'House of D' takes viewers behind the bars of infamous women's prison

The Department of Communication, Film, and Theatre at Eastern Connecticut State University presented its final main stage production of the year with "The Prison That Made America: Women's House of Detention (1932-1974)." Written and directed by theatre Professors Reginald Flood and Alycia Bright-Holland, the show ran from April 24-27 at the Fine Arts Instructional Center Proscenium Theater.

The play took viewers behind the walls of the historic Women's House of Detention in Greenwich Village, New York, a neighborhood where Bohemian rebellion and queer culture flourished.

The play follows "House of D" residents, some well-known, such as political activists Angela Davis, Afeni Shakur, and writer Andrea Dworkin. The unheard voices of criminalized people were also uplifted through "lesser-known characters such as Charlottle, Virginia, Louise B., and 'Big Cliff' Trundle," said Bright-Holland

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