For those of you curious/already preparing to relive your graduation, here’s the full transcript of Meryl Streep’s speech at Barnard Commencement.
Thank you, all. Thank you, President Spar, Ms. Golden, President Tilghman, Members of the Board of Trustees, distinguished faculty, proud swelling parents and family, and gorgeous class of 2010. If you are all really, really lucky, and if you continue to work super hard, and you remember your thank you notes and everybody’s name; and you follow through on every task that’s asked of you and also somehow anticipate problems before they even arise and you somehow sidestep disaster and score big. If you get great scores on your LSATS, or MSATS, or ERSATS or whatever. And you get into your dream grad school or internship which leads to a super job with a paycheck commensurate with responsibilities of leadership or if you somehow get that documentary on a shoe-string budget and it gets accepted at Sundance and maybe it wins Sundance and then you go on to be nominated for an Oscar and then you win the Oscar. Or if that money-making website that you designed with your friends somehow suddenly attracts investors and advertisers and becomes the go-to site for whatever it is you’re selling, blogging, sharing, or net-casting and success shinning, hoped-for but never really anticipated success comes your way I guarantee you someone you know or love will come to you and say, “Will you address the graduates at my college?” And you’ll say “Yeah sure, when is it? May 2010? 2010? Yeah sure, that’s months away,” and then the nightmare begins. The nightmare we’ve all had and I assure you, you’ll continue to have even after graduation, 40 years after graduation. About a week before the due date, you wake up in the middle of the night, “Huh, I have a paper due and I haven’t done the reading, Oh my god!”
Video via Columbia’s Youtube Channel
If you have been touched by the success fairy, people think you know why. People think success breeds enlightenment and you are duty bound to spread it around like manure, fertilize those young minds, let them in on the secret, what is it that you know that no one else knows, the self examination begins, one looks inward, one opens an interior door. Cobwebs, black, the lights bulbs burned out, the airless dank refrigerator of an insanely over-scheduled, unexamined life that usually just gets take-out. Where is my writer friend, Anna Quindlen when I need her? On another book tour.
Hello I’m Meryl Streep, and today, Class of 2010 and I am really, I am very honored, and humbled to be asked to pass on tips and inspiration to you for achieving success in this next part of your lives. President Spar, when I consider the other distinguished medal recipients and venerable Board of Trustees, the many accomplished faculty and family members, people who’ve actually done things, produced things, while I have pretended to do things, I can think about 3800 people who should have been on this list before me and you know since my success has depended wholly on putting things over on people. So I’m not sure parents think I’m that great a role model anyway.
I am however an expert in pretending to be an expert in various areas, so just randomly like everything else in this speech, I am or I was an expert in kissing on stage and on screen. How did I prepare for this? Well most of my preparation took place in my suburban high school or rather behind my suburban high school in New Jersey. One is obliged to do great deal of kissing in my line of work. Air kissing, ass-kissing, kissing up and of course actual kissing, much like hookers, actors have to do it with people we may not like or even know. We may have to do it with friends, which, believe it or not is particularly awkward, for people of my generation, it’s awkward.
My other areas of faux expertise, river rafting, miming the effects of radiation poisoning, knowing which shoes go with which bag, coffee plantation, Turkish, Polish, German, French, Italian, that’s Iowa-Italian from the bridges of Madison County, a bit of the Bronx, Aramaic, Yiddish, Irish clog dancing, cooking, singing, riding horses, knitting, playing the violin, and simulating steamy sexual encounters, these are some of the areas in which, I have pretended quite proficiently to be successful, or the other way around. As have many women here, I’m sure.
Women, I feel I can say this authoritatively, especially at Barnard where they can’t hear us, what am I talking about? They professionally can’t hear us. Women are better at acting than men. Why? Because we have to be, if successfully convincing someone bigger than you are of something he doesn’t know is a survival skill, this is how women have survived through the millennia. Pretending is not just play. Pretending is imagined possibility. Pretending or acting is a very valuable life skill and we all do it. All the time, we don’t want to be caught doing it but nevertheless it’s part of the adaptations of our species, we change who we are to fit the exigencies of our time, and not just strategically, or to our own advantage, sometimes sympathetically, without our even knowing it for the betterment of the whole group.
I remember very clearly my own first conscious attempt at acting. I was six placing my mother’s half slip over my head in preparation to play the Virgin Mary in our living room. As I swaddled my Betsy Wetsy doll I felt quieted, holy, actually, and my transfigured face and very changed demeanor captured on super-8 by my dad pulled my little brother Harry to play Joseph and Dana too, a barnyard animal, into the trance. They were actually pulled into this nativity scene by the intensity of my focus. In my usual technique for getting them to do what I want, yelling at them would never ever have achieved and I learned something on that day.
Later when I was nine, I remember taking my mother’s eyebrow pencil and carefully drawing lines all over my face, replicating the wrinkles that I had memorized on the face of my grandmother whom I adored and made my mother take my picture and I look at it now and of course, I look like myself now and my grandmother then. But I do really remember in my bones, how it was possible on that day to feel her age. I stooped, I felt weighted down but cheerful, you know I felt like her.
Empathy is at the heart of the actor’s art. And in high school, another form of acting took hold of me. I wanted to learn how to be appealing. So I studied the character I imagined I wanted to be that of the generically pretty high school girl. I researched her deeply, that is to say shallowly, in Vogue, in Seventeen, and in Mademoiselle Magazines. I tried to imitate her hair, her lipstick, her lashes, the clothes of the lithesome, beautiful and generically appealing high school girls that I saw in those pages. I ate an apple a day, period. I peroxided my hair, ironed it straight. I demanded brand name clothes, my mother shut me down on that one. But I did, I worked harder on this characterization really than anyone I think I’ve ever done since. I worked on my giggle, I lightened it. Because I like it when it went, kind of “ehuh” and the end, “eheeh” “ehaeaahaha” because I thought it sounded child like, and cute. This was all about appealing to boys and at the same time being accepted by the girls, a very tricky negotiation.
Often success in one area precludes succeeding in the other. And along with all my other exterior choices, I worked on my, what actors call, my interior adjustment. I adjusted my natural temperament which tends to be slightly bossy, a little opinionated, loud, a little loud, full of pronouncements and high spirits, and I willfully cultivated softness, agreeableness, a breezy, natural sort of sweetness, even shyness if you will, which was very, very, very effective on the boys. But the girls didn’t buy it. They didn’t like me; they sniffed it out, the acting. And they were probably right, but I was committed, this was absolutely not a cynical exercise, this was a vestigial survival courtship skill I was developing. And I reached a point senior year, when my adjustment felt like me, I had actually convinced myself that I was this person and she, me, pretty, talented, but not stuck-up. You know, a girl who laughed a lot at every stupid thing every boy said and who lowered her eyes at the right moment and deferred, who learned to defer when the boys took over the conversation, I really remember this so clearly and I could tell it was working, I was much less annoying to the guys than I had been, they liked me better and I like that, this was conscious but it was at the same time motivated and fully-felt this was real, real acting.
I got to Vassar, which 43 years ago, was a single-sex institution, like all the colleges in what they call the Seven Sisters, the female Ivy League and I made some quick but lifelong and challenging friends. And with their help outside of any competition for boys my brain woke up. I got up and I got outside myself and I found myself again. I didn’t have to pretend, I could be goofy, vehement, aggressive, and slovenly and open and funny and tough and my friends let me. I didn’t wash my hair for three weeks once. They accepted me like the Velveteen Rabbit. I became real instead of an imagined stuffed bunny but I stockpiled that character from high school and I breathed life into her again some years later as Linda in the Deer Hunter. There is probably not one of you graduates who has ever seen this film but the Deer Hunter it won best picture in 1978 Robert De Niro, Chris Walken, not funny at all. And I played Linda, a small town girl in a working class background, a lovely, quiet, hapless girl, who waited for the boy she loved to come back from the war in Vietnam. Often men my age, President Clinton, by the way, when I met him said, “Men my age, mention that character as their favorite of all the women I’ve played.” And I have my own secret understanding of why that is and it confirms every decision I made in high school. This is not to denigrate that girl, by the way, or the men who are drawn to her in anyway because she’s still part of me and I’m part of her. She wasn’t acting but she was just behaving in a way that cowed girls, submissive girls, beaten up girls with very few ways out have behaved forever and still do in many worlds. Now, in a measure of how much the world has changed the character most men mention as their favorite is, Miranda Priestly.
Now as a measure of how the world has changed. The character most men mention as their favorite. Miranda Priestly. The beleaguered totalitarian at the head of Runway magazine in Devil Wears Prada. To my mind this represents such an optimistic shift. They relate to Miranda. They wanted to date Linda. They felt sorry for Linda but they feel like Miranda. They can relate to her issues, the high standards she sets for herself and others. The thanklessness of the leadership position. The “Nobody understands me” thing. The loneliness. They stand outside one character and they pity her and they kind of fall in love with her but they look through the eyes of this other character. This is a huge deal because as people in the movie business know the absolute hardest thing in the whole world is to persuade a straight male audience to identify with a woman protagonist to feel themselves embodied by her. This more than any other factor explains why we get the movies we get and the paucity of the roles where women drive the film. It’s much easier for the female audience because we were all grown up brought up identifying with male characters from Shakespeare to Salinger. We have less trouble following Hamlet’s dilemma viscerally or Romeo’s or Tybalt or Huck Finn or Peter Pan – I remember holding that sword up to Hook – I felt like him. But it is much much much harder for heterosexual boys to identify with Juliet or Desdemona, Wendy in Peter Pan or Joe in Little Women or the Little Mermaid or Pocohontas. why I don’t know, but it just is. there has always been a resistance to imaginatively assume a persona, if that persona is a she. But things are changing now and it’s in your generation we’re seeing this. Men are adapting… about time…they are adapting consciously and also without consciously and without realizing it for the better of the whole group. They are changing their deepest prejudices to regard as normal the things that their fathers would have found very very difficult and their grandfathers would have abhorred and the door to this emotional shift is empathy. As Jung said, emotion is the chief source of becoming conscious. There can be no transforming of lightness into dark of apathy into movement without emotion. Or as Leonard Cohen says pay attention to the cracks because that’s where the light gets in. You, young women of Barnard have not had to squeeze yourself into the corset of being cute or to muffle your opinions but you haven’t left campus yet. I’m just kidding. What you have had is the privilege of a very specific education. You are people who may be able to draw on a completely different perspective to imagine a different possibility than women and men who went to coed schools.
How this difference is going to serve you it’s hard to quantify now, it may take you 40 years like it did me to analyze your advantage. But today is about looking forward into a world where so-called women’s issues, human issues of gender inequality lie at the crux of global problems from poverty to the AIDS crisis to the rise in violent fundamentalist juntas, human trafficking and human rights abuses and you’re going to have the opportunity and the obligation, by virtue of your providence, to speed progress in all those areas. And this is a place where the need is very great, the news is too. This is your time and it feels normal to you but really there is no normal. There’s only change, and resistance to it and then more change.
Never before in the history of our country have most of the advanced degrees been awarded to women but now they are. Since the dawn of man, it’s hardly more than 100 years since we were even allowed into these buildings except to clean them but soon most of law and medical degrees will probably also go to women. Around the world, poor women now own property who used to be property and according to Economist magazine, for the last two decades, the increase of female employment in the rich world has been the main driving force of growth. Those women have contributed more to global GDP growth than have either new technology or the new giants India or China. Cracks in the ceiling, cracks in the door, cracks in the Court and on the Senate floor.
You know, I gave a speech at Vassar 27 years ago. It was a really big hit. Everyone loved it, really. Tom Brokaw said it was the very best commencement speech he had ever heard and of course I believed this. And it was much easier to construct than this one. It came out pretty easily because back then I knew so much. I was a new mother, I had two Academy Awards and it was all coming together so nicely. I was smart and I understood boiler plate and what sounded good and because I had been on the squad in high school, earnest full-throated cheerleading was my specialty so that’s what I did but now, I feel like I know about 1/16th of what that young woman knew. Things don’t seem as certain today. Now I’m 60, I have four adult children who are all facing the same challenges you are. I’m more sanguine about all the things that I still don’t know and I’m still curious about.
What I do know about success, fame, celebrity that would fill another speech. How it separates you from your friends, from reality, from proportion. Your own sweet anonymity, a treasure you don’t even know you have until it’s gone. How it makes things tough for your family and whether being famous matters one bit, in the end, in the whole flux of time. I know I was invited here because of that. How famous I am, how many awards I’ve won and while I am I am overweeningly proud of the work that, believe me, I did not do on my own. I can assure you that awards have very little bearing on my own personal happiness, my own sense of wellbeing and purpose in the world. That comes from studying the world feelingly, with empathy in my work. It comes from staying alert and alive and involved in the lives of the people that I love and the people in the wider world who need my help. No matter what you see me or hear me saying when I’m on your TV holding a statuette spewing, that’s acting.
Being a celebrity has taught me to hide but being an actor has opened my soul.
Being here today has forced me to look around inside there for something useful that I can share with you and I’m really grateful you gave me the chance.
You know you don’t have to be famous. You just have to make your mother and father proud of you and you already have. Bravo to you. Congratulations.
35 Comments
@ummm i still havent gotten my cc grade.wjhats that deadline ccsc got for us? SUe, are you still here?
@cc'10 lady i’m a female graduate of columbia 2010, and i would like to believe that meryl was talking to me as well. being a girl at columbia, no matter what school, is harder than it looks. in any case, THIS is how one talks about themselves to other people in an appropriate and meaningful manner [sorry ben jealous. waffle house was not part of the columbia experience.]
@Cheers! I think she was talking to all women everywhere. I’ve rec’d watching it to everyone I know – and my CC ’10 roomie was first on the list. Wherever we are, we’re totes awesome and deserve to hear someone calling us out on the effort to overcome anything in the way of that.
@i was with you until you said ‘totes’
@Cheers! God forbid colloquialisms. Shiver.
@bc'13 I so wish I could have been in NYC to hear this.
Thanks, Meryl, for the most amazing commencement address I could have imagined.
…I can’t imagine who can top Meryl for my class.
@man Whatever anyone’s gonna say, Barnard is a respectable school and lots of individual Barnard people will do a great things as will lots of individual Columbia people.
Read the speech, though, not a big fan due to her (admittedly somewhat light) misandry, I guess you need some of that to choose an all-girls’ school in the first place but I’m still not a fan.
To the previous commenter, I don’t know how many CC students actually want to work in finance or law or medicine, but I do know that people like “problem is” are less likely to be happy because they do have that attitude. The majority of good jobs are gotten by demonstrating you can do the work required in that job, and that you care about it. What college you went do and what grades you made doesn’t qualify you at all for any job with solid hiring practices.
@my man … you are a voice of reason.
@oh geez Do we really have to explain the difference between misandry and feminism?
@man It wouldn’t be a bad idea to be clear on the distinction.
@Okay then Pleased to oblige! For those following along at home – which I hope is all of you, from the comfort of sweet, sweet summer – misandry is the hate of men. It is similar to misogyny, the hate of women, but not precisely analogous. The reason for this subtle discrepancy is the same thing which feminism is an assertive critique against: an imbalance of power.
Feminism is not characterized by hate. It is protest against the systemic oppression and individual abuse of people. It is against the culture which blames a woman for her own rape, and which tells little boys to express their anger, while little girls are told to hold it all inside. It is FOR the physical, emotional, and psychological safety of everyone, not just of women. When Meryl Streep speaks to female acting as a survival skill, she does not do so from the angle of “taking advantage,” or “manipulation.” She does so from the perspective of an empathetic individual who understands that institutional power makes some people vulnerable, and it breaks them down until they are nothing but expressions of that institution, rather than treasured, cherished human beings.
Basically, her speech wasn’t about hate, it was about advocacy.
@problem is most of the Barnard grads won’t get that dream job in this economy…It will go to those who worked harder at the better institution whether we like it or not…GO CU
@I love that you insult Barnard but end it with “Go CU.” If you’re going to insult Barnard, you should at least say “Go CC,” since Barnard is, like it or not, affiliated with CU. Try a better insult next time.
@Tell that to the Barnard grad who has a job reporting for the Wall Street Journal, or any of the countless others who have, in fact, already lined up their dream jobs. Tell us, what job did YOU get?
@CC'11 I really disagree with this sort of mumbo-jumbo. I would argue that on average, a lot more Barnard graduates are living happier, more fulfilling lives in jobs that they love than CC grads. Why? Because every other CC student wants to be a Wall Street Banker or a Lawyer or a Med Student. So many more Barnard students, on the other hand, have ambitions that are far more suited to the interests in their hearts since throughout their undergraduate years, they are cared for and considered far more than anyone across the street and I think that counts for a lot. Anyways, that’s my two cents.
@dear cc'11 As thrilled as I am to hear your kind words about Barnard, it’s important for us all to stop generalizing about other people’s experiences.
Barnard IS great.
Columbia IS great.
Both happy and sad people attend both colleges.
We could all do a better job of representing our distinguished schools by behaving better.
bc’10
@Another CC'11 Thank you.
@to "problem is" au contraire
@male cc10er You know, the core theme here is “change, resistance to change, and then more change.” Sounds a lot like what Ben Jealous was speaking about. But Meryl did it with this uncanny grace and sense of humor. And not one drop on that wench Sarah Palin.
Meryl is the hottest 60 year old ever.
@wow Unreal. Meryl once again shows why she’s perfect. One of the best graduation speeches I’ve ever heard, and that last line is a KILLER.
Why can’t Columbia Class Day speakers do it like this?
@well... TLDNR
@anonymous amazing
@you would be that guy because its an affiliated institution…..
@I'm gonna be that guy Just gonna say it, why is the Barnard College Class Day speech on the Columbia YouTube channel?
@dear guy I wonder… not get much attention/love from your mother when you were a child? That’s alright… it happens.
I suppose Columbia chose to post the Barnard Class Day on their website because, aside from you, they recognize quality and art and, maybe even, truth.
Now go find something less attention-seeking to do. Something that may even be of value to another human being. Call your mother.
@kindness both What an amazing speech from an amazing woman. So glad to get to hear it. I wish I had been there. Congrats again, 2010!
@Naive PreFrosh I looooooooooooove the last line. So inspiring. But you know, I wanna be famous anyway. ;p
@cc10 Blown away. What a fabulous woman.
@wow She was really fabulous. What a well-spoken, sincere, classy woman. I hope we get someone as good for when I graduate.
@Zomg: There are no bold parts.
@Eliza With the updated audio-visual assistance, we’ll let you decide for yourselves. But yes good call!
@Wow meryl is a national treasure
@cc10 it’s so good. so so good.
@Anonymous Video with transcript is also on Columbia’s YouTube channel:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5-a8QXUAe2g
@ahhhh.... almost as delicious to read as it was to hear. Thank you Meryl. You’ve secured our hearts.