Next Steps in Making Reproductive Rights a Reality for All Regardless of Income

Monday’s Supreme Court decision – striking down onerous and dangerous Texas regulations on abortion clinics and requiring similar repeals nationwide – was a major victory for women and families across the country. The costly and medically unnecessary provisions of the Texas law are hallmarks of TRAP laws (Targeted Regulation of Abortion Providers), which have been used as tools by anti-choice legislators to steadily and strategically chip away at a woman’s right to choose in states around the country.

We should celebrate the Supreme Court’s decision to strike down regulations that have made comprehensive health care access an impossible reality for millions of women, but we cannot allow ourselves to become complacent. Anti-choice legislators will continue to make reproductive healthcare as unaffordable and inaccessible for as many women as possible. As Secretary Hillary Clinton, has said, “Any right that requires you to take extraordinary measures to access it is no right at all….not as long as we have laws on the book like the Hyde Amendment making it harder for low-income women to exercise their full rights.”

For those of us who understand that the Constitution truly does extend women the right to do what we decide is best for our own lives and bodies, ensuring that the right to reproductive access is a reality in practice, not just on paper, must be our focus. All women – not just the privileged few – must be able to afford and access this right.

Millions of women face an affordability crisis because their only option for healthcare coverage does not include abortion services. Most women in the military do not have insurance coverage that comprehensively covers abortion procedures, and our poorest sisters on Medicaid are also barred from insurance coverage for abortion in most states. Additionally, many state insurance exchanges do not allow women the opportunity to purchase plans that cover abortion care.

On the federal level, we must repeal the Hyde Amendment by passing the EACH Woman Act to ensure a woman’s ability to exercise her constitutional reproductive rights will not be based on how much she earns or how she is insured. The Hyde Amendment is why military women, women on Medicaid and federal employees have healthcare coverage that does not include abortion services, severely restricting their access. This year is the first in which the Democratic Party platform calls for the repeal of the Hyde Amendment, a step in the right direction to finally end this attack on our rights.

The federal government should act to right this wrong, but states needn’t wait for that to happen. I am proud that in California our state has stepped up to ensure that poor California women utilizing MediCal do have comprehensive reproductive insurance coverage despite the federal restriction. Sixteen other states have acted as well. Elected officials in more states must step up and declare that poor women should have an equal ability to exercise their constitutional rights.

Although we made great strides with the passage of the Affordable Care Act, women in 25 states are unable to purchase health care plans on the health insurance exchange that include full abortion coverage. There must be efforts launched in these states and at the federal level to require that women are able to purchase insurance plans that are truly comprehensive, and meet their healthcare needs.

For those of us who are not elected officials, voting and volunteering for campaigns are among the most important actions we can take. This year, we have the opportunity to change the course of women’s health care in this country for a generation. On Monday, we saw the power of the Supreme Court. The next President could appoint as many as five justices, which will have a lasting impact on our nation’s laws regarding women’s healthcare access and affordability. Hillary Clinton has been an avid fighter for women’s reproductive rights for decades. We know that, as President, she will continue that fight to ensure that all women will be able to exercise their constitutionally-guaranteed right to make decisions about their own reproductive futures. On the other hand, we must not leave our healthcare decisions in the hands of the reckless Donald Trump, who recently horrified even anti-choice activists by saying that women who need an abortion should be treated as criminals and punished.

To ensure that reproductive rights are an affordable reality, we need not only the next President to champion this effort. We must elect a U.S. Senate willing to confirm these Justices, and both houses of Congress must be ready to pass legislation like the EACH Woman Act. Down-ballot state elections will give us an even greater opportunity to elect pro-choice legislators who we can trust to pass laws that benefit the health and well-being of all women and families.

On Monday, the Supreme Court reminded us that the right to an abortion cannot simply exist on paper, but rather that it must be truly a reality for all women. While their decision is definitely cause for celebration, let’s use the energy behind that victory to organize and vote to create real and lasting change, ensuring that our rights are not just privileges for the select few.

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7 Ways To Make Sure Your Customers Stay Loyal

Customer loyalty is important, and the only way to keep customers loyal is to provide them with a great customer experience. A lot of things are changing digital marketing, and the experience economy is just one of them.

This guide is going to show you how you can improve your online reputation through providing customers with an incentive to stick with you. With 95% of people saying that a good customer experience is a top priority for them, this is something you cannot afford to ignore.

It Starts with the Right People

If you are going to supercharge your marketing campaign, you need the right people on your team from the beginning. There’s little point in increasing your Internet marketing budget if you don’t have the people who are going to use it correctly.

So how do you hire the right people?

Don’t just look at the numbers. Look at how each person is going to integrate themselves into the team. Consider what their visions are and whether their goals align with yours. Everyone has to be pushing in the right direction if that customer experience is going to be perfect.

Listen to Customers on a Personal Level

It’s easy to get so wrapped up in your business that you forget to interact with your customers. And with trends like marketing automation reigning supreme, it’s tempting to hand over everything to technology. Good old fashioned talking still wins the day, though.

Don’t miss out on the key wants and needs of your target audience by failing to speak to them on a personal level.

Promote Based on the Experience Mindset

Make sure that the people in positions of authority are there because they believe in putting customers first. It’s impossible to create a certain culture if you don’t have the leaders for that. If you have the managers and the employees focusing on two different things, you are going to have conflict. You are going to run into problems all the time.

If someone isn’t pulling in the same direction as you, it’s time to change things up.

Be a Role Model

One of the simplest ways to reach your customers is to take control of the situation personally. Don’t disappear into your comfortable office and let the rest of the team handle everything. You have to lead by example and put out the fires when they appear.

You want to inspire your workforce to treat customers in the right way. If you are a leader focusing on customers, you will be calm but display a sense of urgency. You should be focusing on improving the customer experience in all areas. This type of leader is what leads to a culture that runs through the DNA of a company.

Aim at the Heart

The fact is that in-store technology is taking over and it’s easier than ever before to concentrate on this over everything else. Despite these changes in the digital marketing world, you should still aim to win the hearts and minds of your target market.

There’s nothing more valuable than building loyalty through this strategy. Don’t just be nice to customers be charismatic. A business that’s charismatic about what it does will leave the customer feeling special. When customers feel special, they want to tell others about it.

Make the Customer Experience Fun

Everything about the customer experience should be fun. Your employees should be having a great time and the customers should also be having a great time. Make sure that your processes are regularly updated and that feedback is taken and acted upon.

To make sure your team stays motivated, provide special rewards and discounts. You can apply the same idea to your customers. Give them random promotions and discounts.

Keep Improving

It’s important that your team continues to get better with what it does. Don’t just provide formal coaching and mentoring. Go further than that by providing them with peer mentoring. Allow them to elevate themselves.

Learning should be a constant process that never ends. That’s what will help you to save money on startup marketing.

Conclusion – Making the Customer Experience Key

What you should know is that the customer experience is key to success. If you want to make sure that your brand is keeping customers loyal, you have to make the customer experience the heart of your organization. Doing so will ensure that everything is geared towards making customers feel special when they deal with you.

How will you keep customers loyal?

 

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Checking In With Alex Shadrow, Founder and CEO of UNItiques

This article previously appeared in and appears courtesy of She’s Fit to Lead.

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What if you could sell the clothes in your closet (the ones you loved two weeks ago, but suddenly can’t look at any more), and then use the money to totally update your wardrobe? What if you could do that in a completely safe and secure environment where you knew you were dealing exclusively with other college students? Well, thanks to Alex Shadrow and UNItiques now you can!

Meet Alex Shadrow, the founder and CEO of UNItiques.com: the online marketplace where college students buy & sell both nearby and nationwide.

Starting college, Alex quickly recognized that her tastes and her desire to constantly have a new look were well beyond what her budget allowed. Strapped for cash, she tried to sell her clothes at one of the traditional “second hand” consignment stores. She felt totally ripped off, and in fact, when offered $10 for her virtually new J. Brands she knew that it wasn’t just her imagination.

Next she tried Craigslist and eBay, and things went from bad to worse. She found eBay confusing and hard to navigate, and getting her items to stand out was challenging. Worse, because buyers on Craigslist wanted to see and try the merchandise. She found herself in what could have been a really bad situation when a creepy guy from Craigslist came over to her apartment to supposedly look at some of the items she was selling and then wouldn’t leave. It was then and there that Alex knew there had to be a better way!

Alex started a small online marketplace just for herself and fellow BU students. With the comfort and security of knowing that they were dealing with friends, or friends of friends, or at least other students that someone in their friend group knew, Alex’s webpage quickly grew. When 2,000 girls and guys from BU signed up to buy and sell things, she knew she had given birth to a business and UNItiques was born!

Today, UNItiques has grown to over 11,000 members, and Alex is looking to expand across the nation. Even with the growth, Alex has stayed true to her original concept. UNItiques is still the only marketplace that is just for college students. This September, Alex is expanding her concept, by launching “UNItiques Online,” which will make UNItiques the only marketplace to offer both local sales (like Craigslist) as well as online sales (like eBay). Students will be able to purchase items with their credit cards. UNItiques protects their purchases and handles the shipping, sending sellers pre-paid, pre-addressed shipping labels! While anyone, guest or student, will be able to purchase items via UNItiques, only college members can see one another’s contact information keeping the site safe and secure for students.

Alex has built her business keeping her customer, the college student, in mind. With that, she’s made a concerted effort not to be a “greedy middleman,” and to make sure that sellers feel like they are being treated well and compensated fairly. Her 10% commission on sales is an industry low, as compared to Poshmark’s 20% commission or a consignment stores typical 50% commission.

So how does it all work? Students join the UNItiques website, create stores, and upload items to sell locally on campuses nearby or they can sell on campuses nationwide! They can find incredible deals on furniture, fashion, electronics, and more – as students typically offer prices from 50-75% off of retail. UNItiques also hosts on-campus events for students to attend, like pop ups and fashion shows, and offers internships where students can also join the team!

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Alex emphasizes that establishing trust is one of the keys to success in the sharing economy – meaning peer-to-peer commerce. That is why every single member’s .edu email is verified to ensure that only college students can see one another’s information.

And why is UNItiques so important in today’s economy? It’s because it reflects the realities of today’s young consumer. The online fashion resale industry is rapidly growing. The reality is that the average young woman only actively utilizes about 10% of her wardrobe. 51% of her closet consists of clothing that is new or barely worn, adding up to a whopping $50.4 billion in unworn or barely worn clothing that is ripe for resale. Moreover, resale reflects the new realities of the sharing economy, with peer to peer business and collaborative consumption. With 22 million college students spending $29.5 billion annually on apparel and home furnishings, the opportunity for a business like UNItiques is huge.

So what’s next on the horizon for UNItiques? As Alex describes it, with UNItiques Online, she’s on the path to transition from a mini start-up to a bigger business. She is currently raising capital to fuel UNItiques’ growth. She is in her seed round of capital raising which will enable her to take the next step in her vision, and she continues to look for more investors interested in joining her journey in this emerging, high opportunity industry.

Alex is also growing her team. She is looking for interns to assist her in marketing, advertising, social media and in producing pop ups and fashion shows.

Not only do we love Alex’s vision and passion, but we also love her message about what it means to realize your dreams. As she tells it, launching UNItiques made Alex recognize her true potential and made her feel like she was finally unlocking something deep inside of her and realizing how capable she truly was.

We’re so excited to see what the future holds for this amazing young woman and her
incredible company that has the potential to truly transform the way her generation shops!

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UNItiques.com (website)
UNItiques.com/fashion (women’s section)
UNItiques.com/join (to join the website)
UNItiques.com/jobs (internships & jobs)
Facebook.com/UNItiques

Alex@UNItiques.com
https://www.linkedin.com/in/alexandrashadrow

Join UNItiques.com with code: HUFFINGTON to be entered to win a $250 credit to The Best Seats VIP: Your Personal Entertainment Concierge. Redeem for any of their services including tickets, travel, and more!

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How Samuel L. Jackson Went From A 'F**king Drug Addict’ To An A-List Actor

Upon receiving the Lifetime Achievement Award at this year’s BET Awards, Samuel L. Jackson shared a touching story involving his wife and daughter.  

“[They] found me passed out on the floor after I left somebody’s bachelor party,” he told the audience during his acceptance speech. “Put my ass in rehab the next day, and supported me and pushed me and give me a reason to get up and go and chase it day after day after day.”

The “Legend of Tarzan” actor, who’s been sober since 1991, has never shied away from discussing his battle with substance abuse. Before we knew him as Nick Fury, Mace Windu or even Jules Winnfield, a young Jackson faced drug and alcohol addiction while making a name for himself in the New York theater scene in the 1970s and ’80s. 

“I was a f**king drug addict and I was out of my mind a lot of the time, but I had a good reputation,” Jackson told The Guardian in an interview.

“I was doing Pulitzer-Prize-winning plays. I was working with people who made me better, who challenged me. So I was doing things the right way, it was just that one thing that was in the way — my addiction,” he continued. 

The anecdote Jackson shared in his BET speech was a wake-up call for the actor. After a “crack-induced” meltdown, Jackson’s then 8-year-old daughter and his wife, LaTanya Richardson, discovered Jackson on the kitchen floor surrounded by drugs and paraphernalia. He entered rehab soon after. 

It was Richardson who convinced her husband that his personal health wouldn’t be the only benefit of getting clean. She urged Jackson to consider how his acting might evolve without the influence of drugs and alcohol. 

“I’ve always had my wife LaTanya, who’s my harshest critic,” he recalled. “She’d say: ‘You’re so intelligent that the first time you read something, you think you understand it intellectually and emotionally … But there’s no blood in it.”

And the greatest roles of Jackson’s career wouldn’t emerge until he got clean, an experience he describes as a door blowing wide open. 

“It wasn’t until I got sober that I knew fully what she meant,” said Jackson. “Before, I used to do stuff on stage and kinda look for the reaction from the audience — ‘Aha! I got ’em good that time!’ And once I was able to ignore that, and focus on the relationships with the people I was onstage with, I was finally able to blossom into whatever I might think I am now.”

Head over to The Guardian to hear more from Jackson

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Family Planning Options For LGBT Couples

For some in the LGBT community, determining how they can start or even grow their families with the help of fertility experts is a process sometimes fraught with obstacles. I’m happy to say that in my nearly 30 years as a fertility doctor, third-party reproductive options have come a long way. And my colleagues and I are proud to work with lesbian, gay and transgender individuals and couples to raise awareness of these options — and to help them choose what’s best for them.

When deciding on the fertility clinic to use, individuals should first do their homework by researching success rates, determining whether or not the providers have access to the latest fertility treatments and third-party reproductive services, and even whether the fertility practice is considered by others to be LGBT-friendly. The Human Rights Campaign (HRC) Foundation recognizes almost 500 fertility centers nationwide as “Leaders in LGBT Healthcare Equality.” Reproductive Medicine Associates of New Jersey (RMANJ), where I work, is a repeat recipient of that honor, having met key criteria like patient and employee non-discrimination policies that specifically mention sexual orientation and gender identity, a guarantee of equal visitation for same-sex partners and parents, and LGBT health education for key staff members.

These are questions any individual should ask when choosing a fertility clinic:

  • Does the clinic have a friendly and professional staff?
  • Do you have a high level of comfort with the physicians and support staff?
  • Do the facilities seem comfortable and welcoming?

After choosing a fertility clinic that is right for them, LGBT individuals will undoubtedly have many questions for the reproductive specialist they’ll be meeting with about the options available. In these discussions, we present couples with the following third-party reproductive services, which will ultimately be combined with in vitro fertilization (IVF):

  • Egg donation
  • Gestational carrier
  • Donor sperm

When choosing which service is best, another key decision that should be discussed ahead of time is determining whose DNA a child will receive. While one partner is typically responsible for this, it is possible for both partners to be involved, as is the case with many of our RMANJ patients. Female couples are able to have their child carry their genes by having one donate the egg while the other carries the baby to term.

Since insurance coverage for these services is still relatively sparse — only 15 states require coverage for fertility services — I strongly urge individuals to check with their provider as a first step. Those who are interested may also wish to check with other independent, third-party resources, such as the Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology (SART) or FertilityIQ.com, for a second opinion on these service providers.

Starting a family is no small feat. And among some in the LGBT community, the misconception may still exist — that the only way to start or grow a family is through means other than assisted reproductive technology. We are happy to clear up that myth — and, more importantly, my colleagues and I are proud to play a small role in helping people start or grow their families.

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The New World

The urge to succeed becomes an obsession, but thousands of kilometers and waves still lie ahead of me. At times, I am overwhelmed by bursts of emotion, quickly suppressed by my concentration in the present moment. Solar Impulse 2 needs to be steered with extreme precision. I need to circumvent a bad weather front, jump over a threatening barrier of clouds, cross an area of turbulence, and repair a software problem that is disconnecting my autopilot and preventing me from resting. It is a tactical flight, very different from the royal pathway I was offered over the Pacific between Hawaii and San Francisco. There had been neither clouds, nor turbulence. This leg is a completely different experience. The first transatlantic solar flight will have to be earned. Nothing is yet won and it is too early to rejoice.

The Atlantic – the ocean of all explorers – saw many sea and air navigators competing in the race to modernity. When Charles Lindbergh flew from New York to Paris, it was to promote commercial air transport. Then, he spent the rest of his life opening up airways and airports. For me, the symbol is the same, but the goal is different. I want to pave the way to a widespread use of modern clean technologies. This is what I have been dedicating my life to for 15 years and this mythical ocean may well allow me to do it.

The landing in Seville is approaching. The same city Christopher Columbus set off from to discover the New World. But today, the “Old” and the “New” Worlds are no longer geographical continents, they are states of mind: the old state of mind of fossil energy, pollution and depletion the Earth’s resources; the new state of mind of renewables, cleantech and respect for the environment. When I look at my propellers, turning days and nights on end, activated solely by the sun, I feel like in a science fiction movie. Yet, it is today’s reality; the one I want to promote. I can see the old world awaiting me around the corner, but fortunately I am going straight!

The arrival is magical. I am welcomed by the Swiss and Iberian colored smoke of the Spanish Air Force Team. After the landing, the press reports: historic first transatlantic flight of a solar airplane. However, this flight will really become historic if it contributes to opening the way to more clean technologies and renewable energies in our world. And this, only the future will tell…

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Boy Spends His Allowance On Hundreds Of Books For Inmates

This boy took a page out of the book of generosity. 

Tyler Fugett didn’t use all his allowance money on himself, but instead spent it on hundreds of books for inmates at the local jail in Clarksville, Tennessee.

The 9-year-old, who recently donated the books to Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office, did so with the aim of supporting inmates.

“I don’t want people to think bad things while they are in jail,” Tyler said, according to a press release provided to The Huffington Post. “I want people to get out and not do bad things again.”

Tyler, who has a family member who’s spent time in jail, saved up his allowance for the cause. He then hit up some clearance sales to buy the books. 

While the sweet boy initially donated over 100 books last week, he went back to the sheriff’s office on Wednesday to drop off an additional 100. 

The boy’s gesture is certainly beautiful and it felt even more meaningful due to the jail library’s circumstances. 

“Since no tax payer money is used to purchase books, we rely 100 percent on donations from the community to stock our library,” Sandra Brandon, public information officer for the Sheriff’s Office, said in the release. “Tyler’s generosity is truly appreciated.”

And don’t worry, Tyler received a reward for beautiful efforts. Sheriff John Fuson presented the 9-year-old with a Sheriff’s pin and Sheriff’s challenge coin. He also personally thanked the boy for his amazing work. 

Bravo, Tyler. You’ve got one novel idea. 

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Countering Violent Extremism–End Government Extremism

There is a simple and cost-free strategy to diminish or slash the incidence of violent extremism in the United States: end government extremism, including the initiation of gratuitous wars not in self-defense that kill, injure or displace millions in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, Yemen, Somalia, Libya, and against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL); authorizing the President to play prosecutor, judge, jury, and executioner to kill American citizens not engaged in hostilities based on secret, uncorroborated evidence; imprisoning alleged “enemy combatants” at Guantanamo Bay indefinitely without accusation or charge in violation of constitutional due process; invoking the state secrets privilege to deny judicial redress for government kidnappings, torture, or assassinations; and, providing material assistance–including weapons and money–to unpopular governments that terrorize or oppress their own populations, for instance, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Libya, the Gulf States, Iraq, and Afghanistan.

Nothing excites extremism more than government lawlessness

Nothing excites extremism more than government lawlessness, or example. Justice Louis D. Brandeis explained in Olmstead v. United States (1928):

“Decency, security and liberty alike demand that government officials shall be subjected to the same rules of conduct that are commands to the citizen. In a government of laws, existence of the government will be imperilled if it fails to observe the law scrupulously. Our Government is the potent, the omnipresent teacher. For good or for ill, it teaches the whole people by its example. Crime is contagious. If the Government becomes a lawbreaker, it breeds contempt for law; it invites every man to become a law unto himself; it invites anarchy. To declare that in the administration of the criminal law the end justifies the means–to declare that the Government may commit crimes in order to secure the conviction of a private criminal–would bring terrible retribution.”

Brandeis was prophetic.

Federal District Court Judge Miriam Goldman Cedarbaum presided over the sentencing of attempted Times Square bomber, Pakistani-American Faisal Shahzad. She asked with incredulity how he could contemplate violence that would kill innocent children. He answered:
“‘Well, the drone hits in Afghanistan and Iraq, they don’t see children, they don’t see anybody. They kill women, children, they kill everybody. It’s a war, and in war, they kill people. They’re killing all Muslims’ . . . .”

The Boston Marathon and Orlando terrorist bombers referenced the United States bombings and killings of Muslims in Iraq, Syria, and elsewhere as motivations for their violent extremism.

In 2004, the Defense Science Board Task Force concluded:

“Muslims do not hate our freedom, but rather they hate our policies. The overwhelming majority voice their objections to what they see as one-sided support in favor of Israel and against Palestinian rights, and the long-standing, even increasing, support for what Muslims collectively see as tyrannies, most notably Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Pakistan and the Gulf states. Thus, when American public diplomacy talks about bringing democracy to Islamic societies, this is seen as no more than self-serving hypocrisy.”

Former Director of the Central Intelligence Agency David Patraeus has called the Guantanamo Bay prison for suspected enemy combatants a propaganda recruiting tool for terrorists.

Former FBI interrogator Jack Cloonan, who interrogated al-Qaeda suspects, maintains categorically that while torture yields no useful intelligence, it teaches the impressionable the legitimacy of jihad, on the ground that a nation that tortures deserves to be attacked.

It would save the United States trillions of dollars to cease wars not in self-defense while making Americans safer from terrorism.

It would cost the United States nothing to end assassinations of American citizens not accused of crime. The killings of American citizens Anwar al-Awlaki, his teenage son, and Samir Khan did nothing to diminish the incidence of terrorism.

It would save the United States hundreds of millions of dollars to close the Guantanamo Bay prison and to put on trial in federal courts any detainees reasonably suspected of providing material assistance to an international terrorist organization.

It would save the United States tens of billions of dollars to cease military or financial assistance to governments that terrorize or oppress their citizens.

It would reduce the incidence of anti-American terrorism blowback if the state secrets privilege were renounced for United States government kidnappings, torture, or assassinations.

These United States government correctives would counter violent extremism better than all the alternatives. But they are resisted for twofold reasons. They would deny government officials the adolescent thrill of world domination. And they would undermine the military-industrial-counterterrorism complex about which President Dwight D. Eisenhower warned 55 years ago.

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How A Filipino Designer Helped Bring A Story Of Liberian Women To Life

“Eclipsed” made history this year as Broadway’s first all-female production –written, directed and acted by black women. The play, a story of five mothers and daughters fighting for survival during the Second Liberian Civil War, quickly drew crowds as it not only recounted an important history of resilience, but reminded audiences today that violence against women is hardly a thing of the past.

Another member of the “Eclipsed” team made history too — Clint Ramos, one of the few men on the creative side, who was tasked with bringing the play’s set and costume design to life. After winning a Tony at this year’s ceremony for his work on “Eclipsed,” he became the first person of color to win in the costume design category, and the fourth Filipino to have ever won the coveted Broadway award.

Although Ramos himself never appears on stage, his work is unmissable throughout the production. He crafted both the scenery and the clothing, painting a picture of Liberia onto the stages of New York City. He worked to transform five iconic actors of color — Lupita Nyong’o, Pascale Armand, Akosua Busia, Zainab Jah and Saycon Sengbloh — into women held captive as “wives,” who refer to each other as numbers rather than names. He worked to transform John Golden Theatre into a rebel camp, where the characters, forced into either sexual servitude or militant brutality, braved their days.

“Eclipsed” ended its run on Broadway on June 19, only to announce that a version of the production will head to San Francisco’s Curran Theater in 2017. (The west coast show will provide free tickets to 10,000 girls ages 16 to 24, as part of an initiative to bring under-served young women into the theater world.) Ahead of its transfer, Ramos spoke to The Huffington Post about his vision for “Eclipsed,” the importance of diversity on Broadway, and what it felt like to represent the Philippines. 

Check out Ramos’ descriptions of individual characters in the photo captions below:

On distinguishing the characters of “Eclipsed” through their clothes:

“That is sort of an incidental result of really just diving into the characters. It started with preliminary research and in-depth conversations with director Danai [Gurira] and Liesl [Tommy, the writer]. We really looked at the documentaries and the photographs of that war. But also Danai had actually gone to Liberia to interview these women. They’re older now, but the characters are based on real people. So we had this pretty solid idea of who they were — or what they ought to have looked like.

“I’ve had a long-standing relationship with Liesl and I’m actually able to have discussions with her about casting. She throws out ideas of actors with me and we sort of go back and forth on what their physical types are. When you really sort of parse the play, Danai has written it […] in a very Greek, classical way. And with those plays, the characters are really defined. But the way we defined our characters … it’s already in the writing, it’s in the research. So all we really needed to do was pay attention. For me, that was the only way, in a documentary fashion, to honor them, by replicating what’s in the research.”

On the ways women’s hair (and wigs and wraps) shape their identity:

“I do a lot of shows with people and women of color. One can never underestimate how hair is tied to women of color’s identities. And with this particular piece, we really needed to get it accurate. I work with one of the most brilliant wig designers in American theater. Her name is Cookie Jordan. She and I and the actors really took the conversation seriously.

“If you see hair braided on stage, it’s a wig. I cannot state the importance of it, how we went through so many iterations. For example, with Maima’s wig, I had this idea — with her fashion sense — that she is hair-obsessed. They talk about it in the play. Bessie says, ‘My hair has never looked so good as when [Wife] Number Two did it.’ So all of her braids are on point, her extensions are on point. That sort of shows when she braids Lupita’s hair, as a tight, upward braid too.

“And Lupita’s hair at the beginning was a huge discussion. We had to calibrate and recalibrate what the exact look was. Because we wanted it to be accurate historically and physically, but we also didn’t want it to distract because Lupita is wearing it. The reward for us is when she doesn’t get an entrance applause. Because she’s unrecognizable enough.”

On the universal emotions tied to clothes:

“One of the bigger challenges was to really make [the play] reach across the presidium and reach the audience. In a more direct way, make these women more familiar to an American audience.

“For example, the idea that we see a dress, one that gets seen and handled many times [as a prop], actually be worn on stage, is great. Like that yellow dress — the dress Bessie wears when she’s no longer pregnant. [Editor’s Note: It’s actually an altered Juicy Couture dress bought at Housing Works that is first seen on stage in a pile of loot the soldiers have brought back for the women at the camp.] Its meaning transfers throughout the story from, Oh, it could be the dress of Rita’s daughter, who’s missing, because you see Rita hold on to it for a moment. But then you see Bessie actually pick that dress and you see her wear it. Its meaning transfers.

“It was interesting to curate that loot, to see how much of it would be familiar and how much of it would be traditional. And by curating that, you’re showing a history, a swath of who the victims were. There are businesswomen’s clothing and men’s clothing and children’s clothing, with blood on them. It’s storytelling.”

On reminding the audience that this story — the story of violence against women — is still happening today:

“Somewhere in the middle of the run [of the play], we started to do these dedications, where women would come up after the performance and they would read one of the names of the Boko Haram girls — one or two names. And we would ask the audience to repeat the names. And the hashtag was #KnowHerName.

“The former UN ambassador came and said the youngest [Boko Haram] victim was three months old. It makes you want to throw up. And the oldest was 87 years old. Violence against women is an epidemic and the problem is that we don’t treat it that way. We think of these girls as a unit, who disappeared in this other nation with a machismo culture. But no. [Violence against women] happens everywhere. It’s infuriating.”

On the pressures that came with helping to tell such a profound story:

“I don’t want to speak for the ladies, but in conversations with them, I think most of them knew that it was such a powerful piece. But they came to understand it as so much bigger — the response was so much bigger. It was unbelievable. And for the performers, they had to work around that. It really took a toll on the actors. All of these actors come from the African diaspora, so it’s so personal. As much as they are all professional and highly trained actors, I think this particular piece was hard for them to automate. It’s hard to distance themselves from the characters and what happened and what’s happening in this world. They felt that pressure, they felt that responsibility, and in my opinion, they rose to it. They represented wonderfully. But it was a lot.”

On being the fourth Filipino person to have won a Tony — and the first person of color to win in the costume category:

“When I got the nomination, Lea Salonga, who was the first Filipino to win a Tony, tweeted about it and it sort of became bananas. I didn’t know I was the fourth. I thought there was just Lea and Bobby Lopez. And then I realized Jhett Tolentino, a producer, had already won. When it hit the Philippines, they took it very seriously. And all of a sudden it became a symbol of pride for the country. I have to say, it wasn’t fun, because there’s so much pressure. Masses in churches were doing offerings for this. My mother was texting me telling me that there was a mass offering in the town that I come from. It felt like the nomination wasn’t enough, I had to win.

“And I really did not think I was going to win. I thought Tom Scutt, the English designer who had been nominated for ‘King Charles III,’ would win. I saw that show and thought it was beautiful and detailed and lush. The costumes were phenomenal. I suppose I’m happy that the voters saw the other side of costuming. Usually those kind of shoes get rewarded; the sort of lavish, intricate works of fashion. It was refreshing, and made me happy, that a design like this could be rewarded.”

On this year’s Tonys diversity.

“Even at the ceremony, it was wonderful. My category was the first to be called — and of course, I had so many people to thank but when I looked out at the audience there was Oprah and I blanked. But also when I looked out, it really was a sea of diversity. It was so great to see the faces out there — it looked like the A train, but really well-dressed.

“I hope it’s not an aberration. I hope it’s a vision of the future. I still think there needs to be a little — no, a lot more work done on diversity and representation for people who work off stage and backstage. I think, of the creatives who got nominations,only six were of color. Of the designers, only two were of color. Paul Tazewell, of ‘Hamilton,’ was the other. We talked a lot about what it all really means. For us, it is a big responsibility, because we are not in a position of entitlement. And we cannot take it lightly. We need to show younger artists of color that there is a life in the theater for them. There is a place for them. When I was coming up, I had to seek them out, because I wanted to make sure a person who liked me could have a place in the American theater.

“There is an argument that we need to foster more writers of color so that there’s more work for people of color. Yes, that’s true, absolutely. But we also need to rework the ways we think of staffing and casting shows. Why couldn’t there be a multicultural check-off? Why couldn’t, for instance, ‘Three Sisters’ — a classic [written by Anton Checkov] — be three sisters from different places? When I see non-traditional casting, or color-conscious casting, it’s the first thing I notice but it’s the last thing I think about when I walk out of a show. Because I know that these actors of color are actors and they’re storytellers and they inhabit their characters, and I just walk out of there with a story.

“We have to make sure that kids know that there are options. And it really starts with producers and gatekeepers of color.”

On the importance of early access to the arts:

“We all started out as performers [at a younger age]. When you join a drama club you become enmeshed in a theatrical life, and not only is it awesome in terms of being able to perform and all that kind of stuff, it’s also a great liberal arts education. You get to go to places you’d never dream of. I’d get to immerse myself in specific cultures and periods of times and places that I would hardly have ever decided to visit if I wasn’t in theater. Even if that dream of, Oh, maybe I can be an actor, comes to an end, you still want to be a part of the theater. I wanted to be a part of a community. I liked the catharsis that comes from working in the theater. 

This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.

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