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“Breed or Bust”: A Woman’s Bold Trip to Bodily Freedom—at The Marsh-Berkeley

“Breed or Bust”: A Woman’s Bold Trip to Bodily Freedom—at The Marsh-Berkeley

May 6, 2024 Kim Waldron

Joyful Raven’s Hilarious, High-Spirited Solo Fits the Moment

by Kim Waldron

This review was first published on September 4, 2022, for Joyful Raven’s “Breed or Bust” at Playground-sf.org at Portrero Stage, San Francisco.

Abortion rights are tangled up again. We’ve got access in California, and we’re lucky to have Medicaid to cover the cost. But in Tennessee, Texas, Florida and other states, abortion is banned even for rape and incest victims. It feels like I need a legal degree to figure out what’s going on.

Complicated, right?  But not as confusing and complicated as the decision each individual woman makes when facing an unplanned pregnancy. And that’s what Joyful Raven captures perfectly—and hilariously—in her award-winning, one-woman show “Breed or Bust,” now playing at The Marsh, in Berkeley.

I can’t remember the last time I loved every minute of a production, but I did for this one. I’m telling my friends to go. We all need to laugh.

Joyful Raven. Photos by Elijah Nouvelage

Energetic and confiding, Raven engages us from the get-go.  We learn about her background growing up in a commune of hippies. We learn of her early carefree artist’s way of life. We meet the boyfriend. Then those two damned little blue lines show up on the pregnancy test, and her carefree life turns intense.

Raven interacts with the audience throughout the performance, sometimes teasing us but always kind. To be fair, the audience interplay is not always Raven’s choice. More than once a woman in the audience watching the action couldn’t help but yell out, “No!” or give a cheer of approval. I cannot recall sitting among a more engaged audience.  Raven responds to every outburst, incorporating it into the performance. She’s a pro.

There’s real fun when Raven assumes clever personas. She’s the boyfriend, her best friend, hippies in the old commune, and more.  At one point she embodies her out of control motherhood instinct as a fabulous “Baby Monster” who leaps on the bed, desperately trying to take control.

When Raven imagines talking with the fetus, who serenely considers the pros and cons of life on earth, any fundamentalist Christian present would have a heart attack. Fortunately, none were in the audience.

Joyful Raven in “Breed or Bust”

I’m a veteran of the sex, drugs, and rock ‘n roll era of the 1960s, so I thought I knew my stuff. It’s humiliating to admit I flunked the show’s sex education question on the clitoris. Somehow, I missed the 1998 Australian research and 2009 French sonography.  I don’t want to spoil anything, so will just say: You gotta see the clitoris replica Raven presents. I’m just glad I found out before I died.

The show is no political manifesto, it’s one woman’s story of her own journey and her options. For all the comedy, it touches deep when Raven works to come to terms with her choices and wrestles with what it means to be a woman.  It’s complicated and honest.

Fresh from touring the country, this show appeals to mature audiences. Women, if your Significant Other is, or identifies predominately as, male, take him/they to see “Breed or Bust” for educational purposes.

I guarantee you’ll have a good time if you come with women friends. You might even find yourself calling enthusiastically to the stage with advice.


“Breed or Bust”
–written & performed by Joyful Raven, directed by Jael Weisman, at The Marsh, Berkeley, California. Info: TheMarsh.org – to June 8, 2024 – Saturdays @8 pm.

Cast:    Joyful Raven

Banner photo: Joyful Raven. Photos by Elijah Nouvelage

BONUS QUIZ

1. In 1967, abortion was a felony in 47 states and DC.   True or False?
2. In 1971, abortion was legal in six states and DC.  True or False?
3. In 1973, the US Supreme Court made abortion legal in all states. True or False?
4. In 1976, the Hyde amendment denied access to abortion for poor women.  True or False?
5. In 2022 the US Supreme Court ended the federal right to an abortion. True or False?
6. I’m going to vote this November and push my friends to vote too.  True or False?

Answers:
1 through 5: All True.
6: Every election is determined by the people who show up.


#Comedy, Plays, solo shows

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