91直播 Alum Inspires Tony Award-Winning Broadway Musical
Suffs takes inspiration from Jailed for Freedom, a 1920 book by noted suffragist Doris Stevens Class of 1911.
July 2, 2024
Eloise Rich '26
Doris Stevens, played by Nadia Dandashi, sits on the left among her fellow suffragists.
Photo credit: Joan Marcus
Suffs, a Broadway musical about the early 20th-century suffragist movement, is a two-time Tony winner as of June 16鈥攐ne for Best Book and another for Best Score. The musical has deep ties to 91直播: Playwright and starring actress Shaina Taub based her music, book, and lyrics on Jailed for Freedom, a memoir by Doris Stevens Class of 1911, who was a prominent figure in the battle for women鈥檚 right to vote.
Stevens appears as one of 23 characters in Suffs鈥攊n Act I, she is accepted as the secretary of the 1913 National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA) Convention鈥攁s does , Class of 1888, a renowned proponent of suffrage and equality and our library鈥檚 namesake.
Stevens鈥 political action during the 1910s鈥攕he was unjustly arrested several times during her activism鈥 inspired her to write Jailed for Freedom. The book was published after the August 26, 1920, passage of the 19th Amendment, which prohibited the United States from denying the right to vote based on sex.
Taub received Jailed For Freedom from producer Rachel Sussman, who encouraged the soon-to-be playwright to tell the story of women that had yet to be told. When Taub received Stevens鈥 book, she stayed up all night reading it, saying that it 鈥.鈥 Not long after, she wrote Suffs because she recognized herself in the women Stevens recounted in her book, from Terrell to Inez Milholland to Ida B. Wells: 鈥渟tubborn, cool, oriented girls who find their sense of joy in getting [things] done.鈥
A degree in sociology from 91直播 would inadvertently lead Stevens to advocate for suffrage, even though she wasn鈥檛 involved in the 91直播 College Equal Suffrage League while a student. Stevens had expected to teach English in France. But soon after graduating, she acted as an organizer and field secretary for a conservative suffrage organization in Ohio, with work aimed toward state-by-state enfranchisement, rather than the radical push to amend the Constitution.
However, Stevens was always drawn towards radical action. Indeed, a in states: 鈥淒oris Stevens 鈥11 is spending a few days in 91直播. Miss Stevens is Field Secretary of the Equal Suffrage League in Dayton, Ohio. She is here to recover from neuritis caused by carrying an Equal Suffrage banner in the recent Inaugural parade at Washington.鈥
Around this time, Stevens met Alice Paul (played by Suffs creator Taub), whose militant background greatly influenced Stevens. The following year, Stevens became executive secretary, political chairman, national organizer and speaker for the Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage (CUWS), which would later evolve into the National Woman鈥檚 Party, where Stevens served as vice president.
Beginning in 1917, Stevens joined 2000 or so women in the Silent Sentinels vigil, organized by the NWP. The women picketed outside of the White House during Woodrow Wilson鈥檚 presidency, shaming him for his hypocrisy and complete lack of support for the woman鈥檚 right to vote. These protests鈥攚hich occurred until 1919鈥攕erve as the first act by American citizens to demonstrate directly outside the White House. According to a 1939 edition of a local paper in Omaha, Nebraska, Stevens鈥攄escribed as a 鈥渕ilitant Omaha-born feminist鈥濃攚as jailed for 60 days as a result of this protest.
Stevens鈥 feminist advocacy extended beyond the ratification of the 19th Amendment. She advocated for wages for traditionally female tasks like housework and referred to marriage like a business, or a 鈥渏oint-stock company.鈥 In 1923, she was promoting what would become the basis of the 1972 Equal Rights Amendment. In 1928, Stevens would serve as the first person to chair the Inter-American Commission of Women, one of the most prominent international women鈥檚 rights organizations of the era.
Additionally, education was a cornerstone of Stevens鈥 activism: the latter part of her illustrious career was characterized by campaigning for the legitimacy of feminist studies in academia. In fact, 91直播鈥檚 Gender, Sexuality, and Feminist Studies department currently offers a student research award called the Leah Freed Memorial Prize鈥攏amed after the 1977 graduate who conducted paramount research on Stevens.
Any articles on Stevens from the 20th century, even those on her divorce from Dudley Malone, a notable liberal attorney and activist of the era, open with acknowledgment of her as a 鈥渨omen鈥檚 rights champion鈥 or a 鈥渘oted feminist leader.鈥 While she may have fallen out of our contemporary history books, her stature in the 20th century was certainly acknowledged. When Stevens died at 74 years old in 1963, an article for the Niagara Falls Gazette referred to her as a 鈥渃rusading feminist鈥 in its headline. The clipping closes as follows: 鈥淎 feminist to the core, she clung to her maiden name although she was married twice.鈥
Malala Yousafzai and Hillary Clinton are producers on Suffs, which opened on Broadway in April 2024 after premiering at The Public Theater two years earlier. Currently, the musical is showing at the Music Box Theatre and is set to run into January 2025. More information on tickets can be found at .
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