Yes, Debanking Is Real
Pro-Hamas Foreign Students Are About to Be Deported
Wait, That's How Long LA Knew About Their Shoddy Water Systems?
Democrats Are Making Things Worse for Themselves
Thomas Massie Just Introduced a Measure That Would Be a Game Changer for...
Boohoo: John Brennan Whines and Lies About Losing His Security Clearance
Senate Republican Announces Bill to Finish Building Donald Trump's Border Wall
AOC Is Very Worried That High-Profile Americans Aren't Afraid to Associate With Donald...
'Deportation Flights Have Begun': Hundreds of Criminal Aliens Are Already Gone
Education Department Details How It's Tackled Eliminating DEI From the Agency
Massachusetts Governor Says She 'Supports' Trump's Crackdown on Criminal Aliens
Do Americans Support Limits on Abortion? Here's What a New Poll Shows
Remember 'Mostly Peaceful Protests'? Check Out the Media's New Narrative for Covering Anti...
Trump Just Revoked Fauci’s Security Detail
RFK Jr. Reacts to Trump Declassifying the JFK Assassination Files
Tipsheet

Ketanji Brown Jackson Performed in a Woke Broadway Production

AP Photo/Patrick Semansky

Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson made her Broadway debut in a “queer” rendition of “Romeo and Juliet.”

According to USA TODAY, Jackson’s role in the production, “&Juliet,” was a one-night-only, walk-on role. 

Advertisement

Reportedly, the musical is about what would have happened if Juliet continued after Romeo. 

Just before Jackson’s first rehearsal for her Broadway debut, she spoke to CBS Mornings.

“I feel very much in my element,” she said. “I just always loved theater and I felt very comfortable on stage. I was always performing from when I was really young.”

On “&Juliet” specifically, Jackson said that “It’s a story about female empowerment and women’s ability to do what they want to do to control their own destiny. I think it’s a wonderful message.”

“I grew up a theater kid…when I got into high school, I did speech and debate and I had these two different loves: the law and theater. And so, being the first black woman Supreme Court justice to appear on a Broadway stage…that has been a dream of mine all of these years,” she said, adding that she acted at Harvard with Matt Damon.

Advertisement

“I just also think it’s very important to remind people that justices are human beings, that we have dreams, and that we are public servants. We are not so detached from the people that we serve,” she said.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement