by Jodie Evans
Last night at the Emmy Awards, Sally Field, in accepting her honor for best
performance in a dramatic series, gave the best performance as a real-life
thinking mother who found herself in the privileged position of being center
stage with an audience of millions. Before the Fox Network cut off her speech,
she attempted to squeeze in a few words about the war in Iraq. What American
viewers did not hear her say was: “. . . if
the mothers ruled the world there would be no goddamn wars in the first
place.”
Why did the Fox Network censor her words? Was it because of the use of
the mild expletive “goddamn”? The awards show censors were definitely
on the alert last night to make sure no offensive expletives slipped by.
But the producers used a clumsy process of “bleeping” out the
words, cutting away from the speaker to wide shots, and excising not only
the offending words but whole sentences, thereby effectively silencing
a number of speakers.
The network that served as the Bush Administration’s house organ
in the lead-up to the Iraq war—and is currently trying to spin support
for a war against Iran—must have relished the excuse to block Sally’s
particular message. Canadian television’s airing of the Emmys included
her speech uncensored.
In her series Brothers and Sisters, there is an emblematic
moment between Field and one of her sons who chooses the military. She
referred to this scene earlier in her acceptance speech: “At
the heart of [her character] Nora Walker, she is a mother,”
Field said. “May they be seen, may their work
be valued and raised . . . especially the mothers who stand with an open
heart and wait—wait for their children to come home from danger,
from harm’s way and from war.”
As the music began to swell, signaling she should wrap-up her remarks,
she exclaimed, “I’m not finished. I have
to finish talking . . . if the mothers ruled the world there would be
no god . . .” The rest was silenced.
Afterwards, informed that she had been cut off, she seemed to take it
well: “I've been there before,”
she said. “If [mothers] ruled the world we
wouldn't be sending our children off to be slaughtered. I shouldn’t
have said the ‘god’ before the damn.”
As she made her speech, some of world’s outstanding women leaders,
including four Nobel laureates, had just concluded a meeting in Rhinebeck,
New York. Sally Field was scheduled to attend the conference titled Women,
Power and Peace, organized by activist playwright Eve Ensler and
the Omega Institute. The three-day gathering concentrated on “the
necessity for women to stand up for what we have always known: that while
conflict may be inevitable, war is not; and while disagreement can foster
understanding and growth, violence does not.”
What the Fox censor highlighted was the mainstream media’s reluctance
to give airtime to anti-war voices. With the notable exception of Cindy
Sheehan—whose pleas to speak with President George Bush about the
irretrievable loss of her son temporarily broke through the mainstream
media’s soundproof wall—we don’t hear much from mothers
who have stood firm against the war in Iraq and, indeed, against war in
general. We hear all the time from policy analysts, military commanders,
and commentators for whom the war in Iraq is an issue for debate.
Even though her words were censored in the moment, the controversy caused
by Fox’s actions turned Sally Field's message into the headline from
the Emmy Awards, instead of a footnote, and opened a much needed conversation
that allows mothers, who tend to think first and foremost of the human
costs of war, to speak and be heard.
A Women’s Media Center board member, Jodie Evans is a mother and
cofounder of CODEPINK: Women for Peace, a
grassroots peace and social justice movement boasting an international
membership of 150,000. Using creative non-violent means to keep peacemaking
front and center in the public eye,CODEPINK’s
ultimate goal is to redirect resources away from war and into healthcare,
education, environmental preservation, and other life-affirming activities.
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