Play about the Constitution streams in time for Election Day
NEW YORK — Most playwrights want their works to remain relevant for decades to come. Not Heidi Schreck, not with “What the Constitution Means to Me.”
“I often say that I can’t wait until the play is obsolete. I’m always like a little shocked by how it continues to be relevant,” she says. “I would love for it to be a relic.”
“What the Constitution Means to Me” draws on Schreck’s own experiences as a high-school debate champ and the lives of her female relatives to explore America’s principles and the struggle women and minorities have faced to be heard and protected by its founding document.
In the work, Schreck focuses on the Ninth and Fourteenth Amendments and calls the Constitution “a living, warm-blooded, steamy document,” but one in which women’s bodies were left out “from the beginning.” Schreck even uses a snippet of a Ruth Bader Ginsburg address.