A MacArthur 'genius' skewers philanthropy in a farcical play tackling oligarchy and arts funding
NEW YORK (AP) — Taylor Mac does not set out to bite the hand that feeds in a new play satirizing cultural philanthropy. The MacArthur 'genius grant' recipient claims to be 'just trying to get some lipstick on it."
Set at a not-for-profit dance company's gala, "Prosperous Fools" invites questions about the moral value of philanthropy in a society denounced by the comedy as 'feudal.' A boorish patron goes mad trying vainly to wield his lacking creative capital and thus confirms the choreographer's fears of selling out to a sleazy oligarch who represents everything his art opposes. The show, written by Mac and directed by Darko Tresnjak, runs through June 29 at Brooklyn's Polonsky Shakespeare Center.
'I'm not trying to hurt anybody. I'm trying to get people to think differently about the world,' said Mac, whose gender pronoun is 'judy.'
'I just wish that all of the great philanthropists of America, and the world, would lead with, 'This is a temporary solution until we can figure out how to make a government of the people, for the people, by the people,'" Mac added. "Instead of, 'This is the solution: I should have all the money and then I get to decide how the world works.''
Don't let present day parallels distract you. The fundraiser's honored donor enters atop a fire-breathing bald eagle in a black graphic tee, blazer and cap much like Elon Musk's signature White House getup. He later dons the long red tie popular in MAGA world. But the resemblance doesn't mean Mac is meditating solely on recent events such as President Donald Trump's billionaire-filled administration and tightening grip over cultural pillars including the Kennedy Center.
The script reflects personal frustrations with philanthropy's uneven power dynamics navigated throughout a 30-year career spent in what Mac described as 'a million handshaking ceremonies," first as a cater-waiter and eventually as one of the celebrated honorees who donates performances to help fundraise.
Mac's desperate portrayal of the artist at the center of 'Prosperous Fools' only sharpens its skewering of wealthy philanthropists who take more than they give away. When the artist cries 'But why couldn't I have a good oligarch?' and bemoans that 'I should have stayed in the artistic integrity of obscurity,' it feels like a case of art imitating life.
Mainstream success came last decade for Mac. 'A 24-Decade History of Popular Music' was a Pulitzer Prize finalist in 2017 and Mac's Broadway debut play 'Gary: A Sequel to Titus Andronicus' racked up seven Tony nominations in 2019.
'Prosperous Fools,' however, was written 12 years ago before much of the critical acclaim. Mac said 'someone with power' commissioned a translation of French playwright Molière's 'Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme,' which mocks a status-obsessed middle class social climber.
Mac isn't surprised the original commissioner didn't want the final product. Molière is hardly present. And the play essentially advocates for an end to the perpetuation of culture that only the affluent deem worthy of funding.
Mac is also unsurprised it took over a decade to land another interested producer. The initial 40-person ballet troupe had to be shrunk to a more affordable ensemble of four dancers. Plus, its style, in Mac's judgment, is still rather 'queer' for a 'heteronormative' theater industry.
'And then the other reason is because I insult donors," Mac said.
'I don't think I insult donors," Mac added. "I ask donors to consider. And the theater is entrenched in making sure their donors feel good about themselves — not that their donors are in collaboration with us for us all to get to a place of better consciousness.'
The show's slapstick humor helps break down its fairly cerebral subject matter. In one of several moments of hilarity, the patron and his 'philanthropoid' — the ballet's artistic director, whose primary concern is securing donations — sway around the stage oinking like pigs. Mac's artist delivers scathing and highbrow critiques while pretending to be 'The Princess Bride' actor Wallace Shawn in a puppet costume. The gala's other honoree — a star singer called the 'patron saint of philanthropy" who wears a gown adorned with impoverished children's faces — makes no bones about her lust for Shawn.
But, as Mac knows, nonstop humor can have the effect of softening its target. 'Prosperous Fools' foregoes the actors' bows that typically end a play in favor of an epilogue, delivered by the artist in rhyming couplets, that serves as the show's final blow to 'philanthrocapitalism.'
'I want to be a tender heart in this too tough world trying to figure out how to maintain my tenderness and how to create revolution with tenderness. And I'm at a loss for it right now," Mac said. "Part of what the play is doing is saying, 'I'm at a loss. Are you? Do you have a solution for me?''
By skipping the curtain call, Mac practically demands that the crowd wrestle immediately with whether charity absolves wealth hoarders' greed — a question boldly put forth at the close of a Theatre for a New Audience season sponsored by Deloitte and Bloomberg Philanthropies.
But whether the show's heavy-handed message has reached those financial backers remains to be seen. 'No one's spoken to me," Mac said. Neither responded to requests for comment.
___
Associated Press coverage of philanthropy and nonprofits receives support through the AP's collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content. For all of AP's philanthropy coverage, visit https://apnews.com/hub/philanthropy.
James Pollard, The Associated Press
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Forbes
24 minutes ago
- Forbes
Mariska Hargitay's ‘My Mom Jayne' Premieres On Streaming This Week
Mariska Hargitay and Jayne Mansfield in "My Mom Jayne." My Mom Jayne, a documentary about the late Jayne Mansfield by her daughter, Law & Order: SVU star Mariska Hargitay, premieres on streaming on Max this week. Directed and produced by Hargitay, My Mom Jayne made its world premiere at the 2025 Cannes Film Festival in May. The official summary for the documentary reads in part, 'In her feature film directorial debut — and the first time she has delved into her mother Jayne Mansfield's story — Mariska Hargitay searches for the mother she never knew almost six decades after the Hollywood legend's tragic death. 'Through intimate interviews and an extensive collection of never-before-seen photos and home movies, she grapples with her mother's complicated public and private legacy, uncovering the surprising layers and depth of who Jayne was, not only to her fans, but also to those closest to her.' Warner Bros. Discovery announced in early June that My Mom Jayne will begin streaming on Friday, June 27, on Max and will air on HBO linear that evening from 8 to 10 p.m. ET/PT. For viewers who don't subscribe to Max, the platform has three subscription tiers to choose from. An ad-based tier is $9.99 per month, an ad-free tier is $16.99 per month and an ad-free tier with 4K Ultra HD programming is $20.99 per month. Mariska Hargitay Interviewed Her Siblings For 'My Mom Jayne' The official summary for My Mom Jayne from Max also reads that Mariska Hargitay 'was three years old when her mother, Jayne Mansfield, tragically died in a car accident at the age of 34 — leaving behind five children. 'The film follows Mariska as she seeks to answer her long-held questions about her mother and integrate the truths she uncovers into her own sense of self. As she explores the complexities behind who Jayne Mansfield was in public, she reckons with the persona that Jayne created, but was later desperate to escape.' Per Max, Mariska Hargitay interviews her siblings Jayne Marie Mansfield, Mickey Hargitay, Jr., Zoltan Hargitay and Tony Cimber for My Mom Jayne. Additionally, Mariska Hargitay interviews her stepmother, Ellen Hargitay, for the documentary, as well as Jayne Mansfield's press representative Raymond 'Rusty' Strait. My Mom Jayne will also include photos of Jayne Mansfield, as well as some of her personal letters and belongings. In addition, the documentary will include talk show and interview footage of the film star from the 1950s and '60s. Rated TV-MA, My Mom Jayne, directed by Mariska Hargitay, will arrive on Max on Friday and will begin airing on HBO linear the same day at 8 p.m. ET/PT.


Washington Post
an hour ago
- Washington Post
Q&A: Pulitzer Prize winner Robin Givhan chronicles Virgil Abloh's rise to fashion fame
NEW YORK — With his calm and cool demeanor, fashion disruptor and multi-hyphenate Virgil Abloh artfully challenged the fashion industry's traditions to leave his mark as a Black creative, despite his short-lived career. In the years since his 2021 death at just 41, his vision and image still linger. Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Robin Givhan sheds new light on how Abloh ascended the ranks of one of the top luxury fashion houses and captivated the masses with her latest book, 'Make It Ours: Crashing the Gates of Culture with Virgil Abloh.'


CBS News
an hour ago
- CBS News
Guitar course run by nonprofit aims to help Minnesota veterans heal through music
A pair of Minnesota veterans graduated from a unique music program Monday afternoon, walking away with new skills and new guitars. Country singer and songwriter Carl Wayne Meekins visited the nonprofit Every Third Saturday in south Minneapolis to deliver the instruments as part of his Play It Forward campaign. Meekins has donated more than 70 guitars to veterans across the country through Guitars for Vets, a national nonprofit that helps former service members heal through music. "Guitars for Veterans is an organization that's nationwide," Meekins said. "They get together with the veterans that show interest in wanting to learn how to play the guitar. They go through 10 weeks of lessons … and at the end, they graduate and get a guitar." Monday's recipients were part of the Minneapolis chapter's 10-week course. After completing their lessons, the graduates received their "award guitars" during a special ceremony that included an acoustic performance by Meekins. "Every one of us as a human being has something inside of us to give away," he said. "It's a gift … I happen to be able to use guitars as a vehicle." Eric Giesemann, a veteran advocate with Every Third Saturday, says the partnership between his nonprofit and Guitars for Vets is a natural fit. "When you're talking about post-traumatic stress, and what it takes to recover from that — working with your hands and needing your brain to come alongside — it allows you time and place to escape from all of that," Giesemann said. Every Third Saturday works to support, connect and empower veterans by offering programming focused on healing, community and growth. The organization's partnership with Guitars for Vets has allowed local veterans to express themselves through music and connect with others who understand their experiences.