Marlo Thomas – The Culture Mom http://www.theculturemom.com Adventures of a culture & travel enthusiast Sun, 08 May 2016 15:03:09 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.5.2 /wp-content/uploads/2015/10/icon.jpg Marlo Thomas – The Culture Mom http://www.theculturemom.com 32 32 Six Degrees of St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital /degrees-st-jude-childrens-research-hospital/ /degrees-st-jude-childrens-research-hospital/#respond Sat, 28 Apr 2012 15:12:10 +0000 /?p=3620 Sculpture of Danny Thomas, the founder of St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital Ahh, the power of social media/social good.  If you haven’t figured out how important it is, and how important the relationships you make online are, you will like this story. My relationship with St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital all started with a simple […]

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St. Jude Children's Hospital
Sculpture of Danny Thomas, the founder of St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital

Ahh, the power of social media/social good.  If you haven’t figured out how important it is, and how important the relationships you make online are, you will like this story.

My relationship with St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital all started with a simple blogger event at Build a Bear in NYC last year. I wrote about an event that inspired me to no end nearly a year ago today. The occasion was for St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital’s  launch of its  Cause for Celebration program.  I took my son out of school and we went to meet the children who were getting treatment at the hospital.  The joy of going to an event like that which had the sole aim to do good, to make a difference, impacted both me and my son.  It was there that I interviewed Marlo Thomas, the daughter of founder, Danny Thomas. And that was the beginning of my relationship with St. Jude.  It all started here on this blog but it got much bigger than anything I ever hoped it to be.  It was literally six degrees.

Fast forward a few months later and during a company meeting, my CEO expressed his desire to work with St. Jude on their annual Thanks and Giving campaign.  I reached out to the organization via Marlo Thomas herself (she is just as amazing in real life as she is on TV, on stage and in film), and within days I had a meeting with the hospital.  The campaign I spearheaded for my company, Ruckus Media Group, was one of the most satisfying marketing campaigns of my career.  We raised and donated a significant amount of money to help the children of St. Jude and our social media campaign helped make some noise, too.  I knew I was a part of something very special but I really didn’t know how special until this week.

I was part of the  St. Jude Partner Summit in Memphis, a meeting for all the partners of the Thanks and Giving campaign, including Target, Gymboree, Domino’s Pizza and other amazing companies.  We spent 24 hours hearing many stories about the dedication and passion that both the team that works at the hospital, as well as the children who undergo treatment there.  We heard from mothers of children who survived the gloomiest periods of their lives, from children and teenagers who are in remission and were saved by the team at St. Jude, from young adults who went into the hospital as children and are now successful and have children of their own.  One survivor, a beautiful young man, lost his right arm during his battle with cancer as a baby and is resilient as ever.  We heard from a member of the medical staff talk about the medical breakthroughs and how many children have been saved over the last 50 years.  We talked about the power of social good and using social media to promote our efforts.  It was an invaluable experience.

During the first night of our visit, we went to the Target House, where patients are assigned to live if they have to undergo treatment for 90 days or more. Upon entrance, we came into a room  with the following words engraved on the wall:

JOY

COURAGE

SMILE

INSPIRE

LIFE

LOVE

BELIEVE

Those words stayed with me as a I toured the facility and saw one of the apartments given to a family during their time here, the music room (donated by musician Amy Grant), playrooms, family rooms, party rooms and a beautiful playground donated by Hasbro (one of Ruckus Media’s partners).  Our group partied with the patients.  We played horse shoes, did arts and crafts, played ball and led face painting.  I was amazed by the calm, relaxed atmosphere both on my tour and at the party.  The families were behaving like any normal family.  Even though many of the kids were wearing masks to keep germs away and they had lost their hair from chemo treatments, they played happily and acted like they had no cares in the world.  That’s what St. Jude is like.  Optimistic and full of hope.

Well, if you can imagine how impactful that was, imagine the tour of the hospital.  We all broke into tours and were able to see firsthand where the money we helped raise is going and who we are all affecting.  It really puts social good in a new light when you can see up close and powerful the results of your company’s hard work.  We were not allowed to take photographs of the children and I really kept my camera and phone in my pocket to take it all in.  I didn’t have any interaction with the children during this time, but I had one experience that left a mark on my mind.

There was an adorable little girl playing in a waiting room, quite diligently making a meal for herself in a pretend kitchen.  I looked at her mother who had a handful of balloons attached to her stroller.  She looked at me, with big, hopeful eyes, and said, “We’re celebrating her last round of chemo today!  We couldn’t be happier.”

Imagine going through that as a mother.  The torture of not knowing whether your child will survive an illness and getting to the last phase.  The image of the sense of relief on her face will stay with me forever.

What I did take pictures of and what was very telling about a child’s experience at the hospital was the Teen Art show on the first floor.  These pictures spoke volumes about the pain and suffering that is endured at the hospital, though you see very happy children walking around the hospital.  Check this one out and read the words carefully:

St. Jude Children's Hospital

St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital is the nation’s leading research and treatment center for children with cancer and other catastrophic diseases.  They cover all costs for treatment, travel, food and lodging for patients and one family member.  St. Jude freely shares its discoveries with the medical community worldwide. They have the largest protocol-based pediatric brain tumor research program in the country and has one of the largest pediatric sickle cell disease programs in the country.  St. Jude discovered a way to lessen side effects, making radiation treatment more effective for virtually all cancers.

To learn more about St. Jude and how you can help make a difference, go here.

Disclosure: My trip to St. Jude was covered by my company but all opinions and thoughts expressed here my own.

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]]> /degrees-st-jude-childrens-research-hospital/feed/ 0 Three Writers for the Price of One with Relatively Speaking on Broadway /writers-price-speaking-broadway/ /writers-price-speaking-broadway/#respond Thu, 19 Jan 2012 14:53:38 +0000 /?p=3270  I was so happy to finally see Relatively Speaking: 3 One-Act Comedies last night at the Brooks Atkins Theatre, just a few weeks before it is set to close.  When I heard the creative talent behind this play, my mouth began to water and I had to see it.  The show features one-act comedies by Ethan Coen, Elaine May and Woody […]

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 I was so happy to finally see Relatively Speaking: 3 One-Act Comedies last night at the Brooks Atkins Theatre, just a few weeks before it is set to close.  When I heard the creative talent behind this play, my mouth began to water and I had to see it.  The show features one-act comedies by Ethan Coen, Elaine May and Woody Allen.  Directed by John Turturro, the cast includes Caroline Aaron, Max Casella, Bill Army, Lisa Emery, Ari Graynor, Steve Guttenberg, Danny Hoch, Julie Kavner, Allen Lewis Rickman, Grant Shaud, Marlo Thomas, Katherine Borowitz, Jason Kravits, Richard Libertini, Mark Linn-Baker and Patricia O’Connell.  Seeing all of them on stage made my heart sing and filled me up with memories of my youth.  How could it not?  Marlo Thomas was on “That Girl” and the creator of my favorite record in the 1970s, “Free to Be You and and Me”; Grant Shaud was in “Murphy Brown” for 8 seasons; Mark Linn-Baker was on “Perfect Strangers”; Julie Kavner was on “Rhoda” and in 7 of my favorite Woody Allen films; Max Casella played Doogie Howser, M.D’s best friend and Steve Guttenberg of “Three Men and a Baby and just about every film made in the 1980s when I was growing up.

But it was the combination of writers that intrigued me and I was curious how their works would unfold and come together. Woody Allen, Elaine May and Ethan Coen are 3 brilliant writers and each is a master of dysfunctional relationships.  Each mini play explores a different type of problem that only occur in families.  The cast of Talking Cure, in which Ethan Coen “uncovers the sort of insanity that can come only from family”.  It’s about an inmate in a mental institution who is trying to uncover his problem by talking to a doctor.  The conversation goes on and on and he basically tells the therapist that “your parents f–k you up!” At the end of the act, we learn that his family led to his demise, or so he thinks.  As they argue in a flashback from the past, his mom yells at his dad, “Hitler is your answer to every argument!”  While definitely interesting, particularly with the focus on Hitler at the end, the following two acts are definitely funnier, and I’m praying that my childhood doesn’t f-k me up.  Maybe it hit to close to home.

The cast of George is Dead, in which Elaine May “explores the hilarity of death,” comprises Lisa Emery, Allen Lewis Rickman, Patricia O’Connell, Grant Shaud and Marlo Thomas.  Marlo Thomas plays a woman who deals with her husband’s death at the start of the act and wanders into her former nanny’s daughter’s apartment to start the grieving process.  She is clearly a woman who has been waiting for her husband to die: “I thought I would miss him.  he was so boring!”  She starts to talk about her potential new husband and declares herself as “free”, but as the play progresses and chaos ensues between her friend and husband leading to the actual funeral, she begins to grieve.  Marlo Thomas is superb in this role.  She and May have worked together before, and I am sure that May must have written this role with Thomas in mind.

The cast of Honeymoon Motel, in which Woody Allen “invites you to the sort of wedding day you won’t forget,” features Caroline Aaron, Bill Army, Mark Linn-Baker, Ari Graynor, Steve Guttenberg, Julie Kavner, Jason Kravits, Richard Libertini and Grant Shaud.  It’s comedy that is reminiscent of Noel Coward.  The act starts out in a tacky motel room with a couple direct from their wedding, clearly in a state of bliss.  With a knock on the door, we learn that the “groom” is actually the real groom’s father who stole the young bride.  The rest of the play is 30 minutes of chaos and I loved seeing so many wonderful actors on stage.  And, of course, Woody Allen never lets me down.  His script is full of funny one-liners and jokes that led to one laugh after another.

Meet the stars of the show here:

Visit www.relativelyspeakingbroadway.com for more information on performances and tickets.

Disclosure: I paid for my own tickets to this show.

 

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