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Batting for Godot: the play about Beckett and Pinter teaming up for a game of cricket | Theater

yesSamuel Beckett and Harold Pinter had a lot in common. Both changed the way plays are written and perceived, both were Nobel prize winners and both had a passion for cricket. That last link is a crucial factor in a new play by Shomit Dutta, Stumped, which will be streamed live from Lord’s.

Produced by the Original Theater Company, it will star Stephen Tompkinson as Beckett and Andrew Lancel as Pinter, and is described by Dutta as “a caprice, a shared dream”. Imagine Waiting for Godot crossed with The Dumb Waiter in a cricketing context and you get the general idea.

Dutta is a multifaceted figure who has written an original play about the Trojan war and translated Greek drama, he teaches classics at a London school and is a former captain of the cricket team, the Gaieties, that was Pinter’s pride and joy. All the same, I wonder what prompted him to make a play out of two of the most iconic figures in modern drama.

“The idea originally came from a fellow Gaieties member, Inigo Thomas, who suggested I write a sketch to coincide with a Beckett festival in Enniskillen. But during lockdown in 2020 I decided to turn the sketch into a full-length play, partly inspired by Aristophanes’ The Frogs. In that play, Aristophanes brings to life two of his favorite playwrights, Aeschylus and Euripides, but where he takes the underworld as his setting of him, I chose a more neutral space. Pinter’s plays are largely set indoors and Beckett’s in a dystopian landscape so an idyllic cricket ground, where both men are initially waiting to bat, seemed like a nice compromise.”

The wicket-taker … Harold Pinter, dressed in black, with his beloved Gaieties cricket team;  Shomit Dutta is seated front left.
The wicket-taker … Harold Pinter, dressed in black, with his beloved Gaieties cricket team; Shomit Dutta is seated front left. Photographer: Gavin Watson

While Beckett and Pinter were friends, I suggest they were very different in temperament and technique. Beckett’s plays are bleaker, more abstract, ultimately more image-based than Pinter’s. “I wouldn’t disagree,” says Dutta. “Where Pinter’s characters are pugilistic, Beckett’s often seem nostalgic. Pinter’s characters contest the space between them whereas Beckett’s speak more in isolation – think of Lucky in Godot or the Mouth in Not I – and are often uttering into a void. Stalemate seems a word that applies to Beckett whereas with Pinter there is the possibility of escape. As soon as I say that, I think of exceptions: look at the end of No Man’s Land, one of my favorite plays, where the characters seem frozen in time. But I hope my play will bring out the crucial distinctions between the two writers.”

Dutta had the advantage of knowing Pinter through the Gaieties, for whom the dramatist was at various times player, match-manager and chairman. What are his memories of the writer? “The first non-cricketing remark I made to Harold was that, since he was wearing a winter coat in May, he looked a bit like Davies in The Caretaker. I don’t think he took too kindly to that. But, when it came to the Gaieties, Harold tried to instill a bloody-mindedness and make it clear how deeply he felt about the club, about cricket and about winning. At the same time, he wasn’t a punisher and the Gaieties have always been characterized by a total independence of thought.”

'Cricket and drama both work through metaphor' … Stephen Tompkinson as Samuel Beckett and Andrew Lancel as Harold Pinter in Stumped.
‘Cricket and drama both work through metaphor’ … Stephen Tompkinson as Samuel Beckett and Andrew Lancel as Harold Pinter in Stumped. Photographer: Michael Wharley

What is fascinating is the umbilical link between theater and cricket. Why is it that not just Beckett and Pinter but legions of dramatists and actors have a passion for the game? “I suppose,” says Dutta, “that cricket and drama both work through metaphor. Drama is not mimetic like the 19th-century novel and cricket similarly gives you something that is and is not reality. The beginning of an innings is a birth and the end of one – as I know to my cost as a batsman – is very much like a death. The weather in cricket is a determining factor and is rather like those mysterious forces you find in Greek tragedy. A batsman or a bowler also has to be equally capable of defense or attack like a character in a play – especially in Pinter where words can be a shifting source of evasion or aggression.”

While Dutta is driven by a love for cricket and the classics – and he rejoices in the fact that state-school students are being encouraged to do Latin GCSEs – he is also working on a number of original plays. “I’ve got a project about a meeting between Walt Whitman and Oscar Wilde that took place during Wilde’s first US tour. I’m also co-writing something about the meeting of two magicians, Jasper Maskelyne and a German with the stage name Kalanag, whose talents for deception were deployed by their respective armies in the second world war.” When I point out that he seems preoccupied by oppositional males Dutta counters that he has already written a play about Helen of Troy and is working on a Jacobean-style drama about the painter Artemisia Gentileschi.

But now, his focus is on Beckett and Pinter and I wonder what he hopes Stumped will achieve. “There are,” he says, “two potential audiences: cricket-lovers and those whose prime interest is in theatre. What they will get is a conflict between two characters who are playwrights, in a situation that can shift quickly from attack to defense. I see Beckett as a man with a foil and Pinter as a man with a saber.”

That takes me back to The Frogs where there is a contest to decide whether Aeschylus or Euripides is the weightier playwright. It will be fascinating to see whether Dutta’s Aristophanic play sparks a similar debate about two indisputable titans of modern drama.

Stumped is streamed live from Lord’s on 10 September and is available on demand from 27 September.

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Sports

AFL: Pre-season banter made Collingwood’s Isaac Quaynor and Jack Ginnivan best mates

It’s the Collingwood bromance built on banter.

Jack Ginnivan first registered on Isaac Quaynor’s radar when his agent, John Meesen, asked him two years ago to look out for a “cheeky” new draftee and fellow Kapital Sports Group client.

But it wasn’t until this past summer when Ginnivan’s bravado and spunk caught Quaynor’s attention and he began gravitating to him.

Quaynor was mic’d up one pre-season session and, as a small defender, found himself regularly alongside the dangerous goalsneak.

“I was running past him just trying to razz him up a little bit, and he bit back,” he said of Ginnivan.

“We played on each other in a lot of the match simulation stuff towards the end of pre-season and it was always good fun.

“The more games you play, the more comfortable you feel, so when he wasn’t playing AFL football, he was kind of in his shell a little bit, then as his confidence grew he started to express himself in his own unique way.

“He’s a very confident fella out on the field, he’s very talented, he does some freaky things and he talks a lot of crap when he’s out there – and I love that.”

They have become best mates, with Quaynor watching in awe as the 19-year-old transformed into a “national sensation.”

The pair make up half of the Collingwood representation in the 40-man AFL Players’ Association 22 Under 22 squad, alongside Nathan Murphy and Rising Star favorite Nick Daicos.

“The best part is there are four of us this year and there’s a few other boys who could have been in the mix if they’d played a few more games,” Quaynor said.

“It’s an exciting young group we’ve got at the moment.”

But it hasn’t been all smooth sailing for Quaynor and Ginnivan, who were caught up in a TikTok controversy in June after taking part in a social media trend where they rated women on their features and looks.

“You need to learn from the mistakes you make, and I definitely did,” he said.

“As soon as it came to the media and ‘Wrighty’ (football boss Graham Wright) and things like that; I was automatically remorseful and wanted to get that apology video out to try and nip it in the bud.

“It was pretty full-on but sometimes you’ve got to cop a whack to learn some things.”

Quaynor is convinced Collingwood can win this year’s premiership after a barnstorming run of 11 consecutive victories, including six straight by single-digit margins and eight overall.

The extraordinary run comes a year after the Pies finished second-last and sacked coach Nathan Buckley before hiring Craig McRae, who won his players over with a pre-season pledge to be “a man of his word”.

“It’s been a bit of a whirlwind and a great year to date,” Quaynor said.

“I think the way ‘Fly’ (McRae) and the rest of the coaching staff have been able to direct the ship and create this family, winning environment and culture so quickly is pretty special.

“Us young boys are really buying into that and kind of drive that, which really helps as well.”

Voting runs from August 10 to 17 at 22under22.com.au, with the final team announced on August 23 on the AFL’s social media channels

AFLPA 22UNDER22 SQUAD

DEFENDERS

Keidean Coleman (Bris), Isaac Quaynor (Coll), Nathan Murphy (Coll), Nick Daicos (Coll), Hayden Young (Frem), Jordan Clark (Frem), Sam De Koning (Geel), Harrison Petty (Melb), Bailey Scott (NM), Nick Blakey (Syd), Tom McCartin (Syd)

MIDFIELDERS

Sam Berry (Adel), Adam Cerra (Carl), Sam Walsh (Carl), Andrew Brayshaw (Frem), Caleb Serong (Frem), Matt Rowell (GC), Noah Anderson (GC), Tom Green (GWS), Jai Newcombe (Haw), James Jordon (Melb), Connor Rozee (PA), Zak Butters (PA), Chad Warner (Syd), James Rowbottom (Syd), Justin McInerney (Syd), Bailey Smith (WB)

FORWARDS

Darcy Fogarty (Adel), Cameron Rayner (Bris), Jack Ginnivan (Coll), Nic Martin (Ess), Michael Frederick (Fre), Izak Rankine (GC), Kysaiah Pickett (Melb), Max King (StK), Errol Gulden (Syd), Aaron Naughton (WB), Cody Weightman (WB)

RUCKS

Luke Jackson (Melb), Noah Balta (Rich)

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US

Mother mourns loss of son in CTA Red Line shooting

CHICAGO — “He used to always tell me that he might get into it with somebody on the train or something like that,” said the mother of the latest murder victim on the CTA Red Line.

“And I would always tell him, be safe.”

That’s what Kina Moon said about her son, 29-year-old Diunte Moon, who was riding the Red Line home early Saturday morning after a shift working extra hours as a security guard at Millennium Park.

Moon was “trying to pay bills and support his [7-year-old] daughter” by working more often at his job, according to his mother.

At around 2 am near the 79th Street station, two individuals approached Moon on the train and shot him several times in the chest and abdomen.

Moon was taken to the University of Chicago Medical Center shortly thereafter, where he was pronounced dead.

Police released this video of the two suspects they’re looking to identify in his murder.

As Moon talked to WGN News about her loss—according to police—another shooting happened just before 4:30 pm Monday near the same Red Line stop.

Police said two males pulled handguns on one another outside of the 79th Street station and opened fire on each other. One of the males, a 17-year-old, was hit in the upper body and taken to the University of Chicago Medical Center in critical condition.

In a press conference that happened before the second shooting, Chicago Police Superintendent David Brown announced, in addition to the CTA’s 250 unarmed guards, the authority is also bringing back K9 units.

Brown did not elaborate on how many Chicago police officers were added to patrol the CTA, but the superintendent said that police are considering reassigning administrative officers on desk duty to work the trains.

Police currently do not have anyone in custody in connection to either of the two Red Line shootings. Area Two detectives continue to investigate.

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Entertainment

‘Alex Turner is the greatest of his generation’: Example’s honest playlist | Example

The first song I remember hearing
I had to call my mum, and she says the first song she remembers me reacting and moving to was The Tears of a Clown by Smokey Robinson.

The first single I bought
A seven-inch single of Push It by Salt-N-Pepa, aged five or six, from a car boot sale in Shepherd’s Bush, that came with a foldout poster. It’s regarded as a classic rap, but it’s actually a dance song – there are only two or three little raps and the rest is just instrumental. It’s all about the bassline and the sample.

The song I do at karaoke
Regulate by Warren G and Nate Dogg, because I can do the voices really easily. Nate Dogg sings a bit like me, and Warren G is a bit more raspy.

The song I inexplicably know every lyric to
I was a massive fan of the Wu-Tang Clan at secondary school. There was this huge buzz around their second album, Wu-Tang Forever. I was a little geek, and rubbish at sport, so I just listened to Triumph, which has every member rapping back to back, so I could perform it in the playground.

The best song to play at a party
Millionaire by Kelis ft André 3000 gets everyone on the dancefloor. I’ve seen it at weddings; I’ve seen it in clubs. When my DJ sticks it on before I come on, everyone goes crazy.

The song I streamed last
I’ve been aware of Jack Harlow for about 10 years but his new album, Come Home the Kids Miss You, is amazing. First Class is probably the weakest rap performance on the album, but the production is so incredible, you can just listen to it on repeat.

The song I can no longer listen to
My four-year-old has just discovered Axel F by Crazy Frog and won’t stop playing it. I was also the biggest Michael Jackson fan, but I also found it hard to listen to him since the Leaving Neverland documentary. Pretty Young Thing was probably my favorite song of all the time, but now I can’t listen to it, and that makes me quite sad.

The best song to have sex to
Live from Joshua Tree by Australian band Rüfüs Du Sol is about an hour long – perfect to have a long sex session to.

The song I wish I had written
A lot of the songs I wish I’d written are all by Arctic Monkeys. You can tell Alex Turner is a fan of rap because he sings with the same playful percussive wordplay as rappers do. The pop culture references and the way he talks about everyday life on Fluorescent Adolescent is genius. He’s the greatest of his generation of him.

The song that changed my life
My song Kickstarts was a real gamechanger. It meant I could pay off my debts, play in other countries, and my gig fees probably went up tenfold, even though it only got to No 3 because it came out during the 2010 World Cup. Wherever I perform it, people know it.

The song that gets me up in the morning
The new Swedish House Mafia album, Paradise Again, didn’t really create the storm it was meant to. But if I was a heavyweight boxer, It Gets Better – somewhere between Justice and Chemical Brothers – would be my ring walk song.

The song I want played at my funeral
One of my favorite films is Casino. It ends with a montage of Sharon Stone dying from an overdose and Joe Pesci getting baseball-batted to death, to the sound of House of the Rising Sun by the Animals. It makes you think of the good times and the bad.

Example’s new album We May Grow Old But We Never Grow Up is out now.

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Sports

NSW Waratahs sign Nemani Nadolo for 2023 season

The Waratahs have added some punch to their line-up for the 2023 Super Rugby Pacific season.

New South Wales has signed Fijian wrecking ball Nemani Nadolo to a one year deal, 12 years after the club cut him loose.

Nadolo is a Fijian Test superstar who has scored 22 tries in 32 caps for his country.

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He stands 195cm tall and weighs just shy of 140 kilograms, and his highlight reels feature plenty of barnstorming runs over the top of opposition wingers.

He made his Test debut for Fiji in 2010, when now Waratahs coach Darren Coleman was an assistant for the Pacific nation.

Nadolo was Super Rugby’s equal-leading try-scorer with the Crusaders in 2014, and has most recently been playing with Leicester in England’s Premiership.

Watch every match of the Rugby Championship on the home of rugby, Stan Sport. Continue this weekend with South Africa vs All Blacks (Sunday 12.30am AEST) and Argentina vs Wallabies (Sunday 4.45am AEST). All matches streaming ad-free, live and on demand

“Who would’ve thought after leaving these doors 12 years ago I’d get another opportunity to be part of the club again,” Nadolo said.

“I’m grateful to Darren and the board for having faith in me and giving me another opportunity.”

The coach is glad to have the hulking Fijian on board.

NEW PODCAST! Sean Maloney and Andrew Mehrtens couldn’t be happier that the Rugby Championship is underway with a win for the Wallabies in Argentina and a brutal battle in South Africa for the All Blacks

“We’ve all seen what Nemani has done in world rugby in the last 10 years and it’s incredibly exciting to have him in a sky blue jersey,” Coleman said.

“One of the things we identified from our season review was the need to add some size and power to our roster, and Nemani brings a lot of size and physicality which will add an extra dimension to our team.

“He’s motivated to get back to Sydney have another crack at Super Rugby and push his claims to get in the Fijian Test team for their 2023 Rugby World Cup campaign.”

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US

Albuquerque Welcomed Muslims. Then Four of Them Were Killed.

Indeed, the killings have jolted an increasingly diverse city, where immigration, largely from Mexico and other Latin American countries, is a major source of population growth and integral to the city’s history. Immigrants from the Middle East, including Muslims and Christians from Lebanon and Syria, put down stakes in Albuquerque and other parts of New Mexico in the late 19th century.

The city gradually saw a new wave of Muslim immigrants in recent decades, with many coming to study at the University of New Mexico. A group of Muslim students came together in the mid-1980s to form the Islamic Center of New Mexico, which the three most recent victims attended.

Many in the city’s Muslim community come from Pakistan and Afghanistan, while others are from countries including India, Turkey, Syria, Iraq and Sri Lanka. During the Trump administration, when concerns grew over bigotry directed against Muslims, officials passed a bill affirming Albuquerque’s status as an “immigrant friendly” city. It restricted federal immigration agents from entering city-operated facilities and city employees from collecting immigration status information.

At least 300 Afghan refugees have arrived in Albuquerque over the past year, bolstering a growing community reflected today by at least eight different places of worship for Muslims. Albuquerque strengthened outreach efforts through translators speaking Arabic, Dari, Farsi, Urdu and Pashto — languages ​​that officials have prioritized in recent days when sharing information about the killings.

Although Muslims in the United States faced violence and discrimination after Sept. 11 and during Donald J. Trump’s presidential campaign, the apparent serial nature of the attacks in Albuquerque — and the stubborn mystery of who is responsible — is uniquely disconcerting, said Sumayyah Waheed, senior policy counsel at Muslim Advocates, a civil rights group.

“I can’t think of any incident like this,” she said.

Ms. Waheed said it was concerning that the police in Albuquerque had apparently made a possible connection between the attacks only after three Muslim men were killed.

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Entertainment

Inside The Block Scotty Cam’s incredible 154-year-old country home renovation

Inside Scotty Cam’s stunning 154-year-old country home makeover as he renovates alongside the contestants on The Block

Move over, Blockheads. Scotty Cam has stepped up to the challenge of renovating a home all on his own.

In a surprise twist in the 18th Season of The Block, the host has taken on the combined role of leading the show while also being given his own country retreat to build.

The home, according to Nine, is a ‘weatherboard house’ which was constructed in 1866 by a Scottish immigrant named Joseph McGeorge.

Scotty Cam, 59, has taken on the combined role of hosting The Block while also being given his own country retreat to renew

Scotty Cam, 59, has taken on the combined role of hosting The Block while also being given his own country retreat to renew

Scotty, 59, was given a head start over the rest of the contestants, beginning three months earlier since the homestead had been desolate for more than 25 years and was left ‘falling to bits’.

Scotty will continue renovating the property at the same time the Blockheads are renovating their houses each week.

Viewers will also get a chance to see Scotty’s own room reveals.

His head start has lead the builder to polish off three rooms so far, including a bedroom, bathroom and kitchenette.

The property appears to currently be covered in scaffolding – with the exterior walls, roof and verandah completely ripped apart and ready to be refurbished.

Scotty was given a head start over the rest of the contestants, beginning three months earlier since the homestead had been desolate for more than 25 years and was left 'falling to bits'

Scotty was given a head start over the rest of the contestants, beginning three months earlier since the homestead had been desolate for more than 25 years and was left ‘falling to bits’

The property appears to currently be covered in scaffolding - with the exterior walls, roof and verandah completely ripped apart and ready to be refurbished

The property appears to currently be covered in scaffolding – with the exterior walls, roof and verandah completely ripped apart and ready to be refurbished

As for the bedroom, Scotty transformed the sleeping space from drab to fab, giving the room a modern country vibe with navy blue painted paneling on the walls and a rattan-paneled bed frame.

Scotty continued the navy theme into the bathroom, where he drastically transformed a once filth-ridden area into a clean and spacious once, featuring beautiful white splashback tiles and a free-standing bathtub.

The bathroom has been completely modernized while also keeping to the theme of a heritage homestead.

Scotty transformed the bedroom from drab to fab, giving the room a modern country vibe with navy blue painted paneling on the walls and a rattan-paneled bed frame.

Scotty continued the navy theme into the bathroom, where he drastically transformed a once filth-ridden area into a clean and spacious once

The kitchenette appeared to have needed the most work – with remains of old kitchen utensils still on the tables and a barren oven area, the cooking and eating space required remove the clean-up.

And the renovator did just that, turning the dirt-filled room into a stunning, unrecognizable kitchen.

The cozy space kept the themes of navy in the furniture and decor, while Scotty opted for a beige wall paneling paired with timber floorboards.

The kitchenette appears to be complete with a bar fridge and under-cabinet lighting.

The kitchenette appeared to have needed the most work - with remains of old kitchen utensils still on the tables and a barren oven area, the cooking and eating space required remove the clean-up

The kitchenette appeared to have needed the most work – with remains of old kitchen utensils still on the tables and a barren oven area, the cooking and eating space required remove the clean-up

The cozy space kept the themes of navy in the furniture and decor, while Scotty opted for a beige wall paneling paired with timber floorboards

The cozy space kept the themes of navy in the furniture and decor, while Scotty opted for a beige wall paneling paired with timber floorboards

It was revealed late last year that Scotty would be renovating his own house on the show.

The Block smashed ratings during the season’s premiere on Sunday night, likely due to the controversy over new contestants Elle Ferguson and Joel Patfull quitting after two days.

The engaged couples abrupt exit followed Joel’s mother being hospitalized after a fall.

Series host Scotty Cam lashed out at their ‘excuse’ for leaving and berated their behavior as ‘p**s poor’ and ‘un-Australian’.

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No retirement plans for Eddie Ockenden after Kookaburras beat India at Commonwealth Games

The Australian team, nicknamed the Kookaburras, scored 29 goals through their undefeated pool stage, adding another 10 in the two final appearances.

In a fierce midday sun at the University of Birmingham complex, the Kookaburras blitzed the opening half and put five goals in past the Indian defenders, leaving the number four-ranked team in the world shellshocked and unable to recover, losing 7-0.

Tom Wickham celebrates after scoring Australia's fourth goal.

Tom Wickham celebrates after scoring Australia’s fourth goal. Credit:Getty Images

Blake Govers’ scintillating form in front of goal in this competition continued, scoring his seventh in the opening minutes in a powerful conversion from a penalty corners.

Jacob Anderson (2 goals), Nathan Ephraums (2) and Tim Wickham all joined in to put the result beyond doubt. Flynn Ogilvie scored his first goal of the tournament in the final term.

The talented Indian side was dealt a killer blow when they lost their skipper Manpreet Singh in the second quarter in a heavy clash with Australian skipper Aran Zalewski. Singh left the field with a collarbone injury and the Kookaburras made the most of his absence from him.

Tom Wickham and Nilakanta Sharma compete for the ball.

Tom Wickham and Nilakanta Sharma compete for the ball. Credit:

A large Aussie contingent in the packed stands started singing Waltzing Matilda in the final moments with the result helping to subside the heartbreak of a penalty shootout loss in the Olympic final against Belgium last year.

“It has been incredible,” Ockenden said.

“You won’t find anything else in your life that you can do so passionately. To be able to play hockey for so long and do what I’ve been able to do, I have been very lucky.”

Co-captain Aran Zalewski said the Kookaburras were building a “great dynasty”.

The 31-year-old, who grew up in Margaret River south of Perth, scored three goals in the competition and has been ever-present for the Kookaburras in their biggest tournaments since late 2013.

“We’re really proud of the history we have,” Zalewski said. “Every team that comes is a different team (but) we know we have to come out and perform. We enjoy it and we pride ourselves on performing well here.”

He said Ockenden was “still looking like a spring chicken” in a team where competition for a spot in the starting line-up is fierce in the build-up to next year’s World Cup.

“We can draw on so many experiences he’s had…highs, lows, things that are indifferent. Just having someone that’s so calm under pressure, he is a humble guy and a fell gooda”.

Nursing his arm in a sling, Indian captain Manpreet Singh said Australia’s attacking pressure didn’t allow his team to play their own game.

“This was not the result we wanted. A good fight, a closer result… then we would be happy, but this is not the result we wanted. We could have done something more, we could have created more opportunity, but we didn’t play our best game,” Singh said.

“This is the best hockey in the world, they are one of the best teams in the world. You can’t make mistakes against these kind of teams.”

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Republicans turn on each other amid post-Roe chaos

“This bill is just another bill that regulates abortion, which is baby murder, that it says if you do this, if you fulfill this requirement, you can still murder your baby,” Indiana state Rep. John Jacob said during the debate. “There is still time to turn back to God before it’s too late and repent, and I will still pray for repentance for this chamber.”

The latest Republican infighting on abortion could prove volatile for the party heading into a November election when the political winds are supposed to be at their back. In addition to hammering Democrats on inflation and the economy, many Republicans — especially in state legislatures — are turning on one another. It’s created a grueling situation for governors trying to bridge the divide between more moderate and conservative members of their party while demonstrating to voters they’re willing to act on abortion.

“What Republicans need to be concerned about is: What is their branding going to be? Not just on this — we’ve already seen an erosion in the suburbs on cultural issues that have helped the Democrats,” said former Virginia Rep. Tom Davis, who led the NRCC. “That’s the problem, when people get emboldened… it takes rational discussion off the table. That’s where we are.”

The vitriol has left some Republican legislators reeling, forced to defend their anti-abortion bona fides to constituents and friends.

In South Carolina, a Republican lawmaker promised to “call names in public” if any of his colleagues tried to “water … down” the state’s proposed abortion ban with exceptions.

And in West Virginia, a Republican lawmaker took to the Senate floor to eviscerate his colleagues’ bill to ban almost all abortions because it removed criminal penalties for doctors who perform the procedure and didn’t include strong enough reporting requirements for cases of rape and incest.

“We hear around here a lot that making legislation is like making sausage, and I’m going to tell you this right here is not the kind of sausage that you want to use for your biscuits and gravy,” said West Virginia State Sen. Robert Karnes. “This is a rancid sausage. It’s maggot filled — very little meat in this sausage, a lot of teeth and toenails, maybe. This is not a pro-life bill. This is a pro-abortion bill.”

For some, the whiplash feels absurd. In South Carolina last month, an ad hoc legislative committee briefly debated and then quickly would vote to table an amendment that have established misdemeanor possession penalties for abortion pills — indicating that criminal penalties for pregnant people are a third rail most Republican lawmakers still aren’t willing to touch.

But South Carolina Rep. Micah Caskey, who sits on the committee tasked with drafting a new abortion ban, said Republican lawmakers are increasingly feeling pressure to support more restrictive abortion proposals lest they lose the label “pro-life.”

“I view all of this with frustration and contemplate for the crayon-level discussion of our public discourse on this issue,” Caskey said. “I’m told that a year ago I was a crazy fanatic for supporting a six-week ban, and now the goal post has been moved such that if I don’t support a complete and total ban whatsoever that I’m not pro -life?”

The South Carolina proposal awaits a hearing in the House Judiciary Committee, which Rep. John McCravy, the ad hoc committee’s chair, said could happen next week. West Virginia lawmakers have not scheduled a conference committee to reconcile the different versions of the anti-abortion bill that passed the House and Senate last month.

Republicans at the federal level are similarly split on how forcefully to address the issue.

Immediately after the Supreme Court’s decision, former Vice President Mike Pence called for Congress to pass a national abortion ban. But the National Republican Senatorial Committee has urged candidates to tread lightly and stressed that it’s an issue now in the hands of state and local officials — a position that’s drawing the ire of anti-abortion advocacy groups.

“It’s disingenuous to say that you oppose all federal involvement in abortion because it’s already a federal issue,” argued Kristi Hamrick, spokesperson for Students for Life, which is lobbying lawmakers for a national abortion ban starting at six weeks of pregnancy. “Look at the Title X program, which gives funding to Planned Parenthood. Look at our foreign aid.”

Some Republicans fear a political backlash if they outlaw abortions — even with exceptions — particularly after Kansas voters last Tuesday overwhelmingly rejected a constitutional amendment that would have allowed their Legislature to ban the procedure. At the same time, they face pressure from an ascendant, hard-line anti-abortion advocacy community that has vowed not to let political leaders blink in a post-gnaws world.

“State and local politics have always been important for people to be engaged in, but some of them just forgot that fact,” Danielle Underwood, a leader of the Kansas amendment campaign and the group Kansans for Life, told POLITICO ahead of the vote.

Even states where trigger bans made abortion illegal shortly after the Supreme Court’s ruling have not been able to sidestep the debate. In South Dakota, Republican Gov. Kristi Noem promised the day gnaws was overturned to call a special session to strengthen the state’s abortion ban — which some believe has loopholes leading to “covert abortions” — before saying it wasn’t necessary because the state is already “the most pro-life state in the nation.”

On Monday, Nebraska Gov. Pete Ricketts said he wouldn’t call a special session because Republicans don’t have the votes they need to pass a 12-week abortion ban, a reality he called “deeply saddening.”

Democrats, meanwhile, have largely unified around protecting access to the procedure and trying to paint Republicans as enemies of women’s rights. But there are divisions on the left as well.

Progressives want more aggressive action from the Biden administration — such as leasing federal buildings or land in red states to abortion providers, allowing people to bring abortion pills from Mexico and Canada, and directing the VA to provide abortions to all veterans and their dependents. But moderates, including some who say they’re personally opposed to abortion, are calling for simply restoring Roe.

The tension is on display in the Senate, where bipartisan bill led by Sens. Tim Kain (D-Va.) and susan collins (R-Maine) to encode gnaws has come under fire from progressives and abortion-rights groups who fear it would still allow states to enact too many restrictions.

But with no path to pass that or any other abortion-rights bill, Democrats’ internal split has lower stakes than that of their GOP counterparts, some of whom are in special sessions to debate abortion laws and know their actions are coming under greater scrutiny.

“It’s one thing to do it in practice. It’s another thing to do it for real. For all the energy and excitement and emotional expenditures around the heartbeat bill, there is absolutely a more concrete sense that what we do here is going to go into effect and be the law of the land in a way unlike the heartbeat bill,” Caskey said , referencing the six-week ban he supported last year.

So far, some of the most intense debates have focused around whether to permit abortions in cases of rape and incest. Only five of the 13 states — Idaho, Mississippi, North Dakota, Utah and Wyoming — with trigger bans on the books when gnaws was overturned included rape or incest exceptions, highlighting how the Republican Party has moved away from supporting such exceptions.

During a Senate committee hearing on the Indiana bill, Indiana Right to Life General Counsel Courtney Turner Milbank lambasted the legislation as a “wolf in sheep’s clothing,” in part because of its rape and incest exceptions, and said it “utterly fails to limit abortions to even the exceptions that it purports to find acceptable.” In the end, the organization said it couldn’t fully endorse the legislation but lauded the House for “doing all they could to limit [the bill’s] exceptions.”

While the data shows these exemptions are rarely used and challenging to obtain, some anti-abortion lawmakers believe they can become loopholes unless there are stringent requirements to report the crime to law enforcement before the abortion. Others oppose such exceptions outright.

But those lawmakers are being met by colleagues who worry that without laws that make exceptions for rape and incest, voters, even those who nominally oppose abortion, will be cool to the party’s outreach — especially after the high-profile case of a 10-year -Old Ohio rape victim who had to travel from Ohio to Indiana earlier this summer for an abortion.

“I don’t think people are taking into consideration how their constituents feel about this bill,” said Indiana State Sen. Vaneta Becker, a Republican, who voted against the abortion ban. “I think it’s going to be an ongoing challenge for Republicans.”

Almost half of Indiana House Republicans joined Democrats to reject an amendment that would have removed rape and incest exceptions.

These debates are welcome, said Mallory Carroll, a leader with SBA Pro-Life America, who insists her movement is in a better place now, with anti-abortion lawmakers having heated debates on laws that can take effect now that gnaws is gone, than it was when legislatures were churning out bills everyone knew would be blocked in federal court.

“This is the messiness of democracy. This is the type of political discourse Americans have been denied under gnaws,” Carroll said. “Better this messy democracy than judicial overlords making decisions that take half a century to undo.”

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Entertainment

Issey Miyake dies of cancer aged 84

Tokyo: Japanese designer Issey Miyake, famous for his pleated style of clothing that never wrinkles and who produced the signature black turtleneck of friend and Apple founder Steve Jobs, has died, media said on Tuesday. He was 84.

Miyake, whose name became a byword for Japan’s economic and fashion prowess in the 1980s, died on August 5 of liver cancer, Kyodo news agency said. No further details were immediately available.

Japanese designer Issey Miyake at the 'Fondation Cartier pour l'art contemporain' 30th anniversary celebration in Paris, France, 2014.

Japanese designer Issey Miyake at the ‘Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain’ 30th anniversary celebration in Paris, France, 2014.Credit:Getty Images

Known for his practicality, Miyake is said to have wanted to become either a dancer or an athlete before reading his sister’s fashion magazines inspired him to change direction – with those original interests believed to be behind the freedom of movement his clothing permits.

Miyake was born in Hiroshima and was seven years old when the atomic bomb was dropped on the city while he was in a classroom. He was reluctant to speak of the event in later life. In 2009, writing in the New York Times as part of a campaign to get then-US President Barack Obama to visit the city, he said he did not want to be labeled as “the designer who survived” the bomb.

“When I close my eyes, I still see things no one should ever experience,” he wrote, adding that within three years, his mother died of radiation exposure.

“I have tried, albeit unsuccessfully, to put them behind me, preferring to think of things that can be created, not destroyed, and that bring beauty and joy. I gravitated toward the field of clothing design, partly because it is a creative format that is modern and optimistic.”

Models wear creations as part of Issey Miyake Homme Plisse men's Spring Summer 2023 collection.

Models wear creations as part of Issey Miyake Homme Plisse men’s Spring Summer 2023 collection.Credit:AP

After studying graphic design at a Tokyo art university, he learned clothing design in Paris, where he worked with famed fashion designers Guy Laroche and Hubert de Givenchy, before heading to New York. In 1970 he returned to Tokyo and founded the Miyake Design Studio.

In the late 1980s, I developed a new way of pleating by wrapping fabrics between layers of paper and putting them into a heat press, with the garments holding their pleated shape. Tested for their freedom of movement on dancers, this led to the development of his signature “Pleats, Please” line.