanted to address my experience with ablism in theatre in general. I canāt force anyone to read this, but if you have the time and you care about representation in theatre, Iād to ask you to try and hear what I have to say
TLDR: Yannick Mirko's speaking out is bringing more attention to ableism in theatre, I added some examples I've seen to emphasize that ableism in the theatre world is really common
Literally I take a break from writing my papers for finals for like 10 minutes and I find out that Arena Stage cast Yannick Mirkoās able-bodied understudy to play Ricky in their production of RtC.
For anyone not caught up, Yannick Mirko is the first disabled person to play Ricky Potts, a canonically disabled character, in the musical Ride The Cyclone. He was unjustly fired from the production he was in (the McCarter atheater) because of their disability. They had one medical emergency and was told that his disability was too unpredictable that he would be replaced by his understudy, who is not disabled.
Now, onto the Arena Stage production. Three of the seven cast members played the roles they are in now in the McCarter Theater production (Jane Doe, Mischa Bachinski, and Noel Gruber). Two are playing their original role from a different production (Constance Blackwood, Ocean OāConnell Rosenberg). One appears to be playing their role for the first time, though I could be wrong on this (The Amazing Karnak). The only cast member of the Arena Stage production who, as far as I can tell, was an understudy for their first production is their Ricky Potts. Ricky is being played by the able bodied understudy who took over the role when Yannick Mirko was fired from the McCarter Theater production. He was also reportedly referred to by his disability aids during the rehearsal process, rather than his name.
This is genuinely disgusting. Theatre is already so discriminatory to disabled people and the McCarter Theater and Arena Stage productions have so far only proved that they can get away with it. Admittedly, I have minimal social media presence so there could be conversations I havenāt seen, but I have seen a maximum of 5 people talk about this.
Itās very much worth noting that most productions I have been in or seen weāre willing to bend over backwards to make sure an able bodied actor could stay onstage. Iāve been in five shows where an understudy was sent out. Three because the actors had Covid and two because the actor was in the hospital and would not be discharged until after the show was over. This may sound like a lot of productions with understudies, but Iāve been in theatre for 11 years. Iāve been in 30 shows. Five shows, especially mid-pandemic, is nothing. I have been in shows where directors have done everything in their power to keep an able bodied actor in a lead role (including many cases of severe illnesses and one with a concussion and staples in his head). Iāve seen an actress onstage while she had broken ribs. Iāve seen a friend perform after slicing her leg and spraining her ankle. Ive seen a different friend come to a three hour rehearsal after spending the morning vomiting. Two different people I know have performed with dislocated joints. Iāve been onstage when I was so sick I couldnāt breathe or speak. Iāve been onstage when my glasses broke and I couldnāt see as far as the people around me. Most actors I know who have left productions only left because they could not physically return or because they were fired for actually valid reasons (skipped nearly half of the rehearsals so they could go on vacation without informing the director).
If these were fine, if Iāve been praised and seen actors praised for doing this, why was Yannick Mirko fired for one medical emergency? Easy answer: Ableism.
One less-than shocking part for me was realizing that Iāve worked with one of the people who was involved in the McCarter production for an awards show. I watched her work with disabled performers in one of the other acts. And, mind you, by āwork with,ā I mean that she told them their spots and expected them to know where to go. She was absolutely lovely to everyone else (especially leads but I donāt want to get into the treatment of ensemble actors right now, thatāll probably be a different post one day).
I also want to discuss my experiences with ablism in theatre, as someone who has witnessed it and, very recently, started experiencing it (to, admittedly, a significantly lesser degree than many).
The first show I was in with a disabled actor, I was 14. My friend was made to climb multiple set pieces despite her leg not being fully functional. Sheād been in a wheelchair for several months at school that year. I didnāt fully realize something was wrong until she started complaining about minor pain to me. She never wanted anyone to go to the director and she never went on her own.
My next is when I was 15. I didnāt realize what was really happening for many years. He had missed several rehearsals with no word to our directors and was made to leave the show. This sounds normal enough, I mentioned someone else who was forced to do the same earlier on. This would be normal if the director hadnāt checked in on and allowed able bodied actors who had done the same thing back into the show. I figured at that point in my life that heād just missed more shows or assumed that heād come to the mutual agreement to leave. I donāt have answers, but Iāve started to doubt those beliefs in recent years.
My next show with a disabled actor was when I was still 15. We had one disabled actress, a girl in a wheelchair. The show was set in a high school. She was in onstage twice. The first time, she sat on the side during a group number and sang with us (she was never taught any choreography. The second time, a cast member brought her on, she was crowned prom queen, and then she left the stage and was never seen again until curtain call. Honestly, at the time, I thought it was weird that we were treating her as less capable and not allowing her into any more of the show, but itās hard to bring that up with anyone. Especially when everyone you try to talk to about it defends the choice. Everyone said that she was less capable or that sheād stick out or that her wheelchair would get in the way. I didnāt feel I could address it, so it was left unsaid. She went to school with me for five years and I never saw her in another production.
It took several years to be in another show with a disabled actor. My school was by all accounts really great about our treatment of disabled people until it came to extracurriculars.
My most recent show that Iām talking about was not technically with a disabled actor, but one who was injured for the entire rehearsal and performance process and was treated similarly from what I could see. It was last year. They were cast in the group that was onstage the least. Nobody in that group was invited to any vocal rehearsals and they were all in one choreography rehearsal. They were also made to stand at the bottom of a set piece on their own because they couldnāt climb it like the rest of their group.
Iād also like to discuss my experiences since finding out that I have a wrist problem that will likely impact me on and off for the rest of my life. For context, I have limited mobility in one of my hands due to a problem with my wrist and thumb. I cannot fully bend my wrist in any direction, nor can I comfortably straighten my thumb all the way or make a fist with the thumb on the inside.
Iād also like to note that I am currently in university taking a creative writing minor, so that sucks because my wrist and thumb do affect my ability to type and write, so it flares up a lot. I also really like to draw and sew for fun and Iāve had to greatly limit my ability to do the things I enjoy. Iāve been in two shows since I went to my doctor because of the pains and four shows since the pain started affecting my abilities to do things.
This first show I was in after my wrist got bad was a very dance heavy production that consisted of two group numbers and a solo or duet for every cast member. The worst part for me was dance warmups, where we were instructed to do many things forced us to put large amounts of pressure on our hands. Primarily different forms of lunges and pushups. I would cry after every dayās warmups. I could barely hold my props.
The next show, I actually worked crew on. I was involved in props, costumes, and makeup, as well as moving sets/props between scenes. I made props with box cutters and scissors I could barely hold. My hands shook so hard when I was trying to melt the edge of a ribbon to keep it from fraying that I dropped a match (thank god I was outside and on pavement). I sewed costumes until I couldnāt do anything for the rest of the day. One of the worst parts was when I hand-sculpted multiple special-effect-makeup prosthetics for one of our actresses. I could hardly hold my makeup brushes or my dummy head that I was sculpting on by the end of every one I made (three sets, for context, every set used two pieces). The other worst was moving sets. I was originally set to move a desk for an office scene that was so heavy that I cried after our first rehearsal and requested to be switched to a new job. I was given a bookshelf that was on wheels. Two of the four wheels were broken and I had to pick up the shelves to get it into the correct position anyway. This show was actually the reason I went to the doctor about the wrist pains.
My next show was actually an improv workshop followed by two performances. I spent the day of the workshop painting for a school activity. I ended up in a wrist brace for the full workshop. I have never seen a group of people so cautious around me, nobody was even willing to touch that arm, which made a certain amount of improv very strange because we were doing a lot of physical stuff with each other. Everyone else was grabbing hands and stuff and they were just awkwardly standing next to me. I ended up taking off my brace for the performances so that I could feel like a part of the show. and hurting myself because I should have been wearing it.
The last show was a recent production where off-and-on through the rehearsal process, I was in the brace. There were many comments made asking about why my wrist was still hurting me, which I assume is a certain amount of ignorance because yes, my wrist still hurts, I haven't been able to move it properly for half a year. However, I was not given a single costume I could wear the brace with and another cast member was instructed to pull my by the arm that was hurt. Luckily, between pain meds and excessively taking care of myself, it didnāt hurt during production week, but Iād still call that some bad treatment.
Basically, theatre sucks for disabled actors. Please, help bring awareness to this. If youāve seen or experienced ableism, I encourage you to speak out. Yannick Mirko is a wonderful performer and an inspiration to me. Heās been through so much. Also, Iām not fond of cursing, but fuck McCarter Theater and fuck Arena Stage. Cast disabled actors as disabled characters and donāt replace them with an able-bodied understudy.
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Uses the word "folx" yet illegally fires someone for medically evacuating. DOPE. So, Gina, the way you speak is very woke for someone who dodges criticism and ignores the ableism your institution perpetuates. but Yannick is the untruther. aight.
Hello !! A little bit ago(2-3 weeks?) I got a response back from my email & dm(deleted the email, photo of the dm is below) informing me that you were in contact with them. I'm assuming that was a lie? But I just want to make sure.

THEY tried to contact ME...sure. Here's what the McCarter Theatre had to say in the wake of the RTC community becoming aware of the ableism and discrimination:
"Dear yannick-robin,
I hope youāve been well. Ā Iām reaching out to you with mixed emotions. Ā As you may recall, there were many moments of joy and discovery we all (including you!) experienced during your time at McCarter. You and I (and many others) worked closely and in collaboration together on many things before and during the run ofĀ Ride the CycloneĀ at McCarter. Indeed, to check our own sense of what we remember, we went back and found many emails and text-messages we exchanged that support our recollection of your time with us at McCarter.
As you know, we have been in contact with folx at Arena, and we are aware of the concerns youāve raised with them. Ā While we fully understand and appreciate your advocacy for performers who use mobility aids, we are surprisedĀ andĀ disappointedĀ by much of what you expressed, considering your collaboration and consent throughout our process. Anything you brought to our attention during your time onĀ Ride the CycloneĀ was addressed. Most notably, we are shocked by your representation that you were fired. Ā As you know, thatās not true. Ā Youāve made other representations to Arena and elsewhere that also are not accurate. Ā Given the positive relationship we felt we had while you were with us at McCarter, weād welcome the opportunity to discuss everything with you, and to explore your thoughts, feelings, and concerns you have about the show.
As we continued to affirm throughout your time with us, we really do believe you have so much unique artistry and passion to offer to the world. It is one thing to advocate for what you believe in. But it is another thing to spread untruths. We invite you to be in conversation with us soon so we can hear more of your story and you can hear more of ours, and so we can work together (as we did before) to prevent any more harm or ill will for any of us going forward. Ā Please believe that we are reaching out for your well-being as well as ours.
We do hope to hear from you.
With goodwill,
Gina"
______________________________________________________________
To be VERY CLEAR with the rtc community, #saverickypotts is NOT a vendetta case of a bitter actor with the sour experience of not being the 'right fit for the role', taking every chance they can to sabotage the show. The fact that I keep being talked to like this BY THE PROBLEM ITSELF is honestly astounding. Instead of atoning, inciting reparation work, making your stages ADA compliant, [honestly the list of helpful shit to do here is endless...END. LESS.], you wanna spend this time calling me an 'untruther'. Dope.
I wonder if Director of DEI is the right title for you...
Sorry, did I make it seem too soft when I spoke up about it? I can be much more detailed about the discrimination I faced every time I entered the theatre. Just let me know when to tell the kids and I will McCarter!!!!
People will pull hairs at terminology all day long. Whether the word to use is fired, exiled, shoved off silently as The Man does, I don't care. I had a medical emergency and was removed from the show. WITHOUT MY CONSENT, APPROVAL, OR EVEN BEING INCLUDED IN THAT DECISION MAKING CONVERSATION. THEY WENT AND HAD A KIKI ABOUT MY DISABILITIES WITHOUT ME AND NOW I GOTTA TALK ABOUT IT ONLINE. Go ahead and take a guess at whether or not I found this email worth my time enough to respond to, friends. It's a resounding NO.
THIS IS AN INDUSTRY WIDE ISSUE THAT WE CANNOT LET GET SWEPT UNDER THE INACCESSIBLE RUG
#tf#untruths my ass#u aint woke#UGH THE PERFORMATIVENESS#its all a front#yannick can say whatever the fuck they want#NY TIMES OR ANYONE PLEASE RUN THIS STORY
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Trans [tw - dysphoria mentioned]
theboredenby, 2024
The trans experience can be summed up in a poem
Each line and verse perfectly fitting a box, a structure
But, by putting the experience into a box, hearts begin to rupture
You aren't enough, bind tighter, be less femme, be less they/them, be less you.
Don't talk about your experience unless it's perfectly sanitised for our ears, don't talk about the dysphoric meltdown you had 15 minutes ago, we don't want to hear that.
We'll support you in June when we are told too, we will march alongside you until the conversation shifts.
As if we aren't being persecuted everyday by legislatures globally.
So if you support us from 6/1-6/31; support us on 11/5 as well.
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Adding on to the "Free few days off work" No. Thats not a good thing. Removing someone who is A PRINCIPAL PERFORMER in a show, who had a legitimate medical emergency AND WAS FIRED AS A RESULT, and replacing them with the understudy is not cool.
If an actor on Broadway in between scenes needs to run off to throw up in a bin because they were too egotistical to call out of the show because of illness, risking people's health in the process and be able to keep their job? Bitch.
(just wanted to say that lol)
you seem to have a lot of patience and kindness for people being unkind online. i'm guessing it takes a lot of effort, but i admire it a lot. anyways, i mostly wanted to thank you for sharing your story as a disabled performer. i've done theatre since i was young and in the past few years my physical health has taken a turn for the worse. while i wish ableism wasn't something we had to deal with in the first place, it's reassuring to see other people who are willing to stand up for themselves!
I am willing to understand when I person is a product of their ableist environment and unaware of it. It is after you have been politely educated and still choose to act that way, where it begins to be harder to be nice.
There have been a lot of rough comments from people saying things like Iām complaining about a āfree couple days off workā or that I āshouldnāt have felt affected by thingsā et cetera, and itās never been a desire of mine to respond to that sort of thing. I appreciate dialectical behavioral therapy a LOT, and thereās a technique called DEAR MAN that helps people sort through interpersonal hardships equitably. These days for me, if I canāt 100% discern that you are a āDear Man-ableā person in the instance youāve done a thing, I just wonāt try to have the conversation.
I will always stand up for myself if it means someday you or anyone else wonāt have to. Doesnāt matter how hard it is, or how much I lose. Iām sorry youāve faced hardships as well, Iām glad I can be a supportive person!
Dropping DEAR MAN below because it really changed my life. You donāt get the time during a production to wait for people to be āDear Man-ableā which is hard, but for when you have the chance to use it, itās here (alt txt included):

#like babes thats what an u/s or alt is FOR?#not because someone had a genuine medical incident and needed time off stage???#If someone fell and left the stage they would not be fired but hey
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Any form of R*de Th* Cycl*ne is harmful. I like the show, the characters are charming, the music is nice and the story is there. But I cannot ignore RTC's blatant ableism in previous and current runs. In the original song for Ocean "Play to Win" the C slur is used. In 2016, What the World Needs contains ableist imagery, and most versions of the US Tour throw the disability off. People like Kholby Wardell who speak to characters they have never once played, minimising obviously problematic content because "it was a different time." RTC first premiered at the Atomic Vaudeville in 2008. Facebook, Twitter and YouTube were around. In 2011 (only 13 years ago) the tour of Canada began. It is now 2024. There is a script that replaces genuine character plot for cheap "humour" to mask the ableism that is underneath. Yes, 13 years is a long time, but YOU WERE STILL ABLEIST??? And you are STILL ABLEIST IN 2024!! SO LIKE YOU CANT SAY LIKE IT WAS A DIFF TIME BECAUSE, THE ACTION WAS STILL BIGOTED. FUCK RTC.
Stop Defending Ableists Challenge (Level: Impossible)
So the other day I made a post listing all the ableist things Jacob Richmond has included in Legoland and Ride the Cyclone.
And the response was abysmal - the amount of "well actually..." kind of responses I got was disgusting and I took down the post because I find it counterproductive to argue with teenagers on the internet. However, I stand by the belief that if you think you are old enough to post publicly on the internet, you are old enough to be held accountable for what you post.
But I think what I had to say was quite important, so I am going to reword it here.
TW here for the discussion of ableism and ableist slurs (they are all censored)
There is ZERO (0) justification for the use of THREE (3) ableist slurs across both works. I don't fucking care if it was the 2000's. The ADA predates both shows and disability activism had existed for decades before that (as yannick very kindly reminded me). So no, it was not ok for Richmond to use those slurs in his works, regardless of the time period. Because there is nothing "correct" (politically, or otherwise) about ableism.
And before you say "Oh, but it was the character who said it, not the writer..."
CHARACTERS ARE NOT SENTIENT BEINGS! They are not created in a vacuum. Their thoughts and actions are often a reflection of the author's own beliefs and morals.
It was not Ocean who decided to use the word cr*pple. It was Jacob Richmond who decided to use it. Same with the r word and sp*z in Legoland. It wasn't Penny and Ezra who decided to use those words, it was Jacob Richmond. Because each character's actions are dictated by the decisions that the author makes for that character. And in this case, the author decided to be an ableist asshole.
Yes, characters can be assholes. They can be complex and nuanced beings. But there are better ways to portray such experiences than being violently ableist (i.e.: without using slurs). And why does the ableist character get complexity and nuance, but the disabled character is simply the sad, disabled kid, with not much else in his personality until he magically becomes abled bodied. Like we deserve nuance and complexity as well, people!
In a 2022 interview with Curtain Call Bway (here), when asked who his favourite character to write was, Richmond responds with the following:
Ocean is definitely my favorite character to write because itās based on certain people Iāve met and certain aspects of myself too.
Like he literally admits it himself, that his decisions when writing an ableist character were based off aspects of his own personality.
The reality is, disability has never been more than a comedic plot point to Richmond. He has never cared about portraying a realistic disabled experience. He has never cared about disabled people.
And the cherry on top is that his response to yannick-robin being hate-crimed was to rewrite Ricky so that he could be played by an abled and therefore production teams wouldn't have to give a shit about ensuring their spaces are safe and accessible for disabled performers. If he actually cared about disabled people and properly representing our experiences, he would have worked with a disability consultant and fixed the issues within the show. Instead, he doubles down and causes even more harm.
To add insult to injury, he then licensed that script to Sarah Rasmussen and her team of ableist cronies for the DC production. Because him choosing to continue working with Rasmussen and her team just shows that he shares the same ableist values as the McCarter/Arena team.
So by saying that "its the character, not the author", you are defending Richmond and his violent ableism. You are attempting to justify the harm he has done and CONTINUES TO DO to disabled people. YOU. ARE. A. PART. OF. THE. PROBLEM.
Ride the Cyclone and Legoland (in ALL its forms and versions) contains so much ableist violence. This violence has traumatised REAL PEOPLE, but yannick, myself, and other people speaking out are the ones ruining the vibe by calling it out? Be fucking for real people.
Now if only my university papers were this thorough...
#ride the ableism#fuck arena stage#brooke maxwell and jacob richmond are ableist#stop defending ableism#theater is for everyone#its 20fucking24#STOP PORTRAYING ABLEISM IN MEDIA U BITCH#Justice for Yannick-Robin#DEI CAN KISS MY ASS#DEI ONLY PROTECTS THE CAPITALIST CORPORATIONS#NOT ACTUAL DISABLED PPL#HTDIO is the only good disabled rep rn#And its closing on bwy#yet K*mberly Ak*mbo won a TONY??!??!?#Correction RTC was premiered 08 not 09 whoops
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Hamilton: Kill me god-
John: *sobbing in the corner*
Hamilton: Why are you crying
John: My dad wants god to kill him
Hamilton: Huh... I want god to kill me too
John: ..........
Hamilton: ..........oh.
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Yall the internet is so great
via @i-need-no-introduction-blog










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