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The second full season of Staged
Readings at Civic Theatre gets under way with the timely
play Nickel and Dimed, by Joan Holden,
based on Nickel and Dimed, on (Not) Getting by in
America by Barbara Ehrenreich.
Can a middle-aged, middle-class
woman survive, when she suddenly has to make beds all
day in a hotel and live on $7 an hour? Maybe. But one
$7-an-hour job won’t pay the rent: she’ll have to do
back-to-back shifts, as a chambermaid and a waitress.
This isn’t the first surprise for acclaimed author
Barbara, who set out to research low-wage life
firsthand, confident she was prepared for the worst.
Barbara Ehrenreich’s best-seller about her odyssey is
vivid and witty, yet always deeply sobering. Joan
Holden’s stage adaptation is a focused comic epic
shadowed with tragedy. Barbara is prepared for hard work
but not, at 55, for double shifts and nonstop aches and
pains; for having to share tiny rooms, live on fast food
because she has no place to cook, beg from food
pantries, gulp handfuls of Ibuprofen because she can’t
afford a doctor; for failing, after all that, to make
ends meet; or for constantly having to swallow
humiliation. The worst, she learns, is not what happens
to the back or the knees: it’s the damage to the heart.
The bright glimpses of Barbara’s co-workers that enliven
the book become indelible portraits: Gail, the star
waitress pushing fifty who can no longer outrun her
troubles; Carlie, the hotel maid whose rage has burned
down to disgust; Pete, the nursing home cook who
retreats into fantasy; Holly, terrified her pregnancy
will end her job as Team Leader at Magic Maids, and with
it her 50-cent raise. These characters wage their life
struggles with a gallantry that humbles Barbara, and the
audience. The play shows us the life a third of working
Americans now lead, and makes us angry that anyone
should have to live it.
As with all Civic Theatre Staged
Readings, the performance will be immediately followed
by a talk back, discussion the issues of the play. In
addition to the cast and director, there will be some
additional community leaders present to discuss the
issues raised in the play.
Cast List
Sherri Bundy
Cameron Johnston
Steve Gooch
Denise Laussade
Laurie Russell
Karen Schiler
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