Kilt Pins
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About this ebook
Catherine Hernandez
CATHERINE HERNANDEZ is a proud queer woman of colour and an award-winning author. She is of Filipino, Spanish, Chinese and Indian heritage and is married into the Navajo Nation. Her debut novel, Scarborough, which was adapted into an award-winning motion picture, won the Jim Wong-Chu Emerging Writers Award as an unpublished manuscript. It was a finalist for the Toronto Book Award, the Forest of Reading Evergreen Award, the Edmund White Award, the Trillium Book Award and Canada Reads. Her second novel, Crosshairs, made the CBC’s Best Canadian Fiction list and was named one of NOW magazine’s 10 Best Books, an Audible Best Audiobook and an NBC 20 Best LGBTQ Book. Her most recent novel, The Story of Us, was shortlisted for the Forest of Reading Evergreen Award and longlisted for a Toronto Book Award. Catherine Hernandez is also a playwright and the author of the children’s books M Is for Mustache: A Pride ABC Book, I Promise and Where Do Your Feelings Live? She lives outside Toronto.
Read more from Catherine Hernandez
Scarborough Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Where Do Your Feelings Live? Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratings
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Kilt Pins - Catherine Hernandez
Preface
In a recent sermon at the Metropolitan Community Church of Toronto (MCCT), Reverend Brent Hawkes mentioned that Christianity is often described as judgmental, inflexible and archaic. His challenge to the world, he stated, was to change these concepts so that being CHRIStian means to be loving, in awe of the world, to be open to others no matter what their religion, ethnicity or beliefs.
As a young Catholic woman, I can honestly say that I grew up feeling the slow and sure ownership of the church over my own body. I was not to honour the blossoming voice of my body since I was told it was anathema to the voice of Jesus. I was not to honour the fact that I could be loving in a sexual way and still love God. I'm sad to say that this fear of the woman I was becoming made my faith dim to a dull glow as I became older.
The start of development for Kilt Pins in 2005 marked my growing understanding of faith and sexuality and how they can coincide and in fact complement each other in the most beautiful ways. Now having joined the mcct, which honours all sexual orientations, I have rediscovered my awe of the universe and of my own body and spirit. As Brent once told us in church, my body and spirit no longer live in a house divided.
My sincerest thanks to the people who invested their firm belief in this project: Toronto Arts Council, Ontario Arts Council, Andy McKim, Aviva Armour-Ostroff, Annie Gibson, Renna Reddie, Nadine Villasin, Nina Lee Aquino, fu-GEN Asian Canadian Theatre, Carlos Bulosan Theatre, Helen Walsh, Philip Adams, Diaspora Dialogues, Praxis Theatre, Caroline Mangosing, the Kapisanan Philippine Centre for Arts and Culture, Cahoots Theatre Projects, Obsidian Theatre, Joseph Recinos, Morgan Norwich, Richie Guzman, Andrea Lui, Andrea Kwan, Anita Majumdar, Elizabeth Wilson, Falen Johnson, Darrel Gamotin, Christine Mangosing, Aura Carcueva, Dienye Waboso, Chrissi Chau, Leah-Simone Bowen, Karyl Agana, Nicole Marie McCafferty, Philip Mineque, Rong Fu, Bea Palanca, Keith Barker, Belinda Corpus, Charlaine Hernandez, Cecille Hernandez, Dierdre DeVillon Nelson and the numerous other actors who have read for me privately or in a festival setting.
Biggest thanks to Ruth Madoc-JONes, who inspires everyone around her and turns everything she touches into gold. She truly is a gem. Thank you for believing in this project since that snowy afternoon many years ago.
—Catherine Hernandez
Notes
This play takes place in current-day Scarborough, Ontario—specifically the Lawrence and Morningside area—but can be produced in any language, and, with the right adjustments, by any culture of teens in the world. Chronologically it starts two days before Ash Wednesday (which occurs forty days before Easter, and, depending on what date Easter falls on, can be as early as February 4 and as late as March 10).
Set
On either side of the stage are large panels resembling bathroom stalls. The surfaces of these stalls are blank at first but become marked with messages as the play progresses. They can also be used to draw the setting of a scene or as a chalkboard in a classroom. The board can be erased as well.
This show can work with a cast of five, with other characters played by the same actor who plays Asha. What you must know about Scarborough is that it is culturally diverse, and this has been reflected in the casting in each of the readings and in the final production. This can be