by Zoe Stagg
Some people pleasantly surprise you, and some completely blow you away. From the first moment Kerry Washington begins assuredly explaining her self-created, Interdisciplinary Performance Major, you know you’re dealing with someone who not only entertains, but thoroughly understands the function of performance as a way to understand the world around her. “I have always been fascinated with the power and relevance of performance in society. We all know that when you go on your first date, you are in some ways performing your identity. But it extends to cultural rites of passage, cultural performance, to the history of Shakespearean performance, to what does Glee tell you about the current state of arts education in America.”
Washington was nurtured into the sharp, smart, and savvy woman she is today long before she set foot in a college classroom. “I really grew up in a household where civic engagement and public service was just part of the dialogue all of the time. My mom is a retired Professor of Education, and before that she was a teacher in the New York City public schools, so teaching, giving back, sharing, those are just the bricks that built the home that I grew up in.” Far from sheltered, Washington was encouraged to participate fully in the communal project of existence. “When you grow up in a household where from a very young age, you’re talking about Affirmative Action and abortion rights and gentrification and environmental racism, you begin to connect issues to real life. You begin to see how much of life is political, and if not political, then culturally important.”