Darwin Days 2010 at Vassar College will focus on women in science, during the annual celebration that highlights the connection between science and the humanities. This spring there will be three solo dramatic readings about women scientists of the 19th and 20th centuries, whose inspired work changed the way the world viewed women and science. These three exemplars of their fields-Mary Anning, Maria Mitchell, and Rachel Carson-explored the earth, sky, and sea-the natural world around us and their discoveries continue to inspire and resonate today.
Dramatic Reading: Blue Lias: or the Fish Lizard's Whore
Written and performed by Claudia Stevens '69, with music composed by Allen Shearer
February 12 at 7:00pm
Vogelstein Center for Drama and Film, Martel Theater
Written and performed by actress, playwright, and librettist Claudia Stevens '69, the dramatic work Blue Lias: or the Fish Lizard's Whore will tell the story of Mary Anning, a 19th-century British fossil hunter and paleontologist on Friday, February 12. According to Stevens, the inspiration for her play was the John Fowles novel The French Lieutenant's Woman, set in Fowles' and Anning's hometown of Lyme Regis. Fowles' unpublished monograph about Anning suggests she was the model for his heroine Sarah Woodruff.
Noted actress and Vassar alumna Frances Sternhagen '51 will return to the stage of the Martel Theater on Monday, March 1, to breathe life into a depiction of Vassar's first professor, astronomer Maria Mitchell (1818-1889). Maria Mitchell: Self Portrait, written by Sternhagen's classmate Barbara Gibbins Duffy '51, has been performed just once before by Sternhagen on Nantucket Island.
During this reading, Sternhagen will celebrate the life and achievement of this groundbreaking scientist whose academic and professional home was found at Vassar College."My play is based on text drawn from the book, Maria Mitchell: A Life in Journals and Letters, that was edited by Henry Albers, and used with his permission. For 32 years he was Professor of Astronomy at Vassar College and occupied the Alumnae Maria Mitchell Chair," noted playwright Duffy. "Professor Albers died in March, 2009, and this reading is dedicated to his memory." She noted that additional material for the play was drawn from the Vassar College Archives and Special Collections Department and the Maria Mitchell Association Archives.Matthew Vassar hired astronomer Mitchell for his new college and constructed an observatory for her, the first building completed on campus that is now a National Historic Landmark. Mitchell was highly regarded for her discovery in 1857 of what would become known worldwide as 'Miss Mitchell's Comet,' the result of systematically sweeping the Nantucket skies with her telescope each evening. For this discovery she received a gold medal from the King of Denmark and was elected into the membership of Boston's Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1847. The telescope she used while at Vassar is now a focal point of the collection of the Smithsonian Institute's National Museum of American History in Washington, D.C.
Sternhagen, a familiar presence on stage, television, and film, may be most most familiar for her television roles as Bunny MacDougal (Trey's mother) in HBO's Sex and the City or Kyra Sedgwick's mother Willie Ray Johnson on The Closer (appearing with fellow Vassar alumnus Jon Tenney '84). She is also a familiar presence on stage, and has received two Tonys (nominated for five), two Obies, and two Drama Desks, and was inducted into the Theatre Hall of Fame and honored, in 2007, with the Helen Hayes Tribute. Last year, she was the recipient of the Alumnae and Alumni of Vassar College 2009 Distinguished Achievement Award. Playwright Duffy is a 1951 graduate of Vassar and a summer resident of Nantucket Island, Maria Mitchell's birthplace.Dramatic Reading: A Sense of WonderA Sense of Wonder has been touring the United States as well as Canada, England, and Italy for over ten years. Lee has performed the piece at regional and national conferences and at over 100 universities, dozens of high schools, the Smithsonian Institute in Washington, D.C., the Albert Schweitzer Conference at the United Nations, the Sierra Club Centennial in San Francisco, and the Department of the Interior 150th Anniversary Celebration. In addition, Lee opened the 2005 World Expo in Japan and in May 2007 performed the play on Capitol Hill, bringing Carson's voice once again to the halls of Congress. She created A Sense of Wonder with the help and guidance of Carson's friends and colleagues and with permission from the Rachel Carson Estate. In 2009, a version of the play was released as a film featuring Lee, and was screened at 175 cities across North America.
Kaiulani Lee has over 30 years of experience in theater, film, and television. She has starred in more than a dozen plays on and off-Broadway and was nominated for a Drama Desk Award on Broadway and has received an OBIE Award for outstanding achievement off-Broadway.
The Darwin Days dramatic readings are presented by the Darwin Days Committee, which consists of Vassar faculty and staff from disciplines all over campus and co-sponsored by the Drama Department. Funds for this series are provided by the Office of the Dean of the Faculty.
Individuals with disabilities requiring accommodations at Vassar should contact the Office of Campus Activities at (845) 437-5370. Without sufficient notice, appropriate space and/or assistance may not be available. Directions to the Vassar campus are available at www.vassar.edu/directions.Vassar College is a highly selective, coeducational, independent, residential liberal arts college founded in 1861.Videos