
 
		On Stage at Kingsborough off ers  
 audiences a  virtual season 
 BY JESSICA PARKS 
 On  Stage  at Kingsborough  
 is going virtual for its 2020  
 fall season — presenting nine  
 different  online  programs  focused  
 on giving audiences a  
 different experience than what  
 is traditionally “on stage.” 
 “I  really wanted  to  offer  a  
 different  perspective  on  live  
 performance,”  said  Anna  
 Becker, the theater’s executive  
 director, “rather than try  
 to do some kind of facsimile.” 
 The theater program inside  
 Kingsborough  Community  
 College brings world-class performances  
 to the Manhattan  
 Beach campus — and Becker  
 wanted  this  season  to  be  no  
 different despite the ongoing  
 coronavirus pandemic.  
 “We really took a long time  
 over the summer to think  
 through how we were going  
 to respond to this,” Becker  
 said. “I really wanted to think  
 through what we were doing, 
 COURIER L 32     IFE, OCT. 23-29, 2020 
  why we are doing it and  
 that we aren’t just reacting to  
 something.”  
 She wanted to offer viewers  
 more  than  archival  footage  
 of past performances, and  
 instead make the most of the  
 current situation — eventually  
 landing upon recorded performances  
 which offer views and  
 insights  not  available  when  
 watching from the audience.  
 The idea blossomed from a  
 conversation Becker had with  
 a Spanish producer, who offered  
 On Stage the opportunity  
 to fi lm an at-the-time upcoming  
 Flamenco performance set  
 at an outdoor Roman amphitheater  
 in southern Spain.  
 “It  inspired  everything  
 else,” Becker said. “We can  
 fi lm it the way we want, we can  
 stage the fi lming where we can  
 get up close and personal.” 
 Becker  was  thrilled  with  
 the end result — a taped performance  
 offering different  
 focuses and vantage points  
 — and set out to commission  
 more footage produced in a  
 similar style to fi ll out the company’s  
 fall season. 
 In another one of this season’s  
 spectacles, Becker and  
 her  team were able  to pull  together  
 “an  amazing  list  of  
 Broadway stars” for a performance  
 exclusive to Kingsborough. 
 Shows will be accompanied  
 by “virtual lobbies” on Zoom,  
 where viewers can discuss the  
 show, which Becker said is a  
 beloved aspect of live shows  
 she  presumes  many  are  longing  
 for during quarantine.  
 “In real life, we would  
 gather in the lobby at intermission  
 and after the show and  
 people would talk about what  
 they  thought  and  what  they  
 saw and what they’re looking  
 forward to seeing,” Becker  
 said. “It’s a way to gather because  
 I am sure as much as  
 people miss the performances,  
 they must miss gathering.”  
 The virtual season includes  
 nine  performances,  running  
 through Dec. 20 on their website. 
  Viewers can pay what  
 they can for tickets with a suggested  
 donation for each show. 
 “We’re really proud to be  
 continuing  our  commitment  
 to presenting world class performers  
 from around the globe  
 as  well,”  Becker  said.  “That  
 commitment is still here.” 
 BY KEVIN DUGGAN 
 It’s by the people, for the  
 people! 
 Brooklyn Public Library  
 released  a  crowdsourced  proposal  
 for a new amendment to  
 the Constitution, which aims  
 to make the country more  
 democratic. 
 The borough’s book lender  
 partnered with  the American  
 Civil Liberties Union to hold  
 dozens of town hall sessions in  
 the last seven months — most  
 of them virtually due to the  
 coronavirus pandemic — to  
 craft the fi rst  addition  to  the  
 founding  document  in  almost  
 three decades, according to  
 the project organizer. 
 “The fact that hundreds of  
 people came and many kept  
 coming back to town hall meetings  
 to think about our lives  
 and democracy — this fact itself  
 is so moving,” said Jakab  
 Laszlo Orsos, the library’s vice  
 president of arts and culture.  
 Bookworms  on  Oct.  17  
 unveiled  the  proposed  28th  
 Amendment, which calls for  
 the abolition of the Electoral  
 College and instead allowing  
 presidents to be elected by popular  
 vote, reallocating senate  
 seats to refl ect population like  
 the House of Representatives,  
 and delcaring Election Day a  
 holiday. 
 The purely symbolic addendum  
 to the 233-year-old text  
 would also grant the same electoral  
 rights that states have to  
 US territories and the District  
 of Columbia, and guarantee  
 that the right to vote shall not  
 be restricted for any citizen of  
 voting age. 
 “It’s a major change in our  
 electoral system, meaning our  
 democracy,” Orsos said. “It’s  
 really furthering the notion of  
 democracy, it came from hundreds  
 of people from Brooklyn  
 and beyond.” 
 The document — which Orsos  
 and his team dubbed the  
 “Brooklyn Amendment” —  
 further states that Congress  
 shall enact laws to secure all  
 rights under the Universal  
 Declaration of Human Rights,  
 including a right to education,  
 housing, healthcare food security, 
  and a clean and healthy  
 environment, which would  
 “restore dignity” to Americans, 
  according to Orsos. 
 Library leaders dropped  
 the manifesto  less  than  three  
 weeks before the upcoming  
 presidential  election  on  Nov.  
 3 and four years after Republican  
 nominee Donald Trump  
 won with the Electoral College, 
  despite his Democratic  
 opponent Hillary Clinton gaining  
 almost three million more  
 ballots in the popular vote. 
 The Constitutional  suggestions  
 come from 32 public input  
 session the library hosted  
 which four experts — dubbed  
 “Framers” — distilled into a  
 legal document. 
 The panel included constitutional  
 law scholar and president  
 of the ACLU, Susan Herman; 
  Kimberly Peeler-Allen, a  
 co-founder of Higher Heights,  
 a group dedicated to expanding  
 Black women’s elected representation  
 and voting; Anand  
 Giridharadas,  an  author  and  
 former New York Times columnist; 
  and environmental  
 journalist Nathaniel Rich. 
 The library’s brainstorming  
 sessions — which kicked  
 off in-person at branches in  
 early March before pivoting  
 to Zoom due to the viral outbreak  
 — touched on a laundry  
 list of other topical issues,  
 such as providing universal  
 healthcare amid the COVID-19  
 outbreak  and  rebuilding  a  reformed  
 and more accountable  
 criminal justice system following  
 the high-profi le police killings  
 of George Floyd and Breonna  
 Taylor. 
 A closer look 
 Brooklyn Library’s crowdsourced ’28th  
 Amendment’ calls for more democracy 
 BROOKLYN 
 The lawful good 
 RED HOT: A fl amenco performance from southern Spain is one of On Stage at Kingsborough’s virtual offerings. 
   Photo courtesy of On Stage at Kingsborough 
 A participant at a March 5 town hall event.  Photo by Gregg Richards