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Art, Grief & Conscious Dying: How Theater Becomes Witness and Change with Karen Malpede

Published 7 months, 3 weeks ago
Description

On Healthy Mind, Healthy Life, we explore how theater can be both mirror and hammer—reflecting our times while shaping them. Playwright–director Karen Malpede discusses her forthcoming memoir Last Radiance: Radical Lives, Bright Deaths (out in October), caregiving for her late husband and collaborator George Bartenieff, and why nonviolent traditions (Gandhi, MLK) still matter. We unpack ecofeminism, Greek tragedy, and the irreplaceable power of live performance—where audiences and actors literally “breathe together.” If you care about art, mortality, and meaning, this conversation is a clear, unsentimental guide to showing up with courage.

 

About the guest :

Karen Malpede is an award-winning playwright, director, essayist, and co-founder of Theater Three Collaborative. Her body of work spans ecofeminist and socially engaged theater created with the late OBIE-winning actor George Bartenieff. Her memoir, Last Radiance: Radical Lives, Bright Deaths, weaves art, caregiving, and conscious dying.

 

Key takeaways:

  • Theater’s unique power: Live performance remains a ritual space where audience and actors “breathe together,” creating empathy and change that screens can’t replicate.

  • Art as witness and change: Effective art reflects its time and challenges us toward nonviolent action and possibility.

  • Memoir vs. stagecraft: Writing plays channels many voices; memoir demanded Karen’s direct voice while honoring others, including George’s.

  • Love and mourning are linked: We mourn because we love; honest art helps us name grief through language (and music).

  • Conscious dying in community: Exemplary deaths—present, creative, surrounded by loved ones—can teach us how to live and how to be with the dying.

  • Roots of activism: Early exposure to injustice and the influence of Irish and Greek theater shaped Karen’s belief in art that builds identity, dignity, and courage.

  • Relevance in a digital age: There’s room for film and podcasts, but theater’s shared breath and presence give it a singular, enduring role.

  • Practical courage: Bearing witness is prerequisite to change; intimacy on the page and stage opens readers and audiences to their own stories.

 

How to connect with the guest  :

Website: https://www.theaterthreecollaborative.org/karen-malpede-page

Facebook

 

Want to be a guest on Healthy Mind, Healthy Life? DM on PM - Send me a message on PodMatch

 

Disclaimer: This video is for educational and informational purposes only. The views expressed are the personal opinions of the guest and do not reflect the views of the host or Healthy Mind By Avik™️. We do not intend to harm, defame, or discredit any person, organization, brand, product, country, or profession mentioned

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