Actor and writer Paul Susi is using his decades long experience as a social services professional and social justice activist to bring an adaptation of Homer’s The Iliad to prisons, church groups and community centers. He just returned from a New England tour of “An Iliad”by Denis O’Hare and Lisa Peterson, a monologue with music that condenses Homer’s Trojan War epic about heroism and the horrors of war. Paul Susi talked with Dmae Lo Roberts about this project and his devotion to social justice work with the unhoused and the incarcerated.

In this episode you’ll hear…

–How Paul started performing “An Iliad” at West Sylvan Middle School’s outdoor school.

“There are Ukrainian and Russian immigrants and children in those schools. And so their, their sixth grade teacher Dr. Holly Graham was teaching her sixth grade class, the Iliad as a way of processing all of their rage. And that sixth grade class knew me as Badger at Camp Angelos and, and and they begged me to, to bring An Iliad to their classroom.”

–The effect “An Iliad” had on incarcerated women at a correctional facility in Wyndam, Maine.

“And we have one woman, I would say in her 60s, a white woman shorter, she was stony faced the whole show. I couldn’t tell if she was in it or not. But the moment she raised her hand and started, she started speaking. She was quietly weeping. She’s a mother who is serving a life sentence. She’ll never see her children or grandchildren again. And she had built walls around herself for that to protect herself, right, to, to survive her sentence.”

–What gives him strength in his work with the unhoused community.

“Doing, doing the right thing that’s in front of you, whatever that right thing might be with whatever power you have.”

More info about An Iliad and The Fig Tree Committee:

An Iliad was written by Lisa Peterson & Denis O’Hare
Directed by Patrick Walsh
Music composed by Anna Fritz
Performed by Paul Susi & Anna Fritz
Production Management by Lyndsay Hogland
Conversation Facilitators include: Julia Waters, Emily Squires, and Douglas Detrick

Paul Susi is a theater artist, educator, writer, social services professional, and activist. As an actor, he has appeared onstage with the NW Classical Theatre Collaborative, Anon It Moves / String House, Shaking the Tree Studios, Push Leg, The Forgery, Island Stage Left in the San Juans, WA, Shakespeare Santa Cruz, Vermont Stage Company, Teatro Solo/Boom Arts, as well as in self-produced, original work.  

Paul has served on the Boards of Directors for numerous cultural nonprofits, including Streetbooks and Cerimon House, and as Co-Chair of the Multnomah County Cultural Coalition, and as Executive Director of Portland Actors Ensemble / Shakespeare in the Parks.  

For five years, Paul specialized in managing new emergency homeless shelters for Transition Projects. He currently serves as a Conversation Project Facilitator for Oregon Humanities, and is working on a project commemorating Chee Gong, a migrant worker wrongfully hanged for a murder he didn’t commit in 1889, and buried in an unmarked grave at the historic Lone Fir Cemetery. Find out more about Paul and The Fig Tree Committee at: www.figtreecommittee.org.