
Whoopi Goldberg and trustee Lee Woodruff â82, Pâ13, Hâ07 on stage in Cotterell Court on March 27. (Photo by Andrew Daddio)
Last Friday, entertainer appeared before 2,500 ±«Óătv community members in Cotterell Court. Her performance â a mix of comedy and grandmotherly advice â was a testament to the skills of a woman who has won countless awards for her work on screen, on stage, and in print.
For an hour, she held her audienceâs attention, first offering a stand-up routine, then engaging in a Q&A session with trustee . Afterward, she met with a small group of students in the Hurwitz Admission Center to discuss her life and issues of campus climate.
âThe assumption was, if you came from the projects, you had no understanding of the rest of the world,â Goldberg told the students, gathered around her in the same space where they and their classmates had held protests during the fall semester. âMy mother said, âLook, we donât have any money, but we donât need a lot of money. We can walk places, we can look at stuff, we can go to museums, we can go and do everything. Thereâs nothing you canât do.â So I just assumed that was true for everybody.â
An advocate as well as a storyteller, Goldberg was blunt in addressing comments about issues of racism and ignorance. She acknowledged those who had participated in last semesterâs demonstrations.
âUntil you all start screaming and saying âNo more, we donât like this,â itâs just not going to stop,â she told students. âYou got tired of it, and you said âno more.â And you taught folks things that they didnât know. It takes a voice to do that and itâs hard. Few people want to stand up, because you donât want that attention, but if you donât, no one will.â
The theme was one she established early in the evening as she took the stage in Cotterell Court.
Couched in the stand-upâs signature anecdotes of â60s free love and personal hygiene, Goldbergâs message to undergraduates went to the heart of liberal arts education: knowledge of yourself and your world are crucial for a successful, fulfilling life in a democracy like America.
âPeople would say to us, âWhy are you listening to that music? Why are you dressed like that?ââ she recalled. âThen we grew up and became those people, asking the same questions: Why are you wearing your pants like that? I donât care if you wear your pants down here, as long as you know whatâs going to affect you in the future. I want you to be present.â
For Goldberg, being present means not allowing your humanity to be built on technology. It means being aware of whatâs going on around you and willing to take a stand when you encounter injustice. It means knowing your own boundaries and being willing to state them boldly.
âYou have to be a complete person,â she told the crowd. âYou have to know what you want, what you donât want. You have to be able to say no. You have to not be afraid that the hip, cute, or beautiful people arenât going to want you.â
It was a message of personal responsibility that could resonate across the multiple generations that had come to campus for the sold-out performance.
âYour gut is really smart,â she said. âYou gotta take a stand somewhere.â