Millsaps Arts & Lecture Series presents āAn Evening with Madame Fā with Claudia Stevens Feb. 24 in the Ford Academic Recital Hall. Portraying an elderly woman inmate at Auschwitz who performed in the concentration camp orchestra, Stevens relates the moral dilemma faced by those who survived through their use of the arts.
Is this your first trip to Jackson?
Yes. Iām looking forward to it. The South gets dumped on so, but it has produced some of our greatest writers. Iāve been told that I will get to go to the Eudora Welty House and garden. Iām thrilled.
What should your audience to expect from the performance piece?
To expect the unexpectedāexpect to have a feeling as though they were really there at Auschwitz, as though they were one of the prisoners or camp guards. Itās that gripping.
What exactly is an interdisciplinary artist?
Interdisciplinary artist, oh, gosh! In my caseāit really variesāitās someone who combines performance modes. I perform as a pianist and a vocalist as well as an actor, combined in ways not predictable to the audience.
How did your performance piece evolve?
It grew out of the combination of my own exploration of taking performance to the limit and for personal expression. It was OK finally for me to deal with the topic of the Holocaust. The Holocaust is part of my family background in a very real way.
What sort of things do you do to relax?
To relax? I like to watch cop shows, all of the āLaw and Ordersā are soothing in a formulaic way. I can do other things while watching them, like sew or do taxes.
Could I ask what you think of Roberto Berniniās āLife is Beautiful,ā the movie about a man and his son interred in a concentration camp?
At first āLife is Beautifulā is charming. On second thought, itās full of misrepresentations, inaccuracies ⦠some of those things are offensive to those who went through it. Iām intrigued by Roberto Bernini. He did this because he wanted to try to find out what it would be like to be a comedian under an extreme experience. That is exactly what I did with Madame Fāwanting to know something unknowable, exploring the world of the work.
What is something surprising about you?
(Laughing) If I tell you then they will know. I feel like Iām an open book.
āAn Evening with Madame Fā starts at 7:30 p.m. For ticket information, call 974-1043.


