ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
LITERARY
www.outlineschicago.com
The Rainbow Was Enuf:
C.C. Carter
by lorraine j. affourtit
It was the best excuse for canceling an interview appointment I had ever heard. Chicago writer and performer C.C. Carter was becoming a grandmother on the morning we were scheduled to meet. Her daughter Betty gave birth to a healthy baby boy on Feb. 8. When we finally interviewed a few days later, this was the first topic of
experience, and often add an element of fiction. It comes from a principal truth, but I stretch it to make it play to the audience.
L.A.: Do you have any early literary influences?
C.C.: I've gotta say Toni Morrison. What she can do with one line.... I teach contemporary literature, so I have an appreciation for Joyce and Lorraine: So how does it feel to be Hemingway. I look for great lines in a grandmother?
conversation:
C.C.: It's good. You know, since I've never had children of my own, it's my first baby, too. We're all taking part. L.A.: Are you close to your immediate family?
C.C.: Yes, everyone is very close. We have an apartment in our basement for my mother-in-law [Betty's grandmother].
L.A.: It must be nice to have family so close by.
C.C.: It is.
L.A.: But you are originally from the East Coast. When did you decide to move to Chicago?
C.C.: Five years ago. I came to visit. I looked across the room, and there was Verna [C.C.'s partner].
L.A.: Was that when you met her? C.C.: Well, we had been friends platonically for five years, then when we had both come out of our previous relationships, we said 'Let's do it.' I think we originally met at the old C.K.'s. Then, I'll never forget-on June 3, 1995, she called me to congratulate me on my Master's. That's when the decision happened.
L.A.: And what did you think of the Midwest?
C.C.: I had lived here before when I was a girl. I was a missionary brat-my father is a minister. We moved every five years or so. But that time I didn't have a car, I didn't really get a chance to explore the city. I spent my teenage years in New York.
L.A.: How was that? C.C.: Rough. There was a lot of character-developing experiences. I've always been a smart kid, intellectually, but socially, and streetwise, I learned a
lot.
L.A.: How do you incorporate that history into your work?
C.C.: Well, I deal with personal
reading. I look to be transported. I've always been interested in poetry, from a very little girl. I remember the first thing I read my mother gave me Phenomenal Woman by Maya Angelou. She made me recite it every night and every morning-it was taped to my mirror. L.A.: Obviously your mother was a strong influence.
C.C.: My mother is ... well, back in the day they used to call them 'brick houses.' She definitely had a class about her, but she could move those hips. Growing up and seeing that you know, she was a size 18. For me, there were always issues at school, but when I came home, it was a very nurturing environment.
L.A.: Your most famous piece has got to be 'Hips.' Every performance I go to, everyone knows that piece.
C.C.: When I wrote it-that day I had had a really bad day. It must have been something I had on: Some women don't know what they do to other women as far as perpetuating stereotypes. I came home and I was extremely angry. The piece just came out that way. Then I performed it. at BLACKLINES' 2nd shocked me as much as it anniversary. The reaction shocked everyone else to hear this piece. For me it was just ammunition. I was talking back.
L.A.: Do you think it's important to take part in
changing the body image values for young girls and women?
C.C.: I read Audre
Lorde's Sister Outsider. That chapter about the hatred that Black women
have for each other. I mean 'What is it about me that makes you so uncomfortable with yourself?' That's what it comes down to. It's important, yes.
My new collection, Body Language, takes body parts that women tend to feel badly about and discusses that. My daughter just had a C-section and the first thing she said was unbelievable. She said 'I'm sorry I couldn't have the baby the right way.' I said 'Do you really think your baby is going to care that you have those staples in your belly?' I just wrote a piece about that.
L.A.: Have you received an encouraging response from women, especially young women?
C.C.: Well, the young ones, I have to tell you, they are more self-confident than we were. Today we see varied body types on TV and celebrities. The women that come up to me are usually my age. And they say "Thank
you very much.'
L.A.: Tell me about your new book. C.C.: We're taking advanced orders. (laughs). This book is totally honest and it's for women. And it's for men. But it's painful. My editor and publisher pulled some things out of me. It's new for me, getting to the edit. It's real-to the core. I've been working on this for five years. I take the woman's body completely apart and try to turn it into something good. LA: What are your expectations for the release of the book?
C.C.: I want to win a Lammy. (laughs). I would be crazy to say that I didn't. At the Women of Color Writers' Conference, there was a discussion titled 'Give Me Props While I'm Still Alive.' Nobody should die without knowing that they made a dif-
ference.
L.A.: Who made a difference to
you?
C.C.: Cheryl Clark, who has since become my mentor. I needed her to know what she did for an 18-year-old who had no Black lesbian role models. To walk past a-bookstore and see in the window her book Living as a Lesbian changed my life.
ly
L.A.: A lot of your work is extremepersonal. Do you find it difficult to share work that is so charged or do you gain strength from its delivery?
C.C.: It's hard. Like the piece that I
C.C. Carter performs Saturday,
Feb. 26 at LE.
did [a re-make of For Colored Girls Who Never Committed Suicide Because the Rainbow Was Enuf at Mountain Moving] about domestic abuse. I am a victim of woman-on-woman domestic violence. But I had always wanted a connection to it. I never want to perform a piece and say it by rote. When
I get tired, something always happens. I performed 'Hips' on the Olivia Cruise when I was just about finished with that piece altogether. Afterwards, there was a woman in a wheelchair and don't know what you did for her. You her lover came up to me saying 'You have to keep performing this poem.' And I was back there again. You've got to keep a little part of the hurt, so it's genuine. Or a little part of the joy.
L.A.: In For Colored Girls, you touch on so many sensitive issues-racism, sexism, heterosexism, domestic abuse, butch/ femme dynamics, etc. Are you interested in confronting the interrelationships between these issues?
C.C.: Definitely. I think that's where the women's component of The Real Read [a performative writers' collective] is going with our work next time. There are a lot of people interested in the issues affecting the colored women's community. Affecting all communities.
L.A.: What would you most like to do with your work, be it writing, performing, acting...?
C.C.: Just to point out the differences, but to get to the core of how we are all the same. If you are domestically abused, whatever race you are, it's the same pain. If I'm in love, it's not a
MOUNTAIN MOVING COFFEEHOUSE NEW: FRIDAY (yes, FRIDAY), March 3rd: Suzanne Westenhoefer
Lesbian comic Suzanne Westenhoefer will perform her new show, "I'm Not Cindy Brady," based on her new CD of the same name, 7:30 p.m.
Saturday, March 25: Ubaka Hill
Ubaka
Ubaka Hill returns for a
Westenhoefer
weekend of drumming workshops and a major concert at the coffeehouse featuring the DrumSong Orchestra. For more info or to sign up for workshops, contact ToniAJr@aol.com/(773) 769-9009.
1650 West Foster Ebenezer Lutheran Church Women & Children Only. Suggested Donation. 312-409-0276 SHOWTIME 7:30 p.m. 25 OUTLINES Feb. 23, 2000
Page 15
Black love, it's human love. I want my work to cross all cultures and all genders. I have an obligation to see myself as who I am. I write from the perspective of a woman who is of color and who happens to be a lesbian. But it doesn't have to have mono meaning. Everyone should be able to see it. That's what I teach my students. Everything you read, whether it is a science book or a novel, make it personal first. Once you make that connection, there's nothing you can read that you can't relate to.
L.A.: You are an adjunct instructor? C.C.: Yes, I teach at South Suburban College. My students are everyone from a 16-year-old who graduated high school early to housewives that are going back to get their degree. They teach me something new every day. I've read some of the most horrific and some of the most brave writings. L.A.: Would you say then that writing was your first love?
C.C.: It's my only love. Acting is a hobby. Writing is my life. Everything
else is coincidental.
L.A.: Will you keep collaborating with the artists you've been working with, such as the 'Poetic Provocateurs?'
C.C.: The Poetic Provocateurs was kinds of ethnic and cultural areas covRoiAnn Phillips' dream. We had all we all could say 'This piece hurts, but ered when we performed together, but
we are going to do it anyway.' We will do it again. Star Gaze wants us to perform. There's some talk of making it professional. Taking it on the road. (laugh)
L.A.: And then perhaps you become a mentor for some young artist looking for a role model.
C.C.: Well, I don't have that to offer yet. But give me five years, and you just wait. Had you asked me five years ago, I would never have told you I'd be where I am. But that's another story.
C.C. is at The Little Black Pearl Sat., Feb. 26. She will read from her new book, and will be joined by Letta Neely and Renita Martin, both of Boston. The Literary Exchange is sponsoring the event, 4200 N. Drexell, RSVP (773) 5096881. She's working on a Hollywood film that should be out next October called My Closest and Dearest Friends.
11th Annual International
Day Dance
n's fit
SISTERS AROUND THE WORLD
CELEBRATE Saturday, March 11, 2000 8:00 p.m. to 2:00 a.m.
Congress Hotel, The Great Hall
520 S. Michigan
$20 advance, $25 at the door. No Personal Checks at door.
Music
Dancing Date Auction
Appetizers Cash Bar Craft Bazaar Tickets are available from members of each group and at Women & Children First, 5233 N. Clark
Call (773) 509-6881
A fundraising event sponsored by: The Literary Exchange, AFFINITY, Chicago Metropolitan Battered Women's Network. Co-spons. OUTLINES/BLACKLINES/EN LA VIDA/NIGHTLINES Stay all night! Special room rate available if you mention Affinity.