Sarandon recently attended a protest calling for a cease-fire on Capitol Hill organized by CODEPINK. The feminist group alerted the press she was coming. NBC, Al Jazeera and other outlets showed up. CODEPINK co-founder Medea Benjamin says Sarandon’s presence was a game changer.
“We’ve been walking these halls for three months, and nobody pays attention to us, especially the Congress people. But having her with us brings out the media, and we get the Congress people themselves,” she gushes.
Not all of the Congress people. Sarandon met with Reps. Rashida Tlaib and Cori Bush. But Ritchie Torres refused to see her. Sarandon told reporters she suspected that’s because he receives money from the pro-Israel lobby AIPAC. On social media, Torres says Sarandon trafficked in “anti-Semitic victim blaming.”
Despite the harsh repercussions that can result, some artists are still using their star power to call for a cease-fire. Fans of Euphoria actor Hunter Schafer learned that she and dozens of anti-war protesters were arrested earlier this week in the lobby of NBC’s headquarters at 30 Rockefeller Plaza, timed to President Biden’s interview on Late Night with Seth Meyers.
Schafer’s arrest was covered by numerous media outlets, including the Associated Press, USA Today and The Los Angeles Times, amplifying the cease-fire message.
But backlash can be swift
Will and Grace star Debra Messing is one of several celebrities who’ve been outspoken in their support of Israel. Others include actors Michael Rapaport and Amy Schumer.
At the March for Israel rally in Washington, D.C., last November, Messing told the crowd of some 300,000 people, “We will pray for the success of the IDF in a war Israel did not start and did not want but a war Israel will win.”
Messing also traveled to Israel and met with family members of hostages held by Hamas and posted videos of those visits on social media. She visited a tunnel built by Hamas.
Her trip was coordinated by Creative Community for Peace (CCFP), an organization working to “promote the arts as a bridge to peace” and “educate about rising antisemitism within the entertainment industry.” The trips to Israel are intended to help artists “bear witness to what happened in the kibbutzim to meet people and survivors of the attack,” CCFP’s executive director Ari Ingel says.