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New refs for the Colgel, Falbi and Udofia families! More info under the cut!
⦿Flegel Reeves: Younger brother of unnamed sister. Husband of Colt Grice. Father of Sullivan Reeves-Grice. Civilian. CEO of the Reeves Company. Trans Male (He/him), Pan
⦿Colt Grice: Older brother of Falco Grice. Husband of Flegel Reeves. Father of Sullivan Reeves-Grice. Marleyan Officer. Co-holder of the Beast Titan. Member of the Council of Shifters. Representative of King Willy. Assistant baseball coach. Trans Male (He/him), Gay
⦿Sullivan Reeves-Grice: Son of Flegel Reeves and Colt Grice. Civilian. Merchant. Heir to the Reeves Company. Member of the Council of Shifters. Holder of the Grimacing Titan. 35 y/o. Transmasculine/Nonbinary (They/them, He/him), Pan. Voice Claim: Jason Raize (Denahi)
⦿Falco Grice: Younger brother of Colt Grice. Husband of Gabi Braun. Father of Seana Braun-Grice. Marleyan Officer. Co-holder of the Jaw Titan. Member of the Council of Shifters. Representative of King Willy. Demiboy (He/him, They/them), Bi
⦿Gabi Braun: Wife of Falco Grice. Mother of Seana Braun-Grice. Marleyan Officer. Sniper. Co-Holder of the Armored Titan. Member of the Council of Shifters. Representative of King Willy. Has ADHD. Trans Female (She/her), Bi
⦿Seana Braun-Grice: Daughter of Falco Grice and Gabi Braun. Garrison Officer. Electrician. Glassblower. Member of the Council of Shifters. Holder of the Toucan Titan. 29 y/o. Demigirl (She/her, They/them), Lesbian. Voice Claim: AJ Michalka (Stevonnie). Dating (?) Danika Herschel-Reitsch
⦿Udo B. Herschel: Husband of Zofia Reitsch. Father of Danika Herschel-Reitsch. Translator/Medic of the Marleyan Military. Genderfluid (He/him mainly), Pansexual Demi
⦿Zofia Reitsch: Wife of Udo B. Herschel. Mother of Danika Herschel-Reitsch. Marleyan Officer. Has autism. Cis Female (She/her), Ace/Bi
⦿Danika Herschel-Reitsch: Daughter of Udo B. Herschel and Zofia Reitsch. Marleyan Officer. Baseball Player. Has autism. 27 y/o. Cis Female (She/her), Bi. Voice Claim: Erica Lindbeck (Cassie Cage). Dating Seana Grice
I wasn't initially planning on drawing something for today, but I saw some other really cute fanart that won me over, so here's some fanart for Mikasa and Falco's birthday!!
The first 2 drawings are Venomverse-related, while the last drawing is meant to be in-canon. For Mikasa's sole drawing, we've got her wife Annie pulling her down by her scarf to smooch her (she's still the shortest of the group), her husband Armin nuzzling her, and her adoptive brother Eren off in the back happily smiling at her. Just an Ackerman and her blondes (and her brunette bro)! I thought about making another drawing featuring Mikasa and her Venomverse kids (or even adding them here) but I really wanted to get this out in time for today so I decided against it. For Falco's sole drawing, we've got Falco's wife Gabi and daughter Seana cuddling him, as well as headshots of his brother Colt, his husband Flegel, their son Sullivan, and their friends Udo/Zofia and their daughter Danika. I also considered adding in Reiner/Bertholdt and their kids but there wasn't any room for them u-u Danika isn't upset because it's Uncle Falco's birthday, but because seeing Seana brings up some complicated Feelings within her. And finally, the last picture has canonverse Mikasa holding out a slice of cake to Falco for them to share. I've seen other people draw similar fanart and I thought it was cute so I wanted to do it too :]
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Mfoniso Udofia ‘06 is a first generation storyteller, educator and playwright. Based in New York City, she was recently profiled by The Times for her works the Ufot Family Cycle Plays (Sojourners and Her Portmanteau) which were produced as part of the New York Theatre Workshop’s Spring 2017 season. WU sits down with Mfoniso to discuss her journey in life and in writing.
Cover Image by Frances F. Denny for The New York Times
Q: What is your story? How did you fall in love with theatre/the stage/storytelling?
I have always loved performance. In middle and high school I played the trombone. At Wellesley I began taking opera lessons. It wasn’t until Wellesley; however, that I discovered that the joy I had on stage could become the joy I had in life. I was singing, dabbling in the theater arts and restoring myself from the inside out and, during my senior year of College, I decided to make my extra-curricular delight, my life’s work.
Q: What was your professional path like? How did a political science major end up in theatre?
My parents had a singular hand in molding and preparing me for Wellesley. I enrolled with the intention of following the footsteps of Madeleine Albright and/or Hillary Clinton. I was interested in the dispossession of so-called third-world countries. I wanted to understand how institutions like the World Bank/IMF worked within West-African nations. What was the help? What was the damage? I loved what I learned at Wellesley and I did well within my chosen major. Plus, I was happy to be manifesting a family dream. Something did change; however, when I discovered that the Arts were just as much a tool for social change as policy-making. I let Political Science, as a career go, and my parents, in time, shifted their dreams for me. I still use what I learned as a Political Science major within my my work. I am writing a 9-play cycle that follows a Nigerian family from Akwa Ibom, Nigeria to Massachusetts, United States. Audiences watch how governments and policies clash against actual human bodies and their dreams for themselves. Audiences then go home and consider the hidden life of people they never knew, and that can change a ballot as well.
Q: What are the biggest challenges you faced trying to build a career in the arts?
I graduated from Wellesley in 2006. I then immediately enrolled at the American Conservatory Theatre and received my degree in Acting in 2009. I did not dream of playwriting at this time; I wanted to be an actress. 2007-2008 was the great global financial crises, referred to by many as the largest financial catastrophe since the Great Depression. As I stated, I graduated in 2009 with a terminal degree in the Fine Arts and then went to New York City to begin my life as an actress. I had thousands of dollars in student loan debt, no security net, and no job prospects. Getting hired in any capacity proved impossible during that time. Building a career in the Arts is a difficult business even when the economy is flush. Non-theater jobs had dried up, not to mention theater based work. I cobbled together a life. I babysat. I substitute taught in NYC public and charter schools. I volunteered with youth. I auditioned as best as I could. It was not easy. I started writing in 2009 to process what was happening in and around me. It was a faithful artistic outlet that I could do no matter what the world was doing. My playwriting career seeded during this time.
Q: What have been the greatest rewards?
There have been many rewards. Seeing people learn and then change their minds about African bodies has been rewarding. Seeing the way theater institutions are banding around the cycle and educating themselves about how they can showcase the plays with integrity and authenticity has been rewarding. One of my greatest rewards; however, has been watching West-Africans see representations of themselves on the American stage. During my run at New York Theatre Workshop [they produced two of my plays, Sojourners and Her Portmanteau], a group of Ibibio women were in the audience. Once they heard one of my characters speaking in Ibibio they started whooping and talking back to the stage in glee. My spirit flew so high that day!
Q: Were there every moments throughout your career when you doubted yourself/what you were doing? How did those moments resolve?
Of course there were moments I doubted myself. I keep a document that shows how many residencies and grants I apply for. In the beginning of my career it felt like I was applying and applying with no return. I couldn’t break through. I depended on my spiritual center, my family and friends who kept pushing me to find the fortitude to keep writing and applying. I also diversified approach. Friends from American Conservatory Theater helped stage readings and workshops of the plays to strengthen them and to build a community around my work. From there I started seeing acceptances roll through, and I have been able to keep members of that beginning community around me today.
Q: What advice would you give to your younger self/someone just starting in the field?
Go! Go! Go! Use energy to multiply energy. Experiment with form. Experiment with ideas. Write what you know and what you haven’t seen. Apply for residencies and grants. Let family and friends bolster you and feed you. Fail forward into your hard-earned success. Say thank you. Say thank you again. Rest. Rest. Rest. Repeat.
Q: What is your creative process like? How do you begin?
I usually write in the morning. 4am is my time to write. Most humans are sleeping, the world is readying itself to waken and flow is easier. All of my plays also begin with a question. Questions such as: Can the Nigerian dream live within American environs? Can trauma become tradition? All of my plays begin in the aforementioned fashioned. What differs in my process is “the way.” I am able to write some plays in one sitting, a veritable conjure that pours out of me. Some plays make me work and I am grasping thoughts and hoping I catch them fast and soft enough to write them down.
Q: Can you tell us about a piece of art that deeply moves you? The one that convinced you that this was the right path?
There are many. I read a lot of contemporary West African literature. A Famished Road by Ben Okri was a seminal work for me. Of course, I count Achebe’s, Things Fall Apart, as a master work and one that helped shape my writer’s mind. Some other works that also helped shape me are: Nwapa’s, Efuru; Adichie’s, Purple Hibiscus, Chauvet’s, Love, Anger, Madness; Danticat’s, Brother, I’m Dying…and there are more. So many more.
Q: Your identity as a Nigerian-American features heavily in your work. How has your identity (and by extension your work) changed over time?
My identity is the ever-evolving truth of myself. When I started writing I knew only 25 years of myself, and my plays only held that. I am now 33 and plays hold 33 years of myself. I cannot wait my plays look like when I am 70 years old.
Q: Do you have any advice for other artists in the age of Trump (given the administration’s stance on immigration)?
Interviewee response: My advice to any artist attempting to create in the age of Trump is to “go forth boldly.” Greed, antipathy and lack of education has caused a devastating case of American amnesia. That amnesia has caused us to forget the plight of the immigrant body, the plight of descendants of those forcibly kidnapped and bound to a land foreign to their ancestral home. This amnesia has caused some of us to forget that this land used to belong to others and has not always been ours. The artist can remember our humanity and place it on stage for all to see. Despite danger, we must strive to create with impunity. So one is always is watching. Healing is always steps away.
And just for fun:
Q: What is your favorite way to unwind/practice self-care?
Self-care is becoming more and more important. I used to run on all cylinders and attempt to work 24 hours in a day. I’d feel guilty if I “wasted” an hour. Not anymore. If I don’t take care of my mind and my body, my mind and body produces nothing. I get my nails done. I get massages. I try to carve out time for my best friend and sit with her on a couch and talk just like we did in our Wellesley dorm rooms. I visit my mother in Massachusetts and rake leaves on our land. I find bodies of water and just look out into the expanse and remember that I am not the center of the universe. My self-care divides itself between conscious pampering, exalting in nature and sitting inside the care and love of the people I adore.
Ambassador Udofia Hosts The 5th Edition of The CMC Africa Award of Excellence 2021 In Grand Style
Ambassador Udofia Hosts The 5th Edition of The CMC Africa Award of Excellence 2021 In Grand Style
Nigeria – The founder of the CMC Gladiators of Repute and Chief Convener of the CMC Africa Award of Excellence, Ambassador Cornell Udofia, on Sunday, 26th September, 2021 hosted the fifth ( 5th ) edition of the CMC Africa Award of Excellence, at the Sheraton hotel, Ikeja, Lagos.
Amb. Udofia, who has gathered unquantifiable and clasic world class experiences and exposures in Public Relations…