WHITE RIVER JUNCTION โ Growing up in Lebanon, Rigel Harrisโ parents were both biology teachers, and, along with theater, science has always fascinated her.
In recent years, conversations with a friend who founded a biotechnology company that grew out of Dartmouth prompted Harris to think more deeply about the moral complexities of scientific inquiry, and cancer research in particular.
Often companies are โso close to putting an end to this thing and they donโt talk to each other because thereโs this race for money,โ Harris, 33, said in an interview in Bellows Falls, a 10-minute drive from Saxtons River, Vt., where she lives in a converted storefront.
The issue is a personal one for Harris, whose father died of melanoma when she was 21.
In talks with her friend, โI was thinking a lot about the ways in which we get paid for work, and the kind of work we do, and it having a bit of a moral judgment attached to it,โ she said.

Those questions play out in the life of Eloise, the protagonist in Harrisโ new show, โBody of Work,โ which premieres next Friday at Briggs Opera House in White River Junction.
A doctoral candidate at New York University, Eloise has learned to exist in double. Thereโs the version of her that conducts potentially life-saving cancer research, and the version that works as an escort to pay her rent.
The neat outlines of those two worlds begin to smudge when Eloise falls in love with a man she encounters on the way to meet a client. Sheโs afraid to reveal how she makes money, but she also canโt afford to give up the work.
Simultaneously, she learns that the lab sheโs part of has been fabricating data. Suddenly what was supposed to be the โballast of her life,โ the measure of her goodness, has been thrown on its head, Harris said. Meanwhile, doing sex work is where Eloise starts to feel like she can truly connect with people, even help them.
Harris likened Eloiseโs experience as an escort to her own work as a birth doula, which pays her bills while she pursues acting and writing.

โDoula work is about making people feel safe, and sex work is about making people feel safe,โ she said.
That relational element of sex work is often overlooked in portrayals in pop culture, Harris said, with characters frequently written by men. Sam Levinson’s sensationalizing portraits of erotic dancers and OnlyFans creators in the current season of โEuphoriaโ comes to mind.
Elements of โBody of Workโ are heavy, but Harris has also held fast to the importance of โhaving a good time,โ she said.
Part of doing that has meant making the play with her pals. Her intrepid director is Hanover High School alum Lulu Fairclough-Stewart, who overlapped with Harris during her time at Skidmore College.
โShe brings out a child-like wonder side of me,โ Harris said of her director.

Or, as Fairclough-Stewart put it: โShe wanted me because Iโm absolutely loco.โ
An actor and writer living in the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood of Brooklyn, Fairclough-Stewart, 29, related Eloiseโs job at the lab to Karl Marxโs theory of alienation, wherein under capitalism the worker is isolated from the product of their labor, other people and ultimately themselves.
Her participation in sex work offers an antidote. Itโs a space where she decides the conditions of her labor on her own terms.
โSheโs directly involved in the making of the product,โ Fairclough-Stewart said in a phone interview.
Fairclough-Stewart, who works as a server and bartender in Brooklyn, is no stranger to taking on extra jobs to support her creative pursuits.
โOnce you choose to be an artist, youโre relinquishing yourself to a life of trial and financial tribulation,โ she said.
And yet that path hasnโt been โas hard as people told me it was going to be,โ she said. While supporting herself with her restaurant job, sheโs been able to develop independent projects such as her one-woman show โCongrats to Meโ and the short film โLost Dog,โ which was nominated for Best Comedy Short at the Indie Short Fest in Los Angeles earlier this year.
โA lot of actors and artists wait for permission to make their art,โ she said. โRigel and I are kind of saying f–k that, weโre going to pioneer our own art.โ
But pioneering oneโs own art also means finding a way to pay for it. Harris estimates it will cost about $17,000 to produce โBody of Work,โ which includes paying her cast and crew.
โIt felt really important to me that we pay people,โ she said. Donations, including those from family and friends, have helped foot the bill, but ultimately sheโs on the hook for whateverโs left over.
Etna pop diva Kelsie Hogue, aka Sir Babygirl, also hosted a dance party at the Filling Station in White River Junction a few weeks back to raise money for the show.
Last year Harris directed Hogueโs rock opera โHow to Stay Sane While Losing Your Mindโ at the Briggs. Now Hogue is helping Harris produce her own show.
โWeโre so different in so many ways, but sheโs someone I can have really safe conversations about work with,โ Harris said.
In the spirit of having fun, Harris hopes to next take โBody of Workโ to the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, a three-week extravaganza in August when thousands of artists flock to the Scottish city to perform their fledgling works for audiences and reviewers.
โI would love nothing more than to spend some time frolicking around the city,โ she said.
โBody of Workโ is in production at Briggs Opera House at 7 p.m. on Friday, June 5 and Saturday, June 6 in White River Junction. For tickets ($21.40 to $70.48) and to learn more, go to bodyofworktheplay.com.
Farm party
Feast and Fieldโs and BarnArtsโ annual summer music series begins this Thursday in Barnard with a set from the Krishna Guthrie Band. The following week will see the reunion of the original cast from โThe Vermont Farm Project,โ the agrarian musical developed in the Upper Valley that premiered at Northern Stage last year. Music starts at 6 p.m. To pre-order tickets (sliding scale) and learn more about the music series, go to feastandfield.com.
American idiot on campus
Students in Dartmouth Collegeโs theater department are performing in โAmerican Idiot,โ the rock musical that borrows songs from Green Dayโs explosive album by the same name, through May 31 at the Hopkins Center for the Arts in Hanover. Tickets ($15; $9 for youth and students) can be purchased at hop.dartmouth.edu.
“Fairlee” good
A group of artists whose work ranges from collage to sculpture and painting are exhibiting work at an old house in Fairlee on May 30 through June 7. The exhibit, โA โFairleeโ Good Art Showโ is at 1985 U.S. Route 5. Contact artist Johns Hopkins at 917-825-0296 to learn more.
