Playwright strips topic of feminism bare in new work
St. Paul, Minn. — The word "feminist" hauls a lot of baggage nowadays. It can draw every kind of reaction from unquestioning acceptance to eye-rolling, from immediate understanding to boiling anger.
Playwright Young Jean Lee is tapping into all these emotions in her latest work, "Untitled Feminist Show," which gets its world premiere Thursday evening as part of the Walker Art Center's Out There series. "Untitled Feminist Show" features six women who perform the entire piece in the nude.
Lee said she approached the work the same way she does all her pieces.
"My jumping-off point for all my shows is like "What's the worst idea I can think of?' or like, 'What's the last show in the world I would want to make?' And then I force myself to make that show," Lee said. "Feminism -- when I first had the idea for the show -- really did seem like a dirty word."

i wanna play in a movie about the 60s with big hair smoking cigarettes lol
people need to understand "snookies bump" isnt new. the bump was a 60s trend, big hair in general, late 50s - early 60s.
Should've been born in the 60s so I would have the essence of a hippie. Raised during Disco &partied with big hair &ugly clothes in the 80's
Hairstylist to the stars Aaron Carlo says the star works the look perfectly. "The 60s beehive is massive right now - it's a look Adele is totally rocking," he explained in an interview with more! magazine. "I've always loved sexy, big
Moved forward from the '60s to 1974 and framed as the doc's keynote address at an American Psychoanalytic Association conference, the story now charts the bumpy treatment of David Gamble (David Turner). A gay Greenwich Village florist unusually









