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The Yale Alumni Magazine is owned and operated by Yale Alumni Publications, Inc., a nonprofit corporation independent of Yale University. The content of the magazine is the responsibility of the editors and the board of directors, and does not necessarily reflect the views of Yale or its officers.

 
 
 

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Medicine as theater

Anna Deavere Smith fastens on a glittering necklace and becomes Dr. Peggy Bia, a Yale nephrologist. Bia is one of more than two dozen characters that Smith portrays in her new one-woman show, Let Me Down Easy. From the stage of New Haven's Long Wharf Theatre, Smith-Bia describes the despair her patients feel as they assimilate "the sucky deck they've been dealt": the failure of their kidneys. "I do a lot more crying in my car than I did in my younger years," she says.

 

The play owes a great deal to New Haven and Yale.

The real-life Peggy Bia watched herself in Smith's play about "the resiliency and vulnerability of the human body" when it premiered in New Haven in January. The play owes a great deal to New Haven and Yale: Smith (who played the national security adviser on The West Wing) came to the medical school in 2000 as a visiting professor. After interviewing numerous doctors, patients, and others, she wrote what she called "a first draft" of a play on the doctor-patient relationship and performed it at the school.

In Let Me Down Easy, Smith incorporates some of those original New Haven interviews, but broadens her scope. Building on interviews she conducted in places ranging from New Orleans to New York and from South Africa to Rwanda, Smith portrays people coming to terms with their bodies and the bodies of others -- in health, in illness, and in death. She signals the move from character to character with a change of accent, props, or clothing, slipping into a pair of stiletto heels to become a supermodel, clipping on a massive belt buckle to play a rodeo rider. Characters include cyclist Lance Armstrong (who speaks on the drive to win); playwright Eve Ensler (on the sexually alive woman); Harvard political philosopher Michael Sandel (on the hot-housing of privileged children as "privatized eugenics"); and genocide scholar Samantha Power '92 (on the danger of shrinking "circles of identity").

 

Smith was able to get information that was withheld from doctors.

One of the characters is Hazel Merritt of Connecticut, who recalls the day her daughter's dialysis went awry, showering blood on the screaming girl. In the play, Merritt asserts that she won't take her doctor's advice to begin dialysis herself.

It was Merritt's doctor -- Yale professor of internal medicine Asghar Rastegar -- who brought Smith to Yale seven years ago. He and then-chair of internal medicine Ralph Horwitz hoped Smith would spur medical students, who are often enthralled by technology, to discover the richness of their patients' stories.

Watching Let Me Down Easy, Rastegar made his own discovery. Hazel Merritt had never told him about the day her daughter's dialysis failed. He wonders if the trauma was what caused her to reject dialysis for herself. Smith, he says, was able "to get information that was maybe censored from the physician. Or physicians maybe don't cross that barrier. That's her power -- that she's able to do that." the end

 
 

 

 

 

 

Campus clips

Graduate students will receive larger stipends starting next year. Instead of a $20,000 nine-month stipend, plus a $3,700 stipend in each of three summers, all humanities and social sciences students will receive 12-month stipends of $25,000. The new system will allow students to focus on their research in the summer instead of getting jobs. Students in the sciences, who already receive 12-month stipends, will see an increase of about 3.5 percent.

 

The Yale Women's Center threatened a lawsuit in January after members of the Zeta Psi fraternity pledge class posted online a photo of themselves standing in front of the center with a sign that read "We love Yale sluts." The fraternity apologized for the incident, but students from the center say they are still considering a sexual harassment suit and are urging stricter undergraduate regulations regarding "fraternity-sponsored or -enabled sexual harassment, assault, and rape."

 

Applications to the Yale College Class of 2012 totaled 22,553, a new record, the admissions office said in January. Other Ivy schools also reported record numbers of applications. Yale's were up 16.7 percent after an 8.4 percent decline last year.

 

Dongguk University says it will sue over Yale's erroneous authentication of a false credential offered by one of the Korean university's former professors. In 2005, Shin Jeong-ah presented a letter on Yale letterhead to Dongguk claiming she had a PhD in art history from Yale. When the letter was faxed to Yale for verification, Yale officials responded that it was genuine. But last summer, a major scandal arose in Korea when it was revealed that Shin had forged the letter. Yale at first said that the fax verifying the degree had been forged, but later acknowledged it had made a mistake. Yale president Richard Levin apologized, and the university says it has tightened its procedure for verifying academic credentials.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Copyright ©2008, Yale Alumni Publications, Inc. All rights reserved.
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Yale Alumni Magazine, PO Box 1905, New Haven, CT 06509-1905, USA.
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