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You're just like my father.

Shaw, Peggy, Split Britches (Theatre company)
Permalink
https://hdl.handle.net/2333.1/69p8czh9
Title
You're just like my father.
Other title
You are just like my father
Author/Creator
Shaw, Peggy, Split Britches (Theatre company)
Restrictions/Permissions
Access is open to all web users, Copyright holder: Split Britches, Contact information: splitb@aol.com, loloweaver@aol.com, http://www.splitbritches.com
Language
English
Date
©1994
Format
1 online resource (1 video file of 1 (digital Betacam) (54 min.)) : sound, color.
Credits
Peggy Shaw. Split Britches, producer ; Peggy Shaw, writer, director ; Stacy Makishi, Karena Rahall, assistants.
Notes

Since 1981, the Split Britches Company (founded by Lois Weaver, Peggy Shaw, and Deb Margolin, www.splitbritches.com) has written and performed in trio, duet, and solo, as well as collaborated and performed with other artists. They describe their work in this way: 'Our work is rooted in popular culture, but positioned against it. It relies on moments rather than plot, relationships rather than story. It depends on the surprise of transformation rather than the logic of psychological narrative. It straddles the line between performance and theater, exploiting theatricality while exposing the pretense. It is about a community of outsiders, queers, eccentrics. It is feminist because it encourages the imaginative potential in everyone and lesbian because it takes the presence of lesbian on stage as a given.' Their vaudevillian satirical gender-bending performances have received numerous awards, including a Jane Chamber award and four Village Voice OBIE awards. Their collection of scripts, 'Split Britches Feminist Performance/Lesbian Practice', edited by Sue Ellen Case, won the 1997 Lambda Literary Award for Drama. This video documents Peggy Shaw's one-woman show 'You're Just Like My Father.' In this performance Shaw pieces together the challenges of growing up butch in the 1950's with a combination of both toughness and vulnerability. Using male role models such as an Army officer and Elvis, Shaw explores the controversial relationship between a butch and her mother, offering both affirmation and criticism. If on the surface 'You're Just Like My Father' seems to be a wry exercise in pseudo-macho braggadoccio, it has its poignant undercurrents. Shaw's performance isn't so much a satire of male chauvinism as a pure celebration of her masculine self. Hemispheric Institute of Performance and Politics

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