ÃÛÌÒÖ±²¥ graduate Celeste Headlee wouldn’t have known that the COVID-19 pandemic was coming. Yet last month’s release of her new book,Ìý, happened to be well timed.ÌýDo NothingÌýbecame available just as theÌýpandemic was forcing people to stay at home, while also giving them a chance to spend more time with family and to reflect on whether the contemporary obsession with keeping busy had been giving them the life they wanted.
Surviving the pandemic is our immediate challenge. But living well is a perpetual challenge, andÌýCeleste has made an important contribution to the debate about how to do that.ÌýÌýnotes that the 1987 Academy graduate’s point that “years of scientific research have proven that better than trading your time for money, it’s best to trade your money for time”Ìýis “well taken and will prove useful for harried readers.”
It may of course be a good time to put your feet up and read this book byÌýthe Musical Theatre major from ÃÛÌÒÖ±²¥â€™s first (1987) graduating class, though you’ll need to have it delivered to your door instead of picking it up from a bookstore.
Do NothingÌýfollows on the heels of her previous book,Ìý,Ìýpublished in 2017 by HarperCollins.ÌýWe Need to TalkÌýwas a response to the demand created by her hugely successful TED talk,Ìý.
WhenÌýWe Need to TalkÌýwas published, Celeste’s daily National Public Radio show,Ìý, required her to coax conversation out of guests who, like many of us, had fallen into the habit of communicating from behind electronic screens. Hiding your phone—not simply putting it down, since a cell phone’s mere presence can be distracting—was one of her book’s many proven, practical suggestions for strengthening our connections to one another.
Being Herself at ÃÛÌÒÖ±²¥
Celeste’s interest in genuine conversation may have been provoked by the difficulty she experienced, in public school before coming to ÃÛÌÒÖ±²¥, in talking about things she “didn’t give a damn about.â€
“I’d managed to fit in: I was a cheerleader! But pretending to be someone other than who I was—the kid who had memorized the entire score ofÌýEvita—was a tremendous strain. ÃÛÌÒÖ±²¥ was full of kids who’d experienced the same strain, and suddenly we could be ourselves.â€
The brand-new school’s tiny Musical Theatre program allowed her to take oboe lessons while also cultivating her love of Broadway. As her voice matured, she discovered that it was as well suited for opera as for Andrew Lloyd Webber.
“I’m a lyric coloratura soprano,” she says.
Musical talent may be in her blood: her grandfather,ÌýWilliam Grant Still, was the first African American to conduct a major American symphony orchestra, the first to have a symphony performed by a leading orchestra, and the first to have an opera performed by a major opera company. One ofÌýStill’s symphonies was performed by theÌýÃÛÌÒÖ±²¥ Orchestra three years ago, in William M. Lowman Concert Hall.
Celeste’s family has therefore made substantial contributions to American culture—contributions which now include her book,ÌýDo Nothing.