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April 25, 2022

Comets 'Bent' on remembering Holocaust The UTD Theatre production brings to life play exploring WWII-era homosexuality, humanity and hope on stage

MARGARET MOORE Copy Editor

W

ith Holocaust Remembrance Day coming up on April 27, the UTD Theater’s spring play sheds light on an often-overlooked part of the horrors of Hitler’s regime: the persecution and murder of gay men. History is not kind, here, and neither is director Chris Treviño’s staging. The show’s listed content warnings—including but not limited to assault, nudity and suicide—are accurate; proceed with caution. Cal Thompson, a visual and performing arts senior who plays the character Uncle Freddy, still found positivity in the show’s overarching positive message and representation, however. “It’s a very heavy piece. It deals with a lot of very intense subject matter. As a queer person, having to deal with that and being in an environment where some people are hearing about it for the very first time can be very difficult,” he said. “But it is also a very gratifying play. Most of the characters in it—except for the Nazis—are queer.” Playwright Martin Sherman’s “Bent” is set in late 1930s Germany, touching on Berlin’s underground LGBTQ+ scene and subsequent repression during World War II. The play opens just after a period known as the Night of the Long Knives, during which Hitler ordered the murder of critics and political opponents in order to consolidate the Nazi Party’s power. Protagonist Max is nursing a hangover with his lover Rudy and a guest from the night before when Nazi Stormtroopers force their way into the apartment, looking for their guest, who turns out to be a former Sturmabteilung trooper on the run. While Max and Rudy escape, Wulf (played by philosophy junior Daniel Underwood), is not so lucky. The pair swiftly go into hiding, but they are ultimately unable to leave Germany. One of the highlights of this production is its deft tonal shift between comedic character interactions and the grim reality of their situation. Max and Rudy’s morning banter is just short of necessitating a laugh track, and watching Wulf realize Max is not the wealthy ticket out of Germany he’d been drunkenly promised the night before is excellent…until it ends with spilled blood. The switch that flips

when a Stormtrooper opens the door instead of the couples’ expected nagging landlord is palpable. That wasn’t the first time I was lulled into a false sense of security by lighter scenes, either; by the end of the show, jokes just made me more nervous for the other shoe to drop. Still, the levity provided a powerful contrast to the show’s darker themes. “Martin Sherman… hooks you in with the romantic comedy at the beginning, and then slaps you in the face with the end of that,” Underwood said. “From there, you've already grown attached to Rudy and Max and their dynamic and you have to witness everything that happens to them as the people in their life make their choices around them and what they're forced to do. I…it's just a whole deal.” Gay men during the Holocaust isn’t an easy subject to cover. Moreover, Tthis play, furthermore, was one of the first to do so, originally opening in 1979, so it’s of historical note itself. Some of the revolutionary nature of , debuting at a time when homosexuality in the U.S. itself wasn’t yet decriminalized—let alone accepted—is lost to time, but the context remains all-too-relevant. Director Chris Trevino worked with the cast to fully research and understand the show’s historical background before performing. “We did a couple weeks of table work on the show, wWe watched ‘Paragraph 175,’ ” a documentary interviewing gay Holocaust survivors, Trevino said. “My assistant director, Hayden Lopez, did a compendium, a lot of research…so we're saying it the right way and we know who we're talking about.” Trevino said. Trevino, Thompson, Underwood, and other cast members all commented on the enduring relevance of the play. Murder rates of transgender BIPOC in particular are “alarming,” Trevino said, and anti-gay legislation such as Florida’s “Don’t Say Gay” law is a persistent problem. “I've heard a lot of people talk about how heavily timely it is because of what we're dealing with,” Thompson said. “And they seem surprised by it, but for a lot of queer people, this has always been the reality…I It's very real, and it's gratifying to have other people finally take it seriously.”

SEE BENT, PAGE 8

Comets report alleged food poisoning at Dining Hall West

TATWIK BODEPUDI | MERCURY STAFF

A series of brilliant cast performances from Mitchell Horn, Cal Thompson, Curtis Gerstner, Fahad Ahmed and others brings Treviño’s vision for the play to life on stage. "Bent" will run 8 p.m. shows on campus through April 30.

TATWIK BODEPUDI | MERCURY STAFF

TATWIK BODEPUDI | MERCURY STAFF

TATWIK BODEPUDI | MERCURY STAFF

How Comets observe Ramadan

A Richardson health department inspection in early April found no major health violations in the facility JACK SIERPUTOWSKI Mercury Staff

Several Comets reported becoming ill after eating at Dining Hall West. UTD denied food poisoning allegations, however, and campus facilities passed the City of Richardson’s subsequent health inspection. The Mercury spoke with three students who became ill after eating at Dining Hall West on March 29, though many more filed reports of sickness. The source of the illness is not clear, but all three became ill within 12 hours of eating either the chicken or the pasta. Computer science freshman Jack Hoggard attributed his sickness to the pasta. “I had pizza, and pasta and some garlic bread, I think it was,” Hoggard said. “It started around midnight. I remember kind of an uneasy, like queasy feeling, and I thought: ‘Oh, I’ll just go to bed, it’ll go away.’ And I remember waking up at probably three in the morning, and I was just in and out of the bathroom—throwing up and then turning around immediately and having diarrhea.

It was just kind of that cycle over and over again… until like 11 in the morning.” UTD Dining said that the health of their guests is extremely important, and they commit to investigating all reports of issues immediately. Dining denied that Dining Hall West’s food was behind the reports of illness. “UTD Dining was made aware that several students had stated they felt ill after eating a meal at Dining Hall West,” said Pam Stanley, director of Food &Retail Services with UTD Auxiliary Services, citing an emailed statement from Chartwells. “Then on April 7th, Dining Hall West received a visit by the local health department. Temperature logs, preparation steps and the equipment used were provided to the inspector. After a thorough inspection, the health inspector did not find any reason to believe the food would have been a cause of illness.” The City of Richardson Health Department confirmed that Dining Hall West re-

SEE DINING, PAGE 8

Inside: Comets dress up for gala and reprom

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VIET KHUE VU | MERCURY STAFF

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JAMIE LIN| MERCURY STAFF

VIET KHUE VU | MERCURY STAFF

FATIMAH AZEEM Opinion Editor

As the soulful call to prayer sounds, signifying sunset, healthcare freshman Siham Awel sinks her teeth into a chewy, sweet date—the first bite of sustenance she’s had in 16 hours. Awel and a sizeable contingent of Muslim Comets abstain from eating and drinking from just before sunrise to just after sunset for 30 days during Ramadan. Ramadan, which shifts back by about a week and a half to two weeks every year to follow the lunar calendar, is fully during the school semester this year. During Ramadan, Muslims fast, read the Quran (Islamic scripture), pray special nightly prayers called tarawih and generally practice their best behavior to observe the month they believe the Quran was brought down to Prophet Muhammad (pbuh). The 30 days of Ramadan conclude with the full moon and a three-day celebration called Eid-alFitr, the largest Islamic celebration, which bears similar levels of importance to Easter for Christians. “It’s one of the core pillars of Islam, so we should participate, [and] also it’s a time of year where I find myself able to reconnect with my faith,” Awel said. “Sometimes, more often than not, we

kind of drift away from our faith, espe- I’m not out of wack or anything, and it’s cially within the settings we live in and all absolutely worth it,” Awel said. the different worldly things around us. So, Awel usually breaks her fast after a long I like that Ramadan helps recenter us. My day of classes with a date, a sweet nutrispirituality has given me willpower, so the tious fruit which Muslims are encouraged fasting part is not challenging. And gener- to begin iftar with in the Quran. The really, fasting is not very hard after you’ve mainder of Awel’s iftar consists of ethnic done it a few times and foods such as samosas, get used to it.” light pastries and variWhile the act of fasting ous curries she prepares It's one of the itself is not difficult for with her family, but really core pillars of Is- Muslims can eat anything Awel, she said that schedlam...it's a time uling her day around for iftar as long as it is suhoor or sahari, the meal halal, or “permissible”— of year where I consumed just before a concept similar to “kofind myself able sher” in Judaism. Among daybreak to prepare for fasting, and iftar, the meal foods that aren’t halal are to recconect consumed just after sunpork, alcohol and any with my faith. set to conclude the day’s sort of animal product in fast, mildly complicates which the animal wasn’t her schedule. slaughtered humanely. — Siham Awel Sarah Baig, CS senior “It’s been very interesting for me and a lot of and the event coordinastudent Muslims to say the least, because tor for the Muslim Student Association Ramadan is 100% within the spring se- on campus, says halal foods are offered mester this year and school is in-person. at MSA’s Iftar Dining Service. Partnered My sleep schedule is a bit chaotic, given with EPIC Masjid, Muslim students can the fact that we have to wake up before grab a hot box of food from EPIC’s daily the crack of dawn for suhoor before I sleep iftar feasts in Dining Hall West thirty again for my classes in a few hours, but it’s SEE RAMADAN, PAGE 8 manageable…It’s a bit of extra work, but


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