Since a young age, Penn State alumna Cynthia Henderson has wanted to save the world. While growing up in Mobile, Alabama, her career goals included becoming a scientist, an astronaut, maybe even the president of the United States.
Fast-forward a few decades later, and Henderson (1997 master of fine arts Penn State graduate in theater) is doing her part to save the world — through theater. The Ithaca College professor and social activist recently returned from war-ravaged Cameroon, where she facilitated workshops on peaceful conflict resolution via the performing arts.
During the last days of her five-week visit, as the war with the Islamic extremist group Boko Haram escalated in the north, Henderson created and facilitated a project about the effects the Boko Haram’s attacks were having on the people of Cameroon. That project was turned into a documentary that was recently accepted for the 2016 Finger Lakes Environmental Film Festival, and is being considered for broadcast on PBS.
Henderson’s trip to Cameroon was funded by a Fulbright grant — her third — and part of her work as founder of Performing Arts for Social Change (PASC), whose mission is to empower people to express themselves and stage their stories, thus raising awareness of societal issues that are often overlooked, such as voting rights, eating disorders, women’s empowerment and AIDS education.
In her workshops, Henderson leads people of all ages and backgrounds — from elementary school children to politicians to gang members — in creating and developing performance pieces that serve as teaching moments for both those involved in the creative process and the audiences who view the final works. Most of the theater pieces are performed for the public.