Halfway through “Georgia & Me,” the playwright/performer who  portrays both of them, or, interlockingly, each of them, cries out: “I  need to see the part of me that is her, the part of her that is me,”  sounding rather more like starry-eyed Frankie Addams, age 12, in Carson  McCullers’ “The Member of the Wedding,” than a woman/wife/mother now  somewhat past age 12.
Her name is Sarah Ford. Much of her life  has been spent in the dance. Capital D — the Dance. Today, with “Georgia  & Me,” Sarah Ford hazards the theater.
Georgia O’Keeffe!  What a wonderful, salty, sandy, all-American name! A man’s name, a  cowboy’s name, but in fact this Georgia was very much a woman, and not  just that but a warrior woman, a pattern-smasher, up against the closed  male world of serious painters. And not only that, but a serious artist  whose work, to some eyes, including my own, dwells in part with quiet  defiance on orchid-like, vagina-like floral close-ups, many years before  vagina-proud Judy Chicago and Eve Ensler were among us.
Artist  O’Keeffe (1887-1986) scoffed at such a reading of those canvases, if, in  later age, she said anything about such goings-on at all, and Ms.  Ford’s duo-logue skirts around the subject — as did O’Keeffe herself in  the course of an interview with this journalist during a late 1970’s  Whitney Museum retrospective of her life’s work.
What I found was  a small, terse, tough, gloomy, crusty old lady still fighting her wars  against the male race and not suffering fools (like me) gladly.
Somebody  else who viewed that exhibition, though not at that particular moment,  was a woman named — you guessed it — Sarah Ford. It hit her between the  eyes, changed her life.
“I’d been a dancer all my life,” says the  tall, skinny, redheaded Juilliard alumna. “I’ve danced with José Limón  and Anna Sokolow. I’ve been an adjunct professor of dance at Pace  University. I got married and had two children in that time.”
“I  was born and brought up in Abilene, Texas. Georgia, though born a farm  girl in Wisconsin, at an early age moved down to Amarillo and then  Canyon, Texas. Wow!”
And another “Wow!” when, at the Whitney, “I  saw how beautiful her work was. I did all sorts of research, there at  the Whitney and at the Met. Read books about her, went to Santa Fe  [where O’Keeffe spent the best part and last half of her life]. I had  all this information in books and on paper, and didn’t know what to do  with it.”
“So there I was, raising my children and getting  divorced, and three years ago getting remarried and moving to Carlisle,  Massachusetts, in the woods — Thoreau country, transcendental country —  and from time to time I’d look in that box.
“I’m a member of the  Boston theater community, in which capacity about a year and a half ago I  saw a one-woman piece called ‘Truth Values,’ and suddenly realized: I  want to do what she does.”
And Ford started writing. When she had  something to show by way of a script, she sent it to the Midtown  International Theatre Festival — and here we are.
Georgia  O’Keeffe was teaching school in Texas around the time a man named Alfred  Stieglitz (1864-1946) was becoming world-famous, first in his own right  as a photographer and then for his gallery “291” on Fifth Avenue.
O’Keeffe  had a friend in New York named Anita Pulitzer. It was to Anita that she  sent some drawings along with a note: “Don’t show these to anybody, but  what do you think?”
Anita Pulitzer showed them to Alfred  Stieglitz, who with excitement immediately said — or subsequently said  he’d said — “These are the work of a woman!” And put them on the walls  of his gallery.
The great worldwide flu epidemic of 1918 hit  O’Keeffe, nearly killed her. Would have killed her if Alfred Stieglitz  hadn’t brought her up to New York City, put her in a small walk-up  apartment in the East 50s, fed her, started taking photographs of her,  fell in love with her.
O’Keeffe, whose mother had never told her  she was pretty, always thought of herself as a round-face, a potato face  — until she looked at those photographs of herself. “He’s given me  angles!” she’d exclaimed, and said “Yes” when Alfred demanded that she  marry him. Divorced his existing wife in the process.
All this is  in “Georgia & Me,” along with the twice-spoken line, once from  Georgia’s lips, once from Sarah’s: “I was scared all the time, but I  never let that stop me.”
                        
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