Doomscrolling, Zombie Milkshake Cults & Catharsis

Poets, playwrights and performers find Covid, catharsis in Cleveland Humanities Festival's āWhat Makes Us Wellā at Mather Mansion on Saturday, April 8
Donāt look now, but many of us arenāt done processing those āunprecedented times.ā Is this you? If youāre picking up what weāre throwing down, you might consider joining Literary Cleveland and 51ĀŅĀ× for a dramatic reading of original literary works by local writers addressing themes of wellness.
Under the direction of Christine Howey, brings together Northeast Ohio authors, poets, playwrights and performers to enact scenes of illness and health; poems mindfulness and spiritual mystery, dialogues on body and spirit, and reflections on social ills. The event takes place on Saturday, April 8 at 4 p.m. at 51ĀŅĀ× Mather Mansion (2605 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, 44115).
Admission is free, .
āWe have quite a collection, 18 pieces in all. Some are funny, some are serious and poignant,ā said Howey, poet and former stage actor and director primarily at Dobama Theatre.
Howey, who has reviewed theater as a journalist since 1997, said that this is āa bit more performative and provocativeā than what would be expected at a poetry feature reading ā somewhere in between performance art and a theatrical dress rehearsal interpretation. By combining the words of local writers with the talents of local theater professionals, this staged reading "will showcase multiple perspectives" that expand the understanding of what makes people well.
āWe have professional actors who read, script-in-hand,ā offered the former executive director of Lit Cleveland. āItās a wide range of emotion, more than a reading.ā
The words in āWhat Makes Us Well: A Staged Readingā are readings poems, essays, and short dramatic pieces on everything from birds to baseball, screen fatigue to ādoomscrolling,ā prayer and chronic pain, āwhite wine and East Palestine,ā zombie milkshake cults and ālong Covid.ā
Howey was surprised at the number of humorous submissions received, given that Covid appeared to be in the driverās seat for much the programās inspiration. She was even more surprised to find herself battling the ailment of āunprecedented timesā a week before showtime.
āWell. You dodge it until you canāt, I guess,ā she said with a chuckle during a phone interview with 51ĀŅĀ× this week.
For those who are unfamiliar, celebrating all of the great cultural institutions of the city of Cleveland and Northeast Ohio that are dedicated to humanistic inquiry. Festival organizers hope that unique voices bringing to life humor and horror, love and loss, the past and the future will help attendees consider what makes one well.
The event is co-sponsored by Literary Cleveland, 51ĀŅĀ×, and the Baker-Nord Center for the Humanities.