UW-Stevens Point presents history with humor, heartbreak in ‘Radium Girls’
10/2/2014
 


History comes to life with humor and heartbreak as the Department of Theatre and Dance stages “Radium Girls” Oct. 17-19 and 23-25.

The drama about a young woman’s fight for her rights and her life will be set in the Jenkins Theatre in the Noel Fine Arts Center at 7:30 p.m., Friday and Saturday, Oct. 17-18, and Thursday through Saturday, Oct. 23-25. A 2 p.m. matinee will be offered Sunday, Oct. 19. It is not suitable for young children.

Tickets are $19 for adults, $18 for seniors, $14 for youth and $4.50 for students with UW-Stevens Point I.D. Tickets are available at the UW-Stevens Point Information and Tickets Office, located in the Dreyfus University Center concourse, by calling 715-346-4100 or at http://tickets.uwsp.edu/index.php.

Set in the 1920s, “Radium Girls” is about a real-life scandal that shocked America, said the show’s director, Theatre Professor Steve Smith. Grace Fryer (played by Tatyana Nahirniak of Cottage Grove) and some of her co-workers become ill with radiation poisoning. She had direct contact with radium-based paint at her job, where she paints luminescent dials for watches. Her fight for worker’s compensation made big changes in workplace safety and child labor laws.

“’Radium Girls’ touches on many areas, including feminist theory, social class, corporate ethics, history, culture studies and workplace safety,” said Smith. “It’s compelling because of its historic context. It also has great roles for women.”

Playwright D.W. Gregory combines historical fiction with courtroom drama and humor to tell a story most of us don’t know, Smith said.

The Jenkins Theatre set has been simply staged on an epic scale to represent the households, factory, town squares, boardrooms and courtroom where the action takes place. A large clock on the set represents the watch dials from the factory as well as how time is running out for the women who work there.


 

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COFAC; Vibrant