"Most Fabulous Story Ever Told" has certainly stimulated "discussion"
A High School announces a play, adults are insulted, controversy rages: letters to the editor, editorials, the ACLU -- via Bill Newman -- enters the fray, and before the curtain rises folks form picket lines holding signs championing both side of the issue.
Sound familiar?
Well if you're from Amherst, the PC capital of the Happy Valley, all too familiar. But what I find fascinating is the Amherst Regional High School principal in 1999, Scott Goldman, allowed "West Side Story" to be cancelled because of "racial stereotyping." Really.
Yes, for the first and only time in history a production of "West Side Story" was censored. In overly enlightened Amherst, of all places. Although a few years later it went on without controversy at a high school in nearby Holyoke, which has a much higher Hispanic population.
Whereas only five years later Amherst became the only high school in the nation to allow teenaged girls to perform "The Vagina Monologues."
But now 14 years later Mr. Goldman, principal of Pioneer Valley Performing Arts charter school, stands firm defending "The Most Fabulous Story Ever Told." I wish he had shown that kind of backbone 14 years ago.
Why is it okay to censor art as "sensitivity" to perceived racism but not to protect against perceived blasphemy?
What high school kid does not like to tweak adults, create controversy, and garner their 15 minutes of fame early in life?
Of course "art" should stimulate discussion and challenge the status quo, but sometimes it seems high schools pick their plays simply for the side benefit of free advertising brought on by all the controversy.
A generation from now "The Vagina Monologues" and "The Most Fabulous Story Ever Told" will be long forgotten. "West Side Story" however, will still be dancing up a storm.